cleaning our dog’s teeth. we all know it’s important. but for some of us, it’s something that seems hard to do regularly.

One of my new Year’s resolutions was to do a better job of taking care of Baxter’s teeth. Now, it’s time for me to report on how I’m doing.

Odpoveď?

Not great.

Argh.

I have brushes and paste and chews and rinses. I have a relatively cooperative dog. I had a few nights in a row where I brushed his teeth best after dinner. but then I stopped.

I’ve chose that what I need is a habit.

I’ve heard it takes something like three weeks to establish a new habit.

I also know that goal setting isn’t enough on its own. I need a plan. So here is my plan to establish our new dental cleaning practice over the next three weeks.

How to make brushing your dog’s teeth a habit

Timing

I liked brushing teeth after dinner. We weren’t pressed for time, Baxter was pretty relaxed, my husband was home so we could label team if we needed to. but then Baxter started going to bed before we finished eating. He ate his dinner, did a lap around the kitchen to make sure we hadn’t dropped anything and walked down the hall to the bedroom.

Getting him up or getting down on the floor to brush his teeth while he’s laying in bed are not ideal scenarios.

New plan: brush teeth in the morning.

Equipment

Mr. B has much more brushes, flavours of toothpaste, sprays and rinses than I do. The regular toothbrush is easiest to maneuver around his mouth instead of the finger brush, and he seems alright with the taste of the canine toothpaste.

However, he has some tartar buildup on his teeth that’s too hard for the brush.

New plan: add a tartar-softening rinse to his drinking water and find a scraper to try to remove the tartar.

Extra help

The comments on my last post and my own experience with Baxter confirm the most significant help for clean teeth is raw bones. We don’t feed raw (yet), so once a week we try to give Baxter a soup bone to chomp on.

The issues are we’re not consistent with every week, and I choose he have the bones outside where he can lie down and chew for an hour or more. When he’s inside—like in the winter—he brings the bones to his bed. Yuck.

New plan: I’m not sure what I’m going to do here. Honestly, I may wait until the weather warms up to officially add bones to our routine. spring is less than a month away now.

What else ought to I consider in my tooth cleaning plan?

How do you take care of your dog’s teeth?

See our article: I can’t afford a dental for my dog

Julia Preston is a regular writer for That Mutt. visit her blog home on 129 Acres where she writes about her adventures of country living and diy renovating.

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