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He's missing minerals, calcium.
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also quite possible - that means we now have 2 best answers you are not feeding a cheapo food are you? feed a human quality dog food and if there is excess give it to your kids |
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When my friends lab was a puppy he was a rock eater too.
He had just started dating his wife and had come back to the house to let the dog out of the kennel. When they opened the front door, the smell of poop was overwhelming. They found Barney in the kennel completely clean. He had backed his butt up to the door of the kennel and let fly everything through the wire mesh outside of the kennel. The only thing they found inside was a rock. He was a good dog and stayed a puppy until he was about 10 years old. |
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I remember when LBJ's Beagles used to do the same. A friend was THE WH vet that week ...chosen from vets at Walter Reed. NOT a very popular job. Anyway, one of the dogs obstructed and had to go to surgery. Of course the human Docs took over much to the relief of my friend... Dog died on the table.. Shows to go ya ;) |
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ps: Knowing Matt, I'm pretty sure he's feeding her quality food....Matt? edited: Found this after Mark's post and searching on PICA...worth a read: http://www.humanesociety.org/animals/resources/tips/pica_eating_strange_objects.html |
Rika kinda nailed it.
An exhausted Labradork is a great family member. Exercise, exercise and then make sure you have tired the little bugger out. My labs ate anything, including puking entire deer innards, in my game room, oh hell, anywhere they wanted to puke. But, god forbid, never outside! The more exhausted, and I mean dick draggin' in the mud tired, the more compliant. Now, it's still a Lab, so **** will continue to occur, but to a minimum. Having stated all the above, I will never own dogs other than Labs. |
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Humans do this too. In the South there were specific areas of a whitish clay that families used for dirt-eating to satisfy a "specific nutritional hunger" due to low levels of micro-nutrients in their food. These areas were not occupied as home or farm sites, but were defended against others. gives a whole new perspective on "get off my lawn" |
Thanks for the suggestions and commentary thus far. She gets a name brand (don't recall which) puppy food that is specified for large breed dogs. In honor of you guys she got a few new rawhides tonight, so there's enough for an entire pack out in my yard. I spent the entire afternoon outside with her today, so we had plenty of teaching moments.;)
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Thanks for reminding me why I don't have time for a dog right now Matt! ;). Good luck! I love labs, but they sure are hard headed dogs!
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A kennel and / or a safe dog run may save your dog's life. Not every blockage can be surgically removed, sometimes they die on the table! Why don't you build a dog run? Sounds like your BJ is big enough to have a paved or concrete run. You can still enjoy the back yard when actively playing / supervising. Also, it can be inside the house where there aren't any rocks. Just make it a point to get the dog a couple hours playtime / walks / runs off leash every day and it will be fine. It will get you and your family out and if you have older kids, they will love going on a neighborhood walk by themselves.
My dogs are kenneled / in the dog run a lot if they aren't in the house. If I'd leave them in the back yard, it would be plowed in a few days just from running around and wrestling. I find that having your dog in the kennel actually focuses them more on you when they are with you. They are more receptive to training and following commands. Just my two cents. G |
Yes, there is risk. The rocks really cannot be removed or the yard covered with dirt and grass?
BTW - not all name brand dog foods are equal. There is a long dog food thread here in OT. |
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Good luck.. raising puppies is a challenge. I'm about to start the process again likely in June and I have very mixed feelings...anticipation with a tad of dread... LOL |
Spam reported to mods....
I keep chiming in on this thread, 'cause I don't mind being wrong (a bunch!) if it eventually leads to a happy, healthy dog and a happy Matt! The good Dr is absolutely spot on imo....who woulda figured ;)! Though I've never needed to resort to a spray bottle or can of "noise", I've often heard they are effective. I concur about the "name brand" foods, not all being equal. Me, I'm just not gonna pay HUGE $ for exoctic foods, but use a good, decent brand (I use Pro Plan (made by Purina...what my last breeder and my vet use)), but Iams, Blue, and a few others would be fine too. Hint...if it's sold in a grocery store, it might not be great even if it's named Purina. G's suggestion about a run would be an option as a last resort for "me", but a good one if all else fails. I'm still a firm believer that the behavior CAN be modified with just a bit of effort and a change of tactics. Good luck Matt...keep it up and let us know! ps: ALL labs aren't hard headed...they are absolutely one of the smartest and "easiest" breeds to train around...using the right techniques. |
You need another dog. This one has too much free time and not enough to do. Another dog to play with would help.
JR |
I'll double check the food brand with the wife, she does our shopping. But I'm pretty sure it was vet recommended.
Webb, it's hard to describe without a pic, but it's a big fenced back yard with lots of grass. Across the entire back of our house is landscaped with a rock border and filled with river rock, including under our large deck. We did all of the work last year (pre-dog) and spent probably $1500 just in rock, so it's not going anywhere. JR, sometimes one dog is one too many. It's a toss-up whether she or my three year old is a bigger pain, and sometimes I want to drop them both off at the pound. I think they conspire against me..... In all honesty, I think it's a combination of playing and teething. She will grab a rock, even when we are outside playing with her, and start munching on it. Other times she'll toss it around. |
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I would not be too concerned about the rocks at this point. I like the idea of training to give up the rock for a tasty prize. |
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1396366578.jpg
SAM on the coast http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1396366886.jpg a tired Lab. Rika |
Maybe teething? Get some kong squeaky chew toys. My dog which looks nearly identical to yours so they must be the same and this is on the internet so it must be true loves those toys.
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It seems that the unpleasantries of either the pain suffered or the trip to the vet cured him of his desire to ingest matter he can't chew/digest because he doesn't eat rocks anymore. |
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