Barbara Nixon
Well-known member
I thought I'd post this because Corn on the cob is very popular in the Us and the topic has just cropped up on Dogpages.
Please don't let your dog, any breed, have a corn husk or even part of it.
A year or so ago, someone on another forum posted that her cavalier bitch was not taking her morning food with her usual enthusiasm. A vet booking was made for the afternoon, but it had to be brought forward, as she became sicker. The vet operated and found a chunk of husk, blocking her gut. This was very odd as the family never ate corn, so either she scavenged, unseen, on a walk or someone tossed a leftover over the fence.
Tragically, the vet rang a couple of hours later, to say that she had died. The damage had been done, undetected over the previous day or so. After someone asked if a cob was a good food source, quite a few people have posted about losing, or nearly losing, quite large dogs.
Please don't feed corn on the cob and make sure that any discarded husks are binned well out of harm's way.
Please don't let your dog, any breed, have a corn husk or even part of it.
A year or so ago, someone on another forum posted that her cavalier bitch was not taking her morning food with her usual enthusiasm. A vet booking was made for the afternoon, but it had to be brought forward, as she became sicker. The vet operated and found a chunk of husk, blocking her gut. This was very odd as the family never ate corn, so either she scavenged, unseen, on a walk or someone tossed a leftover over the fence.
Tragically, the vet rang a couple of hours later, to say that she had died. The damage had been done, undetected over the previous day or so. After someone asked if a cob was a good food source, quite a few people have posted about losing, or nearly losing, quite large dogs.
Please don't feed corn on the cob and make sure that any discarded husks are binned well out of harm's way.