Stainless Steel Puppy Dog Bowls 2 Pack, Pets Puppies Feeding Food and Water Weaning Bowls Dishes Feeder
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- Material Matters: The raised center helps to ensure puppies do not walk or sit on the bowl and the low rim makes feeding time much easier and helps keep puppies cleaner.
- After all, a bowl is simply a bowl. Unfortunately, that isn't true. The majority of pet food bowls are composed of ceramic, plastic, or stainless steel. The worst choice is plastic, which contains chemicals that may cause problems for your puppies. In addition, plastic can be difficult to clean and develop deep scratches that contain unsanitary materials. Ceramic is much less robust and heavy. Your ceramic bowl may break, split, or shatter with a single drop or knock, rendering it unsafe for use.
Convenient and thoughtful design: Young puppies can share their food or water with this puppy weaning dish. The bowl's durable stainless steel structure makes it dishwasher safe. - Dishwasher safe and easy to clean: Warm water and mild dish soap are sufficient to clean stainless steel dog bowls. They are also dishwasher safe, which makes cleaning them simple.
- These puppy weaning bowls have a thoughtful and practical design that makes it simple to stack them within one another for storage or travel. Healthy and long-lasting for your cherished four-legged friends.
- Procedures & Advice for Weaning Puppies: First, prepare a gruel by mixing dog milk with their dry puppy chow; next, give the pups the gruel; and last, finally, reunite the pups with their mother. Step 4: Increase the quantity of solid food gradually. Weaning puppies is advised to begin around 3–4 weeks of age and continue until they are 7-8 weeks old.
Product Description
Weaning Puppies
What is this?
- Weaning describes the transition of the puppy's diet from its mother's milk to the solid growth diet of puppyhood
- Tips: For the first few weeks of their lives, newborn puppies depend on their mother’s milk for nourishment and survival. Not only does it provide the essential nutrients for growth and development, it also helps protect young pups health.
When do I do it?
- Giant breeds, 3.5 weeks
- Large breeds, by 4 weeks
- Small breeds, depends on size but most at 5 to 6 weeks
- Tips: To start weaning, you will remove the mother from the puppies for an hour, 2 to 3 times a day, to try eating solid food
How to Wean Puppies?
Step 1: Make a Gruel
Make a gruel of canned or dry puppy food mixed with puppy milk replacer or water. Look for a well-known, name-brand puppy food that is not grain-free. Ideally use the same brand of food that the mother dog eats
Step 2: Offer the Gruel to the Puppies
During the hour long periods where you separate the puppies from their mother, offer them the gruel in our puppy feeding bowl. Place the puppies in front of it
If the puppies do not seem interested, try dipping your finger in it and then touching their mouths so they can taste it. They may get messy in the process of exploring this new food
Step 3: Gradually Increase the Amount of Solid Food
When you’re beginning the weaning process, the puppies’ diet should consist of only 10% solid food. The gruel should be transitioned to less liquid and more solid until the puppies are able to eat the canned or dry food without diluting it. Then, you should gradually increase the amount each week until their diet is 100% solid food by the time they reach 7 or 8 weeks of age