Pet Links
Useful Links Below are some links to highly recommended non-profit organizations, animal services, and special events APSE The APSE connects pet sitters and pet owners and empowers them to work...
Useful Links Below are some links to highly recommended non-profit organizations, animal services, and special events APSE The APSE connects pet sitters and pet owners and empowers them to work...
...give medications? I’ve been interested in how owners give medications to their pets so that it can be safe and less stressful to everyone involved. In one of our studies,...
...be harmful to dogs, it is probably a good idea to avoid giving your dog commercial or homemade foods with cream of tartar as an ingredient at this time. Cream...
...but it is much harder to back them up scientifically. If a reference is provided to support the information, where is it from? Is it from the author’s own article...
...“crude” fiber measured for most diets. While total dietary fiber is typically available for therapeutic gastrointestinal foods, it is rarely, if ever, available in non-therapeutic foods due to the expense...
...control: A common mistake for pet owners is to give their pets a larger portion of a treat than ideal, even if the treat itself is ok. What seems like...
...on the packaging. Store it right. If you do buy extra, don’t dump it all into a bin or store it at temperatures that are too hot or too cold....
...food allergies to more common ingredients. Food allergies in pets develop to ingredients that they are regularly exposed to – things in their everyday diet rather than to specific foods...
...than a food item and mounts an immune response. The end result of this response can be itchy skin or ear and skin infections in some pets, while it may...
...“limited ingredient” diets and many over-the-counter “limited ingredient” diets contain more ingredients than their name implies. If your pet’s diet history is incomplete (for example, if you adopted your dog...