Can Dogs Eat Apples? Yes โ With One Important Precaution
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 24, 2026
Health guides for dogs of all breeds and ages
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 24, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 24, 2026
Bananas are a dog-friendly fruit that most dogs enjoy. They are non-toxic and packed with useful nutrients, but their high natural sugar content means they should be given as an occasional treat rather than a daily staple. Keep reading to learn exactly how much to give and how to serve them safely.
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
Yes, carrots are entirely safe for dogs of all ages, sizes, and breeds. Unlike many human foods that carry hidden dangers for pets — think grapes, onions, or xylitol — carrots pose no toxicity risk whatsoever. They appear on virtually every veterinary "approved" food list, and for good rโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 24, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 24, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 24, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 2025
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
Almonds are a beloved snack for humans โ packed with healthy fats, protein, and vitamin E. It's natural to wonder whether sharing a few with your dog is harmless. The short answer is: it's better not to. While almonds won't poison your dog the way macadamia nuts or grapes can, they pose a real set oโฆ
Turkey is one of the most common proteins in commercial dog food, and for good reason โ it's lean, highly digestible, and nutritionally excellent. Plain turkey breast is genuinely good for dogs. The problems arise not from the meat itself but from how we typically prepare and serve turkey, which invโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
Bread is one of the most common human foods, and most households have it around at all times. Whether it's a crust tossed to a waiting dog or a pilfered slice from the counter, bread finds its way to dogs regularly. Understanding exactly where the risks lie โ and they are very specific โ helps you mโฆ
Walnuts may be one of the most misunderstood nuts when it comes to dog safety. Many pet owners assume all walnuts carry the same level of risk, but the reality is more nuanced โ and in the case of black walnuts, far more alarming. Understanding the difference between walnut varieties could genuinelyโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
Cherries are a summer staple that many dog owners wonder about โ especially when their dog is eyeing a bowl of them. The answer here is genuinely complicated, and "it depends" is the honest starting point. Cherry flesh in tiny amounts from a properly pitted cherry is not acutely toxic, but the overaโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
Coconut has become a popular ingredient in the pet food world, appearing in everything from dog treats to grooming products. The interest is partly driven by the general wellness trend around coconut and partly by genuine evidence that certain coconut-derived compounds have beneficial properties. Buโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
Of all the nuts that are dangerous to dogs, macadamia nuts sit in their own category of alarm. They are not simply unhealthy or likely to cause digestive upset โ they are genuinely toxic, and the toxic mechanism is poorly understood, which makes the situation even more unpredictable. There is no knoโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
Peaches are a wonderful summer fruit โ sweet, fragrant, and full of vitamins. The good news is that the flesh of a fresh, ripe peach is generally safe for dogs to enjoy in moderate amounts. The bad news is that the pit is genuinely dangerous, and the difference between a healthy treat and a veterinaโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
Laminitis is one of the most devastating diseases in equine medicine โ a painful, potentially crippling condition that can end a horse's athletic career, rob it of quality of life, and in severe cases lead to euthanasia. It strikes horses of every age, breed, and discipline, from backyard ponies to โฆ
Not every article about dogs and food has to be a warning. Raspberries are genuinely one of the better fruits you can offer your dog, and the scientific basis for that is pretty solid. Rich in antioxidants, anti-inflammatory compounds, dietary fiber, and vitamins, raspberries offer real nutritional โฆ
Colic is not a single disease โ it is a broad term for abdominal pain in horses, and it is the single most dangerous medical emergency you will ever face as a horse owner. Every year, colic kills tens of thousands of horses worldwide. Some episodes resolve on their own within minutes; others spiral โฆ
Shrimp is a lean, tasty protein that many dogs find irresistible. The aroma alone is enough to bring most dogs running to the kitchen. The good news is that properly prepared shrimp is one of the more nutritious seafood options you can share with your dog โ assuming you follow the preparation guidelโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Published June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Published June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Published June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Published June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Published June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Published June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist — June 25, 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Published June 25, 2026
Apple cider vinegar has been a kitchen staple for centuries, and in recent years it has migrated from salad dressings into pet care cabinets across the world. Social media is awash with claims: ACV cures ear infections, repels fleas, alkalizes blood, aids digestion, and clears up skin conditions. Buโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
Few discoveries in veterinary nutrition have had as dramatic an impact as the identification of taurine deficiency as the cause of a devastating feline heart condition in the 1980s. Understanding why cats uniquely require dietary taurine โ and how to ensure they get enough โ is fundamental knowledgeโฆ
Before reviewing the evidence, a necessary clarification: two plants are commonly sold as "chamomile." Matricaria chamomilla (German chamomile) is the one with the best research behind it and is most commonly used medicinally. Chamaemelum nobile (Roman chamomile) shares some properties but has a difโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Reviewed June 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Reviewed June 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | Reviewed June 2026
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
Perna canaliculus, commonly known as the green-lipped mussel, is a bivalve shellfish native to New Zealand. It has been used in traditional Mฤori medicine for centuries, and since the 1970s has attracted scientific interest for its anti-inflammatory properties. Today it is one of the most widely recโฆ
Valerian root has been used as a sleep and anxiety aid in traditional European medicine for over two millennia. In modern veterinary practice, it appears in a growing number of calming supplements marketed to anxious, noise-phobic, or travel-stressed dogs. But does the herbal tradition hold up underโฆ
Melatonin sits at an unusual position among canine supplements: it is both a naturally occurring mammalian hormone and a widely available over-the-counter product. It is one of the few non-pharmaceutical calming agents that practicing veterinarians recommend with some regularity, and it has earned aโฆ
If your dog looks a little "fluffy," you are far from alone. According to the Association for Pet Obesity Prevention, approximately 56% of dogs in the United States are classified as overweight or obese โ making canine obesity the most common preventable disease in companion animals. Behind that staโฆ
Silybum marianum, commonly known as milk thistle, is a flowering plant in the daisy family with a 2,000-year history of use as a liver tonic in human medicine. Its active compound complex, silymarin, is a group of flavonolignans โ primarily silybin (also called silibinin), silydianin, and silychristโฆ
A quick internet search for "peppermint oil dogs" returns a flood of blog posts and social media content promoting it as a natural flea repellent, breath freshener, calming aid, or digestive supplement. Some websites recommend diluting it before applying it to fur; others suggest a few drops in a diโฆ
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist
By Sarah Bennett, Certified Animal Nutritionist | ForPetsHealthcare.com