Carrion-eating Lab.

thorneyglatt

Well-Known Member
Half an hour ago our 5 month old black Lab, Angus, scavenged part of a long-dead pheasant or something from a hedge-row. He wouldnt come when called (knowing we wanted to take it off him) and managed to swallow the very smelly portion in one piece we think, after making a few crunching
noises ! The badly decomposed bird was about the size of a large thrush. Is it likely to pass through him, be regurgitated, - or do him any harm internally ?

Thorneyglatt
 
It might upset his stomach a bit, depending on how decomposed - but dogs are natural scavengers. Don't feel you're alone in this - mine do it often!!
 
Last year my bitch (That's the dog not she who must be obeyed :D) picked up a live mouse in her mouth and swallowed it in one gulp, no chewing and thankfully no side effects.

My terrier is a little sh1t and frequently eats bits of dead things when we are out and after nearly 13 years he has never shown any adverse affects.
 
I would not worry about it mine eat anything they can get hold of. The older the better for them.
It does make me wonder, they are meant to have a good sense of smell, but if it makes our stomach turn they want to eat it.:cuckoo:
 
A dog that s allowed to eat that sort of crap from a pup would have the gut flora to cope with it without many worries apart from maybe being a bit farty!
But it is not a good thing to let dogs decide for themselves what to eat you just never know what it is ,maybe a rat full of warfarin or worse. Also a dog that scavenges carrion and then doesnot come when called risks taking road kill and becoming road kill.
Break the habit if you can.
I have working terriers that i dont allow to eat carrion and my brother fed one some green tripes when feeding his hounds, it was off its legs within two hours and on a drip with a massive antibiotics doses and a 50/50 chance of surviving the night. Apparently a massive toxic shock from the bacteria in the tripes which his gut flora were not tuned up to deal with.
 
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