Guest mongo Posted July 2, 2007 Report Share Posted July 2, 2007 I thought that terriers loved to kill rats! how can you have a rat problem? Quote Link to post
Bosun11 537 Posted July 2, 2007 Report Share Posted July 2, 2007 I like to see a dog leave it's bowl 'spinning' after a meal, for all the above reasons, hate to see fussy an picky eaters. As pups my dogs are taught to eat all in front, if they lift their head from the bowl I have an older dog ready to 'pounce', three times with not a lot to eat usually does the trick. Suffice to say, my retired dogs have always ended up livin a fireside life with me Mam. She basically 'Free' feeds, dogs with food in their bowls all day, it always suprises me that the dogs brought up my way have settled in to her's very quickly without putting on weight, turning very picky, even fussy under this system with very little excercise?? Quote Link to post
Bedly 1 Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 Believe it or not, I've a mate who free fed his Labrador. There was a big open bag of kibbies in the house, and he also got a daily meal of tinned food. He was the leanest, fittest Lab I'd ever seen. Anyway, the bloke got a Lab pup that had the typical Lab food obsession, and it quickly became as fat as a fool, so the free feeding stopped. The idea is a good one: the dog can regulate its intake without any stress or worry about food. It won't work for all dogs, though. Quote Link to post
shell 42 Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 I've got Borders and they get a handful of biscuits on a morning out on the yard then are fed their only meal at tea time. If feed was left down they'd end up fat as they put on weight very easily. Quote Link to post
jigger 0 Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 I thought that terriers loved to kill rats! how can you have a rat problem? As i said jmo my friend had 4 terriers and a lurcher in his kennels and still had rats underneath, he wasnt worried about the dogs but just how close the rats were to the houses. Quote Link to post
Simoman 110 Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 No matter how good your dogs are you can still get rats around your kennels. Personally I think dry food is crap and feed raw, I'd love to know how this can be left for dogs to free feed :sick: Quote Link to post
Guest WILF Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 Sounds like plain lazyness to me..............rain Quote Link to post
montague 0 Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 If i free fed i'd have a bloody great fat lurcher & an anorexic terrier. The terrier picks at her food, if she don't eat it then she's obviously not starving so it gets picked up & mixed in with the next days feed. Simple as that. Quote Link to post
Guest mongo Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 Sounds like plain lazyness to me..............rain Nothing of the sort. I probably spend more time with my dogs than most, it's just that they do so well free feeding. Maybe I spend too much time with the dogs and without knowing about it I'm eating their food, it would explain the few pounds I've been putting on! Quote Link to post
Guest oneredtrim Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 (edited) . Edited January 14, 2008 by oneredtrim Quote Link to post
Guest foxtrack Posted July 3, 2007 Report Share Posted July 3, 2007 I thought that terriers loved to kill rats! how can you have a rat problem? ive got to add to this you may bee interested a owl in a south wales hawking centre would jump from her perch and grab the dead rats thrown in to her,grab one in each foot ,return to her perch and eat them with gusto but no more ? while on her pperch asleep rats eat her toes off. and she sat there and dident know what to do Quote Link to post
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