Berkley Gulp Baits

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A Quick Search of the "Internets" says the Dog will be OK
(Apparently your Dog is NOT a Trailblazer with this)
But Keep it OUTSIDE until things pass
 
My old bulldog stuck her nose deep in a tackle box of treble hooked lures and cleaned the box out. Dogs and fishing just go together! Oh yeah, what color did you use in case I ever need to fish for Labs? :) Glad your dogs OK you can probably recycle the lures in a few days.
 
I don't know of much of anything that will hurt a black Lab in the diet department.

My sister's chewed through the power cord to the refrigerator one day while no one was home. No ill effects whatsoever. Yes, it was plugged in at the time.:eek:

Berkeley Gulps are a great trout (saltwater) bait. Maybe your dog can catch a trout while retrieving a duck! Multi-tasking, Labrador style!:D
 
Not hardly. Angus is what they call omnivorous-if it stands still he either eats it or pees on it. :D You know it's true love when you are having coffee in the back yard at daybreak and you have to walk over to your trusty lab and pull out that last half of sock he just can't quite get out on his own. :eek:
Then he's ready to play. :rolleyes:
 
My Doberman ate some carpet that's turned out well string hangen out of her hind end and all ick!
 
Not hardly. Angus is what they call omnivorous-if it stands still he either eats it or pees on it. :D You know it's true love when you are having coffee in the back yard at daybreak and you have to walk over to your trusty lab and pull out that last half of sock he just can't quite get out on his own. :eek:
Then he's ready to play. :rolleyes:

Ready wipes!:eek::D

Pete
 
Any good dairy farm dog worth his salt could pass those milk filter pads with no assistance...

I don't doubt it a bit. I do know, from firsthand experience, that a two year old Lab can pass -- in front of a totally grossed-out dozen or so passengers on a ferryboat -- the entire cover of a regulation-sized softball, with only a bit of an assist on the tail end of things, so to speak.

The rest of the ball was back home in the yard, as we discovered upon our return there.

Good times.:o
 
Our Ol' Gordon Setter, Darby (RIP) would deposit all manner of trinkets in our front yard; Thomas the Tank Engine car, balls, pens, mangled cassettes, lightbulb base:eek:, wrappers, tampons, dish rags. He never gave the comin' out part of the process much concern while he was inhalin' it up at the other end.

I have to ask my wife but, I seem to recall that Thomas car finding its way back into service after a quick hosin' off.:confused:

The only thing that didn't pass on its own was one of my kid's sweatbands. It got pretty tangled up in his intestines. My vet thought that roto-rooter surgery was worth 1500 bucks.

I can't believe soft baits will do any harm but Angus might be ****in' rubber bands for a few days! :D

Important to note...our vet told us not to grab and pull on any "partially ejected objects" like socks, rags, paper towels, etc. that might be wrapped up in something important inside and pulled out along with the object!
 
Important to note...our vet told us not to grab and pull on any "partially ejected objects" like socks, rags, paper towels, etc. that might be wrapped up in something important inside and pulled out along with the object!

Dang it, Koz, now you tell me! Where were you when the ferryboat left the dock? I coulda used your expertise that day!:D
 
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