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Bones cooked vs raw---safety of it all I know they can have some bones and not others.... cooked vs raw...What kinds of bones are safe? Everytime I cook, he goes crazy but Im afraid to give him the wrong type and he gets sick or worse....Tonight for example we are having rib eye steak and my husband and I are contemplating..1. is it OK 2. Should it be raw or cooked .....I would hate to ever gibe him anything thats bad for him... |
Cooked bones should never be given to dogs. They can splinter and cause internal damage. Some raw bones can be given, depending on the size of the dog and whether or not you want them to actually be digested. It just depends on your dog! |
I personally pre cook my little amara's bones. I boil them about 5 minutes to kill the bacteria and give her small ones. |
Everything I have ever read says never ever give cooked bones. |
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Raw bones are definitely safer in some ways, but after reading an article that said raw bones are the number one cause of broken teeth, I don't give any bones to Joey. |
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If a dog breaks their teeth on bones, it's one of two reasons: 1 - they're not used to eating bones and they're not that strong (yet) 2 - they're way too big for the dog |
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2. How do you know what size of bone to get for your dog? |
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Then after a couple of weeks, you can "graduate" to chicken necks. Personally, I would start with quail because I find them to be softer than chicken wings. My babies prefer quail too because it's "different." Just a comment, though, is that you don't want to cut them up in bite size. They can easily be swallowed and your baby can choke. If they're given in larger sizes, it forces your baby to chew. Bones are GREAT for cleaning teeth and making gums healthier and jaws stronger. :) |
I never use cooked bones. I do give them raw bones - however, my method is different than a lot of prey model feeders. I do not give consumable raw bones, bc the choking hazard isn't worth the risk for me (I've experienced a near death experience w/ Marcel w/ a chew....don't ever want to go thru that again). I give raw NON-consumable bones. My fave ones right now are from Whole Foods. I get the Bison Back raw bones, and I have the butcher cut them even smaller for yorkie size. Mine gnaw on them, get the meat off (bison backs only have a small amount), clean their teeth, and then the bones are bare after a while. They love their raw bones. It's adorable seeing them work on them too :). |
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I wish our Whole Foods sold bison... :/ We have a lot of Asian markets in my area, but nothing really "exotic" because we don't have any butchers outside of grocery stores. |
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The bison bones are very lean (unlike some marrow bones), have just enough meat (which you could also prob remove), and fit in their mouths for chewing only -- but they can't eat the bone. I too had some issues w/ smaller consumable raw bones, and it just causes too much fear for me. I bet your boys would love 'em :love:. Whole Foods doesn't always have them...so if you're making a trip to Whole just for that, maybe call ahead and see if they have them in stock. |
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Oh! Bison in the frozen pet section!! I'm going there tonight, so I'll definitely stop by and check it out! :D Very excited now, thank you! :daisy: Quote:
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So Ann, which Whole foods do you go to, I called the one on Ray and Price, and they said they never have them, but would call me tomorrow and maybe a leader could order them. I told them they were in the frozen food pet section, and he kept wanting to sell me beef marrow bones and I kept saying "no they were bison back bones". He said they had bison rib bones, but they are for people and you can grill them. brezofleur hope you have better luck! |
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Yup, they always have the marrow bones and a few other types of frozen raw bones in the Pet Freezer, but these definitely say "Bison Back" on the label of the meat plastic wrap thingy. I wonder if Bison Back is the same as a Bison Rib. They do look like a rib bone, but bigger than the beef ones I've seen at the store. Is that too far for you? It's right on the edge of Phx/Tempe...just off the 10 or 60. |
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Yup, I usually have them cut about 3 inch size. If one of the original bones is a shorter one to start with, I might have them cut that one into only two bones, maybe 4inches each (instead into 3 bones). The longer ones, I give to Wylie (he is 7lbs and a very, very aggressive chewer!). None of mine can ever eat any of the actual Bison bone, which makes me feel so much safer for them. They just mostly chew at it, scrape off the meat (great teeth cleaning), gnaw at them awhile. I never actually take them away, unless I really think they're done w/ them. I should also mention they've never, ever broken a tooth or anything. I took a pic for you, LOL! Tony was all "you're taking a picture of the dogs' bones???" -- as if that's odd or something! :p I would say the longer one is about 5 inches long (Wylie's) and the shorter ones more like 3 inches long (Marcel and Pf). |
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Razzle because of his facial furnishings just doesn't get bones at all. He used to until my breeder almost fainted when I said he was getting bones. lol ie due to facial hair damage. I use small bones that they have to extend their jaw fully to try to chew. In other words they can't get the "whole" bone in their mouth. Just a part of the bone. I feed bones once per week. Razzle has a bone supplement added to his home cooked food. |
old thread reborn... I liked the idea of bison bones when I read they have less fat than marrow bones....until I saw the pictures. YUK! I don't want to give Maggie messy bloody yuk. I don't want to give her raw chicken bones either (can dogs get salmonella?) She doesn't chew in one place. She got a bone this week from a friend. I guess its what you'd call a marrow bone. Someone gave my neighbor some bones she got at our grocery store (which I doubt carries bison!) I'd say they were leg bones.. She had them cut into about 1-2 inches long and the center where the marrow was is about 1.5 inch diameter or so. The bone itself, surrounding the marrow, is probably .25-.5 thick. My neighbor said she had boiled the bones for about 20 minutes then froze the ones she didn't give her dog (larger shih tzu). Maggie carried it everywhere she went for 2 days. Up the stairs, on the bed, back down in the family room, to her front door lookout, everywhere. Finally after about 2 days she decided to start actually chewing it! She always takes her treats off somewhere to eat them, and if its not worth eating right then she will carry it around for a while. Anyway, considering she goes on my bed and sofa I don't want her bringing anything raw or bloody. I also worry about germs/bacteria. I don't want to continue giving her marrow bones if they will make her fat. Maybe I will do what someone suggested and remove a lot of the marrow. Should I boil them? They are plenty big and hard and don't seem like they would splinter despite the boiling. The boiling makes me feel better about the germs. I didn't know what to do about refrigerating it once I gave it to her, but it's been several days now and she seems fine. Shes been chewing it tonight for a good session, there seems to still be some color on the inside so I guess there's still flavor. She chews bully sticks sometimes too. Any insights and suggestions are appreciated! |
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