Take care seriously on Easter Day
Easter days are soon upon us, and it’s time for well -covered Easter tables, Easter decorations and hopefully warm sunshine hours in the garden. But the cozy atmosphere can quickly come to an end if the dog or cat sticks the muzzle in Easter food, Easter decorations or Easter lines and must go to the vet.
– Easter is usually a nice holiday for the Danes, but the holiday days can actually be risky for our cats and dogs. Every year we see seasonal damage reviews – e.g. Poisoning caused by Easter flowers and Easter decorations or Easter decorations that get stuck in the stomach and intestinal tract of the animals. But also Easter licks and fat Easter food send dogs and cats to the vet with gastrointestinal problems and poisonings, explains Lotte Evers, Marketing Manager at Agria, in one press release.
Easter decorations and Easter flowers
– It is not uncommon for curious dogs and cats to taste spring flowers as they start to stick their heads up the ground: Tulips and hyacinths can cause severe poisoning, but especially the daffodil is dangerous to our four -legged. Right now we are starting to stay more outdoors, and so it is good to think that especially the onion can cause bad poisoning: just 15 grams of daffodil’s onion is enough for a medium -sized dog to get liver damage, kidney damage or end in life danger, Evers explains, adding:
– Curious and playful dogs and cats will probably also find Easter decorations and dangling decorations interesting. Therefore, be sure to keep items such as Easter decorations, feathers and decorative eggs out of reach, and be aware that your pets do not eat parts of the decoration. It can result in the dog or cat having to have to have the Operating table to get the Easter decorations out again.