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Keep Your Dog Safe
 Keep Your Dog Healthy and Safe private label rights, plr, The dog niche is huge. No matter whether you are bringing a playful puppy home, or a mature dog, you have to make sure there are no hazards in your house and yard that could hurt your new addition to the family. Helpful tips to keep your dog healthy and safe. See the Table of Contents. 5400 words, 14 page ebook. Sample is below.
Please read the rights.
Table of Contents
Inside Your Home
Making your home safer for puppies and dogs
Where will your dog stay in your house?
Not the garage
In Your Yard
Securing your yard
Safety inside the yard
Dangerous plants
Poisons, fertilizers, and weed killers
When You Leave
Dog Day Care Providers
Boarding Kennels
Pet Sitters and In-Home Care
Friends and Neighbors
Keeping Your Dog Healthy
Dental Care
Grooming and Bathing
Ears and Eyes
Nail Trimming
Helpful Websites
Sample
Inside Your Home
No matter whether you are bringing a playful puppy home, or a mature dog, you have to make sure there are no hazards in your house and yard that could hurt your new addition to the family.
Puppies and Grown Up Dogs
If this is your first experience with a puppy, or it has been a few years since you had a young dog, you need to recognize that a puppy comes with greater challenges than an older dog. For one thing, puppies love to chew; in fact, they have to chew things in order to develop their adult teeth. They aren’t particular about what they chew, however—your favorite shoes, books left on the floor, children’s toys, furniture legs, articles of clothing—almost anything they can sink their little teeth into is fair game. You need to be vigilant about what you leave lying around that they can access. This is not only so favorite possessions are not ruined, but because some things are not good for puppies to chew. Parts of toys that can break off when a puppy chews them can be a choking hazard or cause an abdominal obstruction if swallowed. So, the first step is to walk through your house and see what needs to be put away, or put up, out of the range of the pup.
This is not to say that older dogs can’t cause similar problems. In their case, height is another consideration. A large dog or a dog with long legs can reach amazing heights when he stretches. You may find that anything left on tables, desks, or kitchen counters is in “play” for him. He may be anxious when you first bring him home, and this can bring on mischievous or even destructive behavior for a while until he gets acclimated and feels truly at home. Again, tour through the rooms of the house and see if there are things that should be put away, closets closed, etc.
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