[nagdu] Feeding dog during long day?

Ian C. Bray i.c.bray at win.net
Sat Oct 11 16:52:18 UTC 2014


As far as the actual act of feeding,
Stan will eat his entire meal out of my hand!!

I realized I'd forgotten his bowl one evening on a bus-ride to visit my 
parents...
Basically, I fed him handfulls at a time and used a squeeze-bottle for 
water.

Stanwas happy to eat out of my hand... & he calmed right down after being 
fidgity  and unhappy with hunger.

I'm not sure if he actually chewed it, swallowed it, or inhaled it through 
his nose, but it worked great!

I used a towell I carry for him in my bag & hand sanitizer to clean up.

Ian



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Nicole Torcolini via nagdu" <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
To: "'Danielle Burton'" <danielleburton94 at gmail.com>; "'NAGDU Mailing 
List,the National Association of Guide Dog Users'" <nagdu at nfbnet.org>; 
"'Daryl Marie'" <crazymusician at shaw.ca>
Sent: Friday, October 10, 2014 8:44 PM
Subject: Re: [nagdu] Feeding dog during long day?


> To answer the question that Daryl  had first. Ultimately, it is up to you
> what you do. You could just bring the food and feed her. Since Jenny is
> young, it might go away on its own over time. However, if it does not go
> away over time, you may find yourself in a bad situation some day where
> Jenny absolutely refuses to work because she thinks that it is dinner 
> time,
> which, JMHO, is not acceptable behavior. These dogs are domestic dogs. 
> They
> may not know exactly when they will eat yet, but there will be another 
> meal;
> they are not going to starve to death. I wonder if giving Jenny a treat or
> two would help get rid of the "must have food" frenzy. If you do decide to
> try to work it out, I would suggest doing the following. When she 
> misbehaves
> because she wants dinner, use whatever techniques you would usually use.
> When you get home, do not give her dinner right away. As a matter of fact,
> do not give her dinner until she calms down. Giving her dinner right away
> will just make her think that she will get dinner if she acts silly. Once
> she stops misbehaving, you can go back to giving her dinner as soon as you
> get home. On the days that you do get home on time, mix it up a little. 
> Some
> days, give her dinner on time, and some days do not give her dinner on 
> time.
> Moving to more general... Our dogs can have some kind of schedule,
> but the world should not come to a grinding halt just because they do not
> eat. Lexia knows that she gets lunch soon after going out in the middle of
> the day, which is fine. Sometimes, she wants it to be that way when she 
> goes
> out in the evening. When she comes back inside, she will park herself in a
> certain spot and stare at whoever is around with this look on her face 
> like,
> "Um, excuse me, aren't you forgetting something?". Of course, as funny and
> pathetic as this is, it does not buy her anything. She gets sent back to 
> her
> blanket, and dinner comes when it is time.
> You should be able to move the time that you feed your dog by anywhere 
> from
> a half hour to an hour in either direction without having problems. 
> Usually,
> Lexia eats dinner somewhere between 5 and 7, normally close to 6, but it 
> has
> been as early as 4 and as late as 8 before. How do I do that? If it is 
> extra
> late, then she has to go out later. If it is early, I give her a few 
> treats
> before she goes to bed; she is one of those dogs who will vomit bile if
> there is nothing in her stomach. If you have one of those dogs, then you 
> may
> just need to feed three meals a day, which is what I do. However, if this 
> is
> the case, then you really need to make sure that whatever lunch/snack is
> does not have too much fat and protein. Lexia eats a certain kind of dog
> biscuit for lunch instead of her food, but it is not the treats that I use
> for rewards.
> Finally, if you are worried about not being able to take your dog out 
> until
> a certain time, then give your dog the opportunity before going into
> wherever it is that you will be for a while. Even if a dog does not
> absolutely have to go, a dog will usually go if given the opportunity. If
> you are worried about number 2, then there are things that you can do, 
> like
> walking your dog or playing, that will make your dog more likely to have 
> to
> go.
>
> Nicole and Lexia
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nagdu [mailto:nagdu-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Danielle Burton
> via nagdu
> Sent: Friday, October 10, 2014 11:50 AM
> To: Daryl Marie; NAGDU Mailing List,the National Association of Guide Dog
> Users
> Subject: Re: [nagdu] Feeding dog during long day?
>
> All this talk about feeding and schedule brings me to a question I have
> myself. 1'M in college and I feed my dog at 7:00 in the morning and 5:00 
> in
> the afternoon. Next semester I'll be in class from 3:00 to 6:50 in the
> afternoon. I also have a class at 10:20 in the morning to 12:30. I right 
> now
> take her out at 12. how would you guys feed and park your dogs with this
> schedule? I don't want to feed her too early or too late.
>
> Danielle and Willa
>
>
>> On Oct 10, 2014, at 12:12 PM, Daryl Marie via nagdu <nagdu at nfbnet.org>
> wrote:
>>
>> Hi!
>>
>> jenny has been doing really well on the whole over the past few months,
> but I do have a quick question.
>>
>> She eats breakfast between 6:00-6:30 every morning, because I go to work
> by 7:30.  On days where we don't do anything after work, she is nearly
> flawless in her work, but if I have appointments after work, say after 
> 6:00
> PM, she just loses her head.
>> She usually eats her dinner between 5:00-6:00 PM when we're home, or I
> have plans for the rest of an evening, though she has eaten later.  I have
> never been much of a schedule person, and Jenny doesn't seem to mind minor
> changes in routine in the evening... but if I am working out at the gym,
> she'll get her dinner when we get home at 7:00PM.
>> I am wondering if it might be helpful and keep her focused to feed her
> before leaving my workouts... or would this likely confuse her? Is this 
> just
> a quirk I have to live with?  If I feed her a partial meal, how "partial"
> should I feed her?
>>
>> Any advice would be appreciated!
>>
>> Daryl
>>
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