Sentences with phrase «eat dangerous objects»

If you board your dog and you know he'll eat dangerous objects, warn the kennel owner.
Indoor hazards may be less obvious but they do exist, for example: household chemicals, human medications, eating dangerous objects (elastic bands, needle - and - thread), pull - string blinds, electrical wires, crush injuries from toppled items such as stepladders, caught in slammed doors.

Not exact matches

If your child does something dangerous, unhealthy, or destructive — walking with pens, eating crayons, or throwing stones, for example — gently instruct him or her about the proper use of the object: «Chairs are for sitting, not standing» or «You can bang the spoon on the pot, but it's not for hitting other things or people.»
Dogs eating snow could pick up dangerous objects or chemicals that may be hidden.
Pica — the act of purposefully eating non-food items — and destructive chewing can cause your pup to ingest dangerous objects, such as string, rubber, toys, mulch, rocks and twigs, causing internal damage, blockages and generally upset tummies.
Puppy chewing can break teeth, result in dangerous swallowed objects, or burns and electrocution if Junior bites an electrical cord or eats a poisonous plant.
There is of course very little statistical evidence of this assumption, and one should never allow dogs to eat things which seem dangerous for this reason, but all dog owners are familiar with, for example, when their dogs choose to eat soil, tree roots, bark, stones and other seemingly random objects.
For instance, your dog can easily knock over a harmful product and entertain himself by chewing the bottle and ingesting part of its contents or your dog may simply eat objects commonly found in the household that may cause an intestinal blockage, or worse, that may splinter causing dangerous internal bleeding as they pass through.
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