HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
Your cart
Cart is empty

|
 
Advanced Search
Beds & Bedding
Doggie Dining
Apparel & Accessories
Travel & Transport
Grooming
Indoor & Outdoor
Featured



DISCOUNT CLUB
Your Name:
Email Address:

Articles

Weaning Your Puppy The Right Way

Saturday, December 30, 2006 | Printer Friendly Printer Friendly


The time has come to teach the puppy that they need to depend upon something besides milk for his food.  The process is called weaning and is made up  changing of a pup's diet from liquid to solid.  Dog owners consider weaning to be that instant in time when one takes a pup from his mother.  But weaning actually takes place both before and after a pup is separated from his mother.  During that time his digestive system is learning to digest the foods they will be eating for the rest of they life.  Just like all learning experiences, the steps of weaning must be taken slowly or the pup's digestive system will rebel, and "hurry diarrhea" or dysentery will be the result.

An improperly weaned puppy often finds them selfs with nothing but strange food to eat, strange people pawing over it, and a strange environment surrounding it.  As a result of this physical and psychological trauma, they will likely develop anorexia. As the puppy adjusts emotionally to there new environment, anorexia is followed by an enormous hunger.  This hunger becomes so great that they will even eat the strange food that has not learned to digest yet.  If they are  allowed to eat this diet, the pup begins to suffer from alternating bouts of diarrhea and constipation.
If this happens then the bouts with diarrhea and constipation can lead to poor food absorption and injury to the lining of the intestines.  Finally, the degenerative changes progress through the entire wall of the intestines.  The intestines become sluggish and may stop their movement altogether.  Ultimately, there is a disappearance of the intestinal lining.  The intestinal wall may become as thin as tissue paper.  The pup then rapidly becomes emaciated and dehydrated.  They will eventually die unless proper remedial actions are taken immediately.

The secret tip preventing what they call hurry diarrhea is a full understanding of what it is.  The "hurry" is used because the dog owner tried to push the puppy too fast with a food there intestinal tract was not yet ready for.  Food which might be perfectly suitable for an adult dog was fed too soon to a puppy that has just been weaned.

When you have gotten in too big a hurry and hurry diarrhea occurs, you need to back up and start all over again.  Return to the bland, simply digested foods that should be fed to a pup just learning to eat solid food, and then train there intestine to handle each new food in succession.  At the same time, you must contend with an irritated, perhaps diseased intestine, which complicates your efforts considerably. What your puppy needs is a little slow and easy treatment as well as a patient owner to prevent hurry diarrhea. 






<< Do You Know How Your Dog Eats? >>
 
AS SEEN ON..
featured in “Stump the Rach” segment, September 2007
12/22/08 issue, feature titled “Pamper Your Pooch”, page 22
March 2009 Issue, Small Business Edition, article titled “Lap of Luxury”, pages 89-90
Spring 2009 Issue, pictorial titled “Sleepless In Seattle”, inside back cover


GUARANTEES


Copyright © 2005-2010 Oh My Dog Supplies, LLC Printable version