Thanksgiving Pet Safety Tips

Some things about our Turkey Day traditions are downright dangerous for our furry friends.

By Admin on November 21, 2018
Bettmann / Contributor / GETTY

The pets are underfoot at Thanksgiving dinner, and it tends to be a more relaxed time for almost everyone! But, some things about our Turkey Day traditions are downright dangerous for our furry friends.

Here are a few pet safety tips for Thanksgiving from the AVMA:

  • Keep the feast on the table—not under it.  Eating turkey or turkey skin – sometimes even a small amount – can cause a life-threatening condition in pets known as pancreatitis. Fatty foods are hard for animals to digest, and many foods that are healthy for people are poisonous to pets – including onions, raisins and grapes. If you want to share a Thanksgiving treat with your pet, make or buy a treat that is made just for them.
  • No pie or other desserts for your pooch. Chocolate can be harmful for pets, even though many dogs find it tempting and will sniff it out and eat it. The artificial sweetener called xylitol – commonly used in gum and sugar-free baked goods – also can be deadly if consumed by dogs or cats.
  • Yeast dough can cause problems for pets, including painful gas and potentially dangerous bloating.
  • Put the trash away where your pets can’t find it.  A turkey carcass sitting out on the carving table, or left in a trash container that is open or easily opened, could be deadly to your family pet. Dispose of turkey carcasses and bones – and anything used to wrap or tie the meat, such as strings, bags and packaging – in a covered, tightly secured trash bag placed in a closed trash container outdoors (or behind a closed, locked door).

There are so many more! You can read those here.

Around the site