HE is on a mission to help our pets . . . and is here to answer YOUR questions.
Sean, who is the head vet at tailored pet food firm tails.com, has helped with owners’ queries for ten years. He says: “If your pet is acting funny or is under the weather, or you want to know about nutrition or exercise, just ask. I can help keep pets happy and healthy.”
Today our pet vet helps two rabbits who get cold at night
Sean McCormack, head vet at tails.com, promises he can ‘help keep pets happy and healthy’
Q) MY rabbits James and Gonzo and my guinea pigs Carlos and Jose get cold on a night.
Is it OK to warm large pebbles in the oven to put in their hutches?
Helen Van Horn, Cambridge
Sean says: What cool names. I’d be very careful about that, as you can’t control the heat so there is a danger of them burning themselves if they come in direct contact.
Pet-safe warming blankets have an insert you can heat up. Otherwise, covering their enclosure or house with an insulating layer like a blanket is a good idea. Remember to let some air flow in.
The main thing is plenty of dry, fresh bedding. Provide loads of straw for them to nestle into.
Q) I GOT a yellow Lab called Max just before this lockdown.
He’s great fun and I have been training him with a local trainer but he gets up too early. He sleeps in a crate happily but wakes between 5am and 6.30am.
He doesn’t need a wee and if I sit on the sofa with him, he will sleep until 8am. I tried to leave him but his yap turns hysterical.
We put the crate in our room and left the door open too. Nothing works. We are shattered!
Kate Jones, Perth, Tayside
Sean says: I feel your pain. This is a classic vicious cycle. He whines and yaps because he’s awake and bored, you go to him and reassure him. He gets the attention he craves and settles again.
To break the cycle, ignore the unwanted behaviour at all costs. Earplugs are your friend. Get him out for a wee last thing at night. If you go to him on his 20th yap, he’ll yap 40 times the next morning, as he knows it will work.
If you don’t cave, he’ll eventually realise it doesn’t work any more.
Colin wants to know why his Cockapoo Daisy gets scared by loud noises
Q) DAISY, our three-year-old Cockapoo, is so timid she refuses to walk if she hears a noise, a car or people pass by.
Sometimes she gets just a few metres from the house and won’t go any further.
If she hears a firework, she will run and hide in a corner.
Colin Bond, Chelmsford, Essex
Sean says: Poor Daisy. Without observing what’s happening — and how you react to her behaviour — it’s hard to give specific behavioural advice here.
Qualified animal behaviourists (not to be confused with trainers, who also do a great job) are worth their weight in gold. I’d invest in one. Many are doing remote consultations.
Techniques to look up in the mean time are habituation, desensitisation and response substitution.
Tails.com provides tailor-made nutritional food for pets
Q) WE’VE had Poppy, who is now three, since she was a puppy. She won’t eat tinned food or dog biscuits.
We have tried everything. All she will eat is chicken. I worry she is not getting the right nutrients. I have tried starving her so she would be hungry and eat — to no avail.
Rosemary Matthews, North London
Sean says: Unfortunately, chicken will not provide everything Poppy needs. Something has to change.
You are in charge here. She needs a complete, balanced diet, tailored to her individual needs. There may be a hunger strike at first but you mustn’t cave.
An occasional bit of chicken mixed with her food is fine. But she needs to quit her addiction.
Star of the week
RUBY the flat-coated retriever saved the life of her owner when Chloe Johns slipped into a diabetic coma.
She was taken to hospital when Ruby, her medical alert dog from Hypo Hounds, wouldn’t leave her side.
Our star of the week is Ruby, who saved her owner’s life when she slipped into a diabetic coma
Chloe, 12, from Chelmsford in Essex, has Type 1 diabetes.
Her mum Kathy, 53, said: “It could have been fatal if she hadn’t been treated. She was seriously dehydrated with high blood sugars.
“It was the most serious episode we’ve had. It’s thanks to Ruby that she had the treatment she needed.”
Chloe spent a night in hospital and has since recovered. She says: “Ruby is my best friend. She makes me happy and feel safe.”