Dog Food And Water Containers Mountain Home AR

No food should ever be fed to a dog unless that food is put into some type of a container. Here are some tips when choosing a container to use as your dog's food and water dishes.

Local Companies

Trinity Aquatics Pet Boutique
(870) 425-6360
916 Highway 62 E
Mountain Home, AR
Marine World Tropical Fish
(501) 624-7477
705 Lakeshore Dr
Hot Springs National Park, AR
Bill's Pets
(501) 847-9669
23231 Interstate 30 Ste 30
Bryant, AR
Pet Cellar the
(870) 628-5908
115 Knight Haven Cir
Star City, AR
Lucky Paws Pet Sitting Llc
(479) 575-0119
Fayetteville, AR
Teacup Puppies R US
(479) 248-1808
1478 N Main St
Cave Springs, AR
Pet Shop the
(870) 741-4452
617 Village Inn Rd
Harrison, AR
Stoddard's Pet Shop
(501) 623-5472
1307 Albert Pike Rd
Hot Springs, AR
Abundant Light Photography
(479) 631-5915
2870 W Walnut St
Rogers, AR
Just Fish
(479) 478-7000
7320 Rogers Ave
Fort Smith, AR

Provided By:

Provided by: I-Love-Dogs.com

No food should ever be fed to a dog unless that food is put into some type of a container.  The practice of putting food on newspapers or directly on a cage floor or the ground serves no purpose except to contaminate the food from the surroundings.  This method also contaminates the surroundings from the food, draw flies, increase parasite transmission and soil the dog's coat. The money, time and energy a dog owner thinks he is saving by such feeding practices are completely wiped out by the loss of the dog, the time spent to clean floors and combat insects, or the effort needed to put a food-soiled coat back into show condition.

Feeding Bowls: No feeding bowl should be used unless it meets the following criteria:
1) It is the correct size for the dog that is using the container.
2) It is designed so that it is easily washed, drained and dried, or can be thrown away after each use.
3) It is made from satisfactory materials.

Feeding containers are made from a large number of materials, some good and some bad.  An ideal material from which a dog's food container is made should:
1. Never be toxic to a dog.  This includes the body of the feeding bowl, its coverings, and any paint, decals, printing or other decorations.
2. Capable of withstanding a reasonable amount of abuse from a dog's teeth.
3. Made of a substance that is non-corrosive to dog foods, dog urine and the other substances to which a feeding container normally may be subjected.
4. Resistant to soaps, detergents, water, grease and disinfectant solutions.
5. Resistant to breakage, cracking or similar damage under normal wear and tear.
6. Reasonably priced.

A material that meets every one of these specifications can be quite difficult to find.  However, there are four materials that meet enough to be considered as suitable for dog food containers. These are glass, pottery, plastic and metal.

Glass containers are the least suitable of the four.  They are unfit for kennels or breeder operations. Their fragile nature makes them unsuitable. The feeding bowl used for one house dog usually is handled individually at each feeding, just as the family's dishes and bowls are.  Under such restricted conditions of handling, glass containers rarely are subject to breakage.  And because of their low cost and attractive nature, glass feeding and watering bowls make satisfactory household food containers.



Visit I-love-Dogs.com more information on dogs, dog names and more.

Featured Local Company

Rocky Top Hearts

417-260-1527
4700 Bado
Cabool, MO


Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History