How to stop the gulping....

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inkjunkie

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One of our pups has started gulping her food. To the point she pukes it right out. We have tried a "no-gulp" bowl but it did not slow her down. Anybody got any suggestions? This bowl is a bit more elaborate than the one we have....

http://gobblenot.com/

so I may be ordering one when my SSD shows up tomorrow....
 
Have a pet that inhales her food? I do. He eats so quickly that he coughs and chokes and gags whenever he’s fed. He’s not merely food motivated … he’s food obsessed.
The good news is he’s not a huge begger. He may hang around in the kitchen at my feet while I cook and he may stare at me longingly while we’re seated at the dinner table, but that’s no different than what he does when I’m reading a book. He gapes in adoration, waiting for any scrap of attention in whatever form he can get it –– comestible or otherwise.
But that’s beside the point … onto the gulping thing.
Ever wonder why it is that some pets do this? For dogs it’s either nature or nurture (big surprise). Some dogs, Labs for instance, have a screw loose when it comes to food. Though they may never have wanted for a meal in their entire coddled lives, they’ll drool in advance of dinnertime, beg mercilessly and generally make a nuisance of themselves with respect to dining. Some cats are like this too. Beats me why.
Other dogs have clearly been neglected or suffered near-starvation on the streets. Their environment has informed their extreme behavior at the food bowl; they gulp down as much as they can as fast as they can. And it’s never pretty. They seem to live in perpetual fear of a dearth of food. Some long-time strays or feral cats will exhibit similar behavior.

It’s important to recognize either extreme version of this trait as nothing more than a behavioral abnormality. Pets who suffer it must be treated to a variety of methods to relieve their food anxiety and aid in their normal digestion:

  1. Feed in isolation to reduce the anxiety competition may pose.
  2. Ignore food seeking behavior and never make a big meal out of feeding time.
  3. Feed in a non food-oriented area (avoid feeding in the kitchen, or anywhere you most frequent in your home).
  4. Feed on a strict schedule.
  5. Confine treats to training time or to a very specific time of day. Again, do this away from trafficked areas.
  6. Employ gulp-reducing bowls. These bowls have upright obstacles that pets have to eat around. It takes them longer to do this.
  7. Feed smaller kibbles or wet food they must lap around.
  8. In some extreme cases, veterinary behaviorists should be sought to help address these behaviors. Consider it.
  9. Prozac-like drugs have even been used successfully in some of these more extreme sufferers. It’s one option, but one that should only be attempted when the food-related anxiety is severe and cannot be resolved any other way.
Following these simple suggestions (should they apply) will invariably set your pet more at ease while making feeding time a safer experience. It’s no use ignoring these signs. Not when your pet’s health and happiness are at stake.

Dr. Patty Khuly
 

Maybe throw something thats "obstructive" in the bowl?? Like a ball/chewtoy or something?? Basically something so that eating is "slowed" down
 
One of our pups has started gulping her food. To the point she pukes it right out. We have tried a "no-gulp" bowl but it did not slow her down. Anybody got any suggestions? This bowl is a bit more elaborate than the one we have....

http://gobblenot.com/

so I may be ordering one when my SSD shows up tomorrow....

Do you feed them as a group or separately.
 
Feed on a strict schedule

We feed our Rhodesian Ridgeback twice a day - once first thing in the morning and again at 5PM.
Now he's learned how to tell time! He'll start looking to be fed within 15 minutes of the scheduled afternoon feeding time - and if we're not on time we get told about it!
 
We feed our Rhodesian Ridgeback twice a day - once first thing in the morning and again at 5PM.
Now he's learned how to tell time! He'll start looking to be fed within 15 minutes of the scheduled afternoon feeding time - and if we're not on time we get told about it!

We feed our cat at 6AM and 6PM daily. Now, If we are as little as 5 minutes late, the cat is walking around the house with her tail sticking straight up in the air and making a racket meowing repeatedly until she's fed. lol
 
We place a can in the middle of our dogs bowl it makes her work and the can moves around in the bowl obstructing access to the food. Plus it is cheap and no need for a specialty bowl.
 
Maybe hand feed her little bits...
Going to be tough with the other dogs around. First Azul gulped a meal, next time they got Fed she did not but Mita did...:banghead::banghead: Mita has a habit of flipping the food bowl over. We are now feeding them out of plastic bowls as they started carrying around the ceramic ones..

Have a pet that inhales her food? I do. He eats so quickly that he coughs and chokes and gags whenever he’s fed. He’s not merely food motivated … he’s food obsessed.
The good news is he’s not a huge begger. He may hang around in the kitchen at my feet while I cook and he may stare at me longingly while we’re seated at the dinner table, but that’s no different than what he does when I’m reading a book. He gapes in adoration, waiting for any scrap of attention in whatever form he can get it –– comestible or otherwise.
But that’s beside the point … onto the gulping thing.
Ever wonder why it is that some pets do this? For dogs it’s either nature or nurture (big surprise). Some dogs, Labs for instance, have a screw loose when it comes to food. Though they may never have wanted for a meal in their entire coddled lives, they’ll drool in advance of dinnertime, beg mercilessly and generally make a nuisance of themselves with respect to dining. Some cats are like this too. Beats me why.
Other dogs have clearly been neglected or suffered near-starvation on the streets. Their environment has informed their extreme behavior at the food bowl; they gulp down as much as they can as fast as they can. And it’s never pretty. They seem to live in perpetual fear of a dearth of food. Some long-time strays or feral cats will exhibit similar behavior.

It’s important to recognize either extreme version of this trait as nothing more than a behavioral abnormality. Pets who suffer it must be treated to a variety of methods to relieve their food anxiety and aid in their normal digestion:

  1. Feed in isolation to reduce the anxiety competition may pose.
  2. Ignore food seeking behavior and never make a big meal out of feeding time.
  3. Feed in a non food-oriented area (avoid feeding in the kitchen, or anywhere you most frequent in your home).
  4. Feed on a strict schedule.
  5. Confine treats to training time or to a very specific time of day. Again, do this away from trafficked areas.
  6. Employ gulp-reducing bowls. These bowls have upright obstacles that pets have to eat around. It takes them longer to do this.
  7. Feed smaller kibbles or wet food they must lap around.
  8. In some extreme cases, veterinary behaviorists should be sought to help address these behaviors. Consider it.
  9. Prozac-like drugs have even been used successfully in some of these more extreme sufferers. It’s one option, but one that should only be attempted when the food-related anxiety is severe and cannot be resolved any other way.
Following these simple suggestions (should they apply) will invariably set your pet more at ease while making feeding time a safer experience. It’s no use ignoring these signs. Not when your pet’s health and happiness are at stake.

Dr. Patty Khuly
Prozac?? Hmmmm....might have some left from "back in the day"...Thanks for the info, will be showing it to the boss later...

Maybe throw something thats "obstructive" in the bowl?? Like a ball/chewtoy or something?? Basically something so that eating is "slowed" down
Why is it the simplest things I never think of?


Intersting stuff, knew about the gas problem but did not know it could kill them...

Do you feed them as a group or separately.
All fed at once but in different areas, with us sort of standing guard.

We feed our Rhodesian Ridgeback twice a day - once first thing in the morning and again at 5PM.
Now he's learned how to tell time! He'll start looking to be fed within 15 minutes of the scheduled afternoon feeding time - and if we're not on time we get told about it!
Ours are on a schedule as well.
We place a can in the middle of our dogs bowl it makes her work and the can moves around in the bowl obstructing access to the food. Plus it is cheap and no need for a specialty bowl.
Going to give this a try. Might have a problem, every damn thing is a toy for them.Very well may look for a few rocks.

Very well may get some bowls that fit inside of each other, turn the upper on over. Red, our older hound has been a gulper his entire life. Once we put his brother to sleep he stopped. When we picked the pair of them up back in 03 the breeder had them eating out of a community bowl. The irony was Blue, the guy that is no longer with us, ate VERY slowly. Morsel by morsel. Took him right around 5 minutes to eat 2 cups of food. He would take a morsel or two, take a step back and eat them. Look around a bit, go back to the bowl and stand over it, just looking at it.

Appreciate the suggestions/links.
 
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