Liung
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2013
- Messages
- 247
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So at the last vet appointment (at the Ontario Veterinary College Companion Animal Hospital! Basically the place all veterinarians in Ontario come from, specialists and experts bursting through the seams, which was very cool) I was emailed a copy of the patient charts from the appointment, which was awesome. I got to see all the observations and conclusions the vet made about Lahi and Delilah!
I was a little shocked, however, to see that Delilah had been rated 8/9 for body condition. She’s chubby! I know she’s chubby! But surely she’s not THAT chubby?! I can still feel her ribs and vertebrae fairly easily! Also, Lahi got rated 5/9, and he’s actually super skinny. 11 years old (12 come January) and his vertebrae are painfully pointy. So I think both of them had their weight overestimated a bit.
For those who are unfamiliar with this scoring system, it’s a 1-9 scale, 1 being about to expire from starvation, 9 being excessively dangerously obese. 5 is the ideal, though for active dogs 4 is also okay. It’s measured essentially by their dorsal silhouette and by how easy it is to feel their spine and ribs. You can google it and get mostly cats and dogs but it applies to all animals.
In any case after that I’ve been trying to be more careful to watch how much pellets I’ve been feeding. Delilah tends to try to inhale her food and Lahi is more of a grazer, and Lahi gets depressed if they’re separated, so to keep food mostly well distributed between them I’ve been putting all their pellets in a cat treat ball. Lahi is exceedingly skilled at it (actually he amazes me, he very clearly understands exactly how it works to the point that if it hits a wall, he’ll pick it up with his mouth and move it back to an open space of the floor) whereas it seems that as far as Delilah is concerned, it’s a mysterious object that magically produces food if she smacks it hard enough. It’s great! Good activity for them, they have to work for their food, and Delilah doesn’t get to hog it.
They also get glucosamine tablets every morning and night (Oxbow’s Natural Science Joint Support) which has done wonders for Lahi’s creaky legs, greens and veggies whenever I can manage (which is unfortunately not as often as I’d like) and of course 24/7 access to as much hay as their furry hearts desire. Right now it’s Timothy but they seem to prefer Orchard Grass, so once I’ve finished my 10lb box of Timothy I’ll be switching.
And yet, Delilah continues to act as though she is S T A R V I N G MUMMY PLEEEEEEASE IF YOU DON’T FEED ME I’M GOING TO DIEEEEEEEEEEEE
Last night I gave them their pellets, came back in under 10 minutes and the treat ball was already empty. Even Lahi is being a begging beggar these days.
Now, I know they should be fine. They have hay. They have all the hay they possibly could want. But seriously if they get more frantic over their pellets I’m worried one of them is going to start a fight!
I work at a pet food store, and when switching someone from a low-quality food to a high-quality food, of course they’re going to have to feed their dog less. And I’ll tell them, “your dog won’t understand this, and until their stomach shrinks, they’ll be really hungry even after eating. They’ll beg at you. Don’t give in! They will insist to you that they are starving! Don’t believe them! And if you really can’t resist and feel awful for them going hungry, we have some canned pumpkin and sweet potato that will make them feel full without making them fat.”
And as I was despairing last night at Lahi and Delilah’s Dickens-esque performance, it occurred to me, couldn’t I do the same for them?? Pumpkin is high fiber, being canned it’s also high moisture, what’s not to like?
But I’m a little worried it’s going to be too high sugar for bunnies. Thoughts? What can I give the buns so they’re not constantly trying to get stepped on begging for food?
I was a little shocked, however, to see that Delilah had been rated 8/9 for body condition. She’s chubby! I know she’s chubby! But surely she’s not THAT chubby?! I can still feel her ribs and vertebrae fairly easily! Also, Lahi got rated 5/9, and he’s actually super skinny. 11 years old (12 come January) and his vertebrae are painfully pointy. So I think both of them had their weight overestimated a bit.
For those who are unfamiliar with this scoring system, it’s a 1-9 scale, 1 being about to expire from starvation, 9 being excessively dangerously obese. 5 is the ideal, though for active dogs 4 is also okay. It’s measured essentially by their dorsal silhouette and by how easy it is to feel their spine and ribs. You can google it and get mostly cats and dogs but it applies to all animals.
In any case after that I’ve been trying to be more careful to watch how much pellets I’ve been feeding. Delilah tends to try to inhale her food and Lahi is more of a grazer, and Lahi gets depressed if they’re separated, so to keep food mostly well distributed between them I’ve been putting all their pellets in a cat treat ball. Lahi is exceedingly skilled at it (actually he amazes me, he very clearly understands exactly how it works to the point that if it hits a wall, he’ll pick it up with his mouth and move it back to an open space of the floor) whereas it seems that as far as Delilah is concerned, it’s a mysterious object that magically produces food if she smacks it hard enough. It’s great! Good activity for them, they have to work for their food, and Delilah doesn’t get to hog it.
They also get glucosamine tablets every morning and night (Oxbow’s Natural Science Joint Support) which has done wonders for Lahi’s creaky legs, greens and veggies whenever I can manage (which is unfortunately not as often as I’d like) and of course 24/7 access to as much hay as their furry hearts desire. Right now it’s Timothy but they seem to prefer Orchard Grass, so once I’ve finished my 10lb box of Timothy I’ll be switching.
And yet, Delilah continues to act as though she is S T A R V I N G MUMMY PLEEEEEEASE IF YOU DON’T FEED ME I’M GOING TO DIEEEEEEEEEEEE
Last night I gave them their pellets, came back in under 10 minutes and the treat ball was already empty. Even Lahi is being a begging beggar these days.
Now, I know they should be fine. They have hay. They have all the hay they possibly could want. But seriously if they get more frantic over their pellets I’m worried one of them is going to start a fight!
I work at a pet food store, and when switching someone from a low-quality food to a high-quality food, of course they’re going to have to feed their dog less. And I’ll tell them, “your dog won’t understand this, and until their stomach shrinks, they’ll be really hungry even after eating. They’ll beg at you. Don’t give in! They will insist to you that they are starving! Don’t believe them! And if you really can’t resist and feel awful for them going hungry, we have some canned pumpkin and sweet potato that will make them feel full without making them fat.”
And as I was despairing last night at Lahi and Delilah’s Dickens-esque performance, it occurred to me, couldn’t I do the same for them?? Pumpkin is high fiber, being canned it’s also high moisture, what’s not to like?
But I’m a little worried it’s going to be too high sugar for bunnies. Thoughts? What can I give the buns so they’re not constantly trying to get stepped on begging for food?