How to keep a chenille and what to do:
First, just change the environment within 20 days can not bathe can not walk.
Second, you can’t eat meat or drink milk for two weeks after you arrive home.
Third, within two months of arriving home, porridge food or dry food soaked in water is appropriate. Some other food, often cause indigestion, diarrhea, etc. So do not let the dog eat.
Fourth, feed the dog food 4 times a day. Each time a standard paper cup of 2/3 (softened paper cup of 2/3), remember to soften with hot water and then give him to eat, can not eat more and messy to eat. If you want to give your dog more nutrients you can add a boiled egg yolk every day, remember that an egg yolk should be divided into three feedings.
Fifth, do not feed your puppy food that is too cold or too hot, which can cause damage to your puppy’s mouth.
Sixth, don’t give your puppy spoiled and rotten food.
Seven, you should immediately throw away every meal leftover dog food, each feeding is best to wash the food bowl, so as to prevent diarrhea or food poisoning.
Eight, don’t feed your puppy cat food as dog food because cat food contains too much protein.
Nine: Don’t disturb your puppy while he’s eating, or he’ll become nervous at mealtimes later.
Ten, the water should be supplied adequately, to prepare clean containers, do not feed raw water, to cool the boiling water, and constantly change fresh water, do not not change the stale water for several days. Let the dog drink freely.
Eleven, in the dog 21 days to do deworming, but between the dog in the time we do not pay attention to may eat everything, and 99% will have “worms”! So remember to give it again “deworming”, otherwise, the terrible consequences of “intestines” is inevitable! Deworming method: Go to the drugstore and buy a generation of “Levomycetin”, once every half a month, each time for 3 days, half a tablet a day. Feed! For 2 months.
Twelve, the puppy is afraid of cold, so whether it is winter or summer, pay attention to do a good job of keeping the puppy warm. Don’t let your puppy’s abdomen touch the ground for a long time, so it is easy to catch a cold, causing diarrhea or cold.
Thirteen, do not meet the puppy because it begs for food from you, this will make it develop bad habits, and the puppy will soon be overweight, should establish a set of strict feeding time, let the puppy eat in its food bowl. The puppy should also be taught to learn to sit and wait for food and to start eating only with the owner’s permission.
Schnauzers are known for having toughness and perseverance, and in cold Siberia they need to adapt to the huge temperature difference of dozens of degrees between day and night. A qualified Sheltie must have a unique coat layer to withstand the harsh environment. The coat of a Schnauzer has 2 layers, the outer coat and the fleece, where the outer coat is divided into 2 segments, you can usually see the dark shiny top end, and the lower end of the coat is coarse and relatively light colored. This top shiny hair is called the silvertip and is used to protect against UV light and heat from the hot sun: the thick hair roots grow tightly inside the skin, so generally speaking the outer coat of the Sheltie is relatively free of hair loss.
Diet:
In the daily feed for Schnauzers, there should be 250 to 350 grams of meat, plus an equal amount of cooked dry veggie ingredients or cookies. Meat should be cooked and chopped first, add the right amount of water, and mix with cooked dry ingredients before feeding. Feeding should be timed and limited to end within 15-25 minutes. If the food is not finished within the specified time, the trough should be taken away and cleaned. Water should be supplied 2 to 3 times a day. Brush its coat every day to keep it clean. In the spring and fall, trim the excessively long part of the coat, and regularly remove ear wax, tartar and eye droppings as well as trim the toes and claws.
Schnauzers are unique in their gastrointestinal function and are prone to congenital hepatic portosystemic shunts and hemorrhagic gastroenteritis (which usually occurs between the ages of two and four years). This hemorrhagic gastroenteritis is not caused by viruses and is more likely to occur in miniature schnauzers, while in large schnauzers, because they have malabsorption of vitamin B12, and it is very likely to cause anemia that is no longer present (usually occurs in dogs between six and twelve weeks of age), owners need to pay special attention to it.
Protein and fat requirements are relatively high, so it is recommended to feed puppy food to 18 months of age before switching to adult dog food. Normally, you can appropriate some fish or beef and lamb to supplement the appropriate to promote development, calcium requirements are relatively high, a few times a week calcium tablets or calcium powder for the chenari is very necessary. For the brand of dog food, due to the large differences in the gastrointestinal function of the chenari, so the best depending on the dog, try to find some protein and fat content of high quality dog food. If you don’t have the conditions you can add some chicken, lamb, beef, pork or sea fish in the dog food to supplement some protein.
The dog’s ear, cheek and head hair should also be trimmed regularly, and eyebrows should be trimmed and beautified. In the course of ordinary breeding, we should always pay attention to the dog’s state of mind, action, appetite, the pattern of stool, the dryness and moisture of the nose pads and the coolness and heat of the nose pads, so as to keep abreast of the dog’s health, and to take early treatment measures if we find any abnormality or signs of illness.
Exercise 3 or more times a day for 20 to 30 minutes each time is preferred. It is recommended that pet dogs exercise once or twice a day for about half an hour each time. Chenery’s in pulling sled race is the speed rather than strength, so Chenery usually physical training is the main speed, daily speed running and jogging several times a day for dog show on the star dog is very necessary, in the whole exercise process, the front and rear limbs as much as possible to stretch for the Chenery form will have no excuse to help.
The most common skin problem in the Schnauzer is atopic dermatitis, which occurs in females from six months of age until seven years of age; in addition, the Miniature Schnauzer is prone to a condition known as Schnauzer comedo syndrome (Schnauzer comedo syndrome).
The skin of the Schnauzer is sensitive by nature, and is prone to superficial suppurative necrolytic dermatitis (Superfical suppurative necrolytic dermatitis) due to incomplete cleansing or allergy to shampoo or allergy to sulfonamides, which can cause skin inflammation; in addition to this, the Schnauzer is prone to endocrine problems in the areas of diabetes mellitus and hypothyroidism. In addition, Schnauzers are also prone to diabetes and endocrine problems such as hypothyroidism.
Beauty Treatments:
In the daily feed for Schnauzers, there should be 250 to 350 grams of meat, plus an equal amount of cooked dry veggie ingredients or cookies. Meat should be cooked, chopped, added with the right amount of water, and mixed with cooked dry veggie mix before feeding. Feeding should be timed and limited to end within 15-25 minutes. If the food is not finished within the specified time, the trough should be taken away and cleaned. Water should be supplied 2 to 3 times a day.
Brush its coat daily to keep it clean. Trim any overgrown parts of the coat in the spring and fall, and regularly remove earwax, tartar, and eye droppings, as well as trim the toes and claws.
The dog’s ears, cheeks and head hair should also be trimmed regularly, and eyebrows should be trimmed for beautification.
For trimming the coat on all parts of the body, pay attention to the following points:
(1) The hair on the skull cap should not be allowed to grow too long, but should be trimmed shorter.
(2) Hair between the cheeks and corners of the mouth and under the eyes should also be trimmed shorter.
(3) The hairs on the muzzle and the whiskers on the cheeks and jaws should be trimmed moderately to make them well-proportioned and beautiful.
(4) The hairs on the inside and outside of the ears should be trimmed shorter, and the hairs on the outside circumference of the ear shell should be trimmed flush.
(5) The hair on the throat should be trimmed shorter and neater.
(6) Neck hair and coat should be trimmed not too long and not too short so that the dorsal line is balanced and neat.
(7) The hairs on the neck and back should be trimmed in the order of the hairs starting from the back and going to the left and right.
(8) The hair on the front neck and front chest should also be trimmed in the order of the hair toward the elbow.
(9) The dorsal hairs on the shoulders should be trimmed progressively forward in sequence toward the forechest and be shorter.
(10) The hair from the back to the underbelly of the chest should be left appropriately long and should be trimmed toward the back of the body.
(11) The hair from the back up to the middle of the thighs should be trimmed very short in order to make it work.
(12) The coat at the waist should be trimmed a little shorter than the chest hair, and the hair curling upward below the waist should also be cut short.
(13) When trimming the hairs on the forelimbs, cut the hairs in front of the elbows and on the sides; the hairs around the toes and the hairs between the toes should also be cut.
(14) The line from the shoulders, down and behind the tips of the toes and from the front chest to the tips of the toes should be trimmed evenly and neatly.
(15) The hair on the inside of the hind limbs should be neatly trimmed.
(16) The hair from the back to the middle of the thighs should be cut very short.
(17) The hair on the part of the hock shall be cut so short that the skin can be clearly seen.
(18) Hair that is too long on the tail should be trimmed appropriately, but not cut too short.
(19) The hair from the tail down to the rump should be neatly clipped, but not cut too short.
In the ordinary course of feeding, we should always pay attention to the dog’s state of mind, action, appetite, the shape of the stool, the dryness and moisture of the nose pads and the coolness and heat of the nose pads, so as to keep abreast of the dog’s health, and to take early therapeutic measures if we find any irregularities or signs of illness.