Kembudo-Kai Kempoka
Senior Master
I stopped believing this, because I've had dogs all my life...most of whom have happened on large quantities of chocolate cake or cookies, gotten the trots or a bit sick, then been fine. Nevertheless, better safe than sorry, I always keep my chocolate out of their reach.
I adopted Freska from an abused home several years ago, and she has been a project...bringing out her personality has been ongoing over the last 4 years. She just started to "get it", too, playing on the floor with me like the other dogs for the first time just a couple days ago. After that, there's been a new sweetness in her personality, coming up and asking for affection...also new for her.
She also had epilepsy, and would have occasional seizures. I typically just sit with her, talk to her, hold her and pet her while she gets through them. The vet gave me some meds for her, so that she doesn'e have strings of them...one, a tablet, then a doped up dog for a few days.
Last night, I heard/felt her starting a siezure, cuddled up with her, and the seizure worsened until she just passed from it. In the kitchen, I found the empty wrapper of some baking chocolate. The little sneak figured out how to get up on the table, and open a cupboard she never opened before (she was a very talented thief and sneak, so all the lower cupboards were off for use for food...pots & pans only, and the trash is in a locked closet). It turns out, baking chocolate is hundreds of times higher in the active chemical in chocolate than the chocolate cakes or bars my other dogs have eaten over the years. And it kills by causing terminal seizures.
Keep chocolate away from your dogs. Especially if they are sweet, sneaky, twirly girls.
Good-bye, Fressa-poodle. I'll miss your doe brown eyes and clever manipulations.
I adopted Freska from an abused home several years ago, and she has been a project...bringing out her personality has been ongoing over the last 4 years. She just started to "get it", too, playing on the floor with me like the other dogs for the first time just a couple days ago. After that, there's been a new sweetness in her personality, coming up and asking for affection...also new for her.
She also had epilepsy, and would have occasional seizures. I typically just sit with her, talk to her, hold her and pet her while she gets through them. The vet gave me some meds for her, so that she doesn'e have strings of them...one, a tablet, then a doped up dog for a few days.
Last night, I heard/felt her starting a siezure, cuddled up with her, and the seizure worsened until she just passed from it. In the kitchen, I found the empty wrapper of some baking chocolate. The little sneak figured out how to get up on the table, and open a cupboard she never opened before (she was a very talented thief and sneak, so all the lower cupboards were off for use for food...pots & pans only, and the trash is in a locked closet). It turns out, baking chocolate is hundreds of times higher in the active chemical in chocolate than the chocolate cakes or bars my other dogs have eaten over the years. And it kills by causing terminal seizures.
Keep chocolate away from your dogs. Especially if they are sweet, sneaky, twirly girls.
Good-bye, Fressa-poodle. I'll miss your doe brown eyes and clever manipulations.