While you are busy making your festive plans for Halloween, Thanksgiving, Hanukkah, and Christmas, please don’t forget to include your pets. The holidays are a time for giving, but there are some things you should not share with your little best friends. Once you know the hazards, a little precaution and prevention will make holidays a happy time for everyone.
Some of the more common holiday hazards include:
Any & All Candies and sweets.
Bones: The holiday turkey or chicken will leave a lot of tantalizing bones, but don’t feed them to your pet or labradoodle. Beware of steak bones, too. Small bones or bone chips can lodge in the throat, stomach, and intestinal tract. Raw chicken, turkey or beef bones are O.K. (see raw food article).
Fat: Those wonderful potato latkes (watch the hot oil!), gravies, and poultry skin can cause severe gastrointestinal upset as well.
Holiday plants: Holly and mistletoe are extremely poisonous when eaten. The lovely poinsettia may not be truly poisonous, but its milky white sap and leaves can certainly cause severe gastric distress. With so many hybrid varieties available each year, the best approach is to keep the plants out of your labradoodle and other pet’s reach.
Electrical cords: Holiday lights mean more electrical cords for kittens and puppies to chew. Be sure you have cords secured and out of the way.
Candles: Lighted candles should never be left unattended and that is even more important if left at kitty’s eye level or within doodle puppy’s chewing zone. An exuberant tail, a swat of a paw, and candles and hot wax can quickly become disastrous. Anchor candles securely and away from curious faces and feet.
Pine needles: Check around holiday trees and boughs frequently. Ingested pine needles can puncture your pet’s intestines if sharp enough.
Holiday tree: Make sure your tree is well secured. If you have a tree-climbing cat or large labradoodle with a happy tail, anchor the top of the tree to the wall, using strong cord or rope. Preservatives often used in the water in a tree stand can cause gastric upsets, so be sure it is inaccessible or not used. Avoid sugar and aspirin additives in the water as well.
Ornaments: Sharp or breakable ornaments, dreidels, and even aluminum foil should be kept out of reach. String objects, especially tinsel and ribbons, are to be safeguarded at all costs. They are thin and sharp and can wrap around intestines or ball up in the stomach.
Stress and company: With everyone coming and going, watch out for open doors and sneaky pets. Make sure your labradoodle and other pets have collars and tags on in case of escape. Ask guests to keep an eye out for pets under foot and remind them that sometimes your normally very friendly labradoodle or cat may be less than willing to deal with enthusiastic strangers, boucing children and or rooms full of unfamiliar people. Provide a special quiet place with a blanket (maybe a healthy chew treat) and fresh water for your pets to retreat to if the festivities get too stressful.
See lots of fun photos and videos of our GorgeousDoodles families on our Pics and Vids page, and on our YouTube and Facebook accounts!
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