Note to self:
Don't replant tree seedlings at dogs-eye-level if you have a dog that thinks sticks are toys!
Our little Tenor (who, at 80 lbs. really isn't so little anymore, but will always be the littlest of our dogs in terms of being the youngest, most puppy-like) has a thing for sticks.
So much so, that this Spring, he realized he was out of freshly fallen twigs in the backyard itself, that he started going after low-lying tree branches and shrubs in our "garden" area!
At first, I didn't much care for the shrubs in the backyard that he was breaking off and munching on, so I didn't care. Plus, those bushes grow like weeds, so I figured even if he broke off a few branches, they'd grow back in no time.
Wrong!
I didn't stop him early enough, and he's managed to bite off smaller and smaller branches -- to the point that 2 of the 3 shrubs are practically GONE, and the last one is a mere skeleton of its former self.
Pecan Trees Are Mighty Tasty!
Most recently, Tenor found the Pecan Tree I had repotted into a medium-sized ceramic pot, and (like an idiot) placed below the big Red Japanese Maple tree. This is precisely where the dogs love to play ...and scavage for new tree branches! The first picture on this page is Tenor showing me his new find -- or at least the portion of it he had left intact. There were about 6 more inches to this branch before Tenor got ahold of it, and there were lots of little individual budding branches beginning to show their face....Not any more!
Tenor's got quite a track record when it comes to stripping trees & shrubs of their branches...
Our Dogs Love Sticks
One unusual "trick" that we've taught each of our dogs is to crack the shell from peanuts in order to get to the nut inside.
Oddly enough, they seem to view sticks in much the same way, minus the tasty insides. Our dogs can spend hours biting sticks into smaller and smaller pieces -- with absolutely no intention of eating them. In fact, each gets this funny look on his face if a shard of tree bark has fallen into his mouth. It is simply the act of snapping and breaking twigs that they seem to enjoy so much.
IMPORTANT: I realize that sticks can be very dangerous for dogs -- especially if they happen to ingest even a small portion of one, and even moreso if the plant that the stick came from is poisonous to dogs. My dogs also tend to chase one another -- with sticks in their mouths -- trying to be the last one with the smallest piece at any given moment. I do my best to supervise the dogs any time they're playing with sticks, and anytime I say "drop it" they do.
The best news: I think I've managed to break Tenor of this behavior, and he is no longer biting off branches from our "live" trees & shrubs. Whew!
And we are finally seeing some new regrowth on the shrubs in our garden.
More about Tenor's personal mission to de-shrub our backyard... and my personal mission to repot some trees in the backyard. (Plus a way for you to get 2 FREE tree seedlings!)
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