Zip Bottom Bag
Zip Bottom Bag
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my lab mix tore up a plastic zip lock kind of bag...?
I think she might have also eaten some? All I know is I came home and the zip lock bag had been torn apart...will she be okay though?
*not all of it was tore up, just the bottom half.
she has a kong, and got it out of the cabinet, she also opened a jar of peanut butter and ate some of that...I'm defiantly getting her a crate now...(she was recently adopted)
just baby wipes, lol she didn't eat those...she just tore the bag up.
She'll probably be fine but it is worth keeping an eye on her closely, her eating, drinking and watch the other end to check that is functioning as it should! Any signs of straining, taking longer than normal to pass a stool, discomfort or upset in the next day or two are worth getting checked out with a vet. Dogs are resilient creatures but less than intelligent when it comes to what they put in their mouths!
Problems are most likely to occur if a dog eats sharp items (sticks, wood, hard plastic etc) or long and stringy type material and threads. Sharp items can perforate the digestive organs or scratch and cause irritation and allow infection. String, rope and long bits of cloth etc have the potential to create a tourniquet or trap other items in the digestive tracts.
Small quantities and pieces of foreign objects are more likely to pass through without much fuss, larger items require immediate veterinary attention.
You are wise to try and restrict her access to potentially deadly snacks. Dog proofing a room or putting child type locks on cupboard doors can help if the dog is left for more than 4 hours a day. A crate can be an excellent way of doing this provided a number of measures are in place:
The crate must be large enough for the dog to stand up in and fully stretch out as well as turn around in.
Crates should be properly introduced as a fun and safe place and time in them slowly built up.
Crates should never be used as a form of punishment.
No dog should be left in a crate for longer than 4 hours a day.
My 11 month old has chewed and in some cases ingested the following:
Poo bags, reading glasses, sun glasses, dvds and cases, blue tak, newspaper, cardboard, kitchen roll, broom handle, food wrapping, empty tablet blister packs, a full packet of glaucosamine tablets. All this despite our practice of dog proofing the house every time we leave. Accidents happen and things we thought would be safe haven't been from a crafty collie. Most of these have been eaten while we were in the house but in a different room for a minute or two. As she has separation anxiety we don't like to follow her from room to room hence she's managed to help herself to the recycling bin!
She's suffered no ill effects thankfully!
Keep an eye on her and anything suspicious get her looked at. Good luck!


US $31.94




