Protect Your Pup’s Paws with Mushers Cream
This easy-to-apply all-natural wax-based cream protects paws from harsh surfaces. Protect paws from sand, hot pavement, ice and salt with all natural 100 percent wax-based cream. When applied to pads and between toes, dries in seconds to form a semi-permeable shield. Non-toxic, non-allergenic, non-staining formula can be used weekly or as needed to prevent abrasions, burning, drying and cracking. Perfect for mushing, hunting, walking or before any outdoor activity. Acts as an invisible boot to prevent potential paw problems. Easy-to-apply formula contains vitamin E to moisturize and help heal wounds and keep paws healthy.
Helpful Pet First Aid Book
The Pet Emergency Pocket Guide is a practical reference for pet owners that provides complete planning, response and survival guidelines for both common and uncommon pet emergencies, presented in an easy to use and convenient pocket-sized format. This compact tool delivers step-by-step instructions for daily care, first aid, illness and injury assessment, emergency planning, and natural disaster preparation and survival. It features tabbed, color-coded and illustrated sections that make it easy to use, with checklists and inventory lists for creating your own pet emergency, travel, and evacuation kits. This new Second Edition features the following:
Updated content as suggested by emergency veterinarians Expanded Glossary of Signs & Conditions, including new entries and illustrations Reorganized content and tabs for ease-of-use Updated toxic food list and detailed reactions for dogs Information about preventing dog bites and scratches, as well as how to break up dog fights 3 pages of common plants that are poisonous to cats New section for ‘Pocket Pets’, including basic information and signs and conditions for ferrets, guinea pigs, hamsters, gerbils, mice, rats, rabbits, birds, fish, turtles and snakes New graphics, charts and an updated design
Why You Need a Stat!Syringe:
- Save your dog before its too late!
- Chocolate, grapes, antifreeze, sugarless gum = toxic to dogs
- Uses standard Hydrogen Peroxide 3% (4oz bottle INCLUDED)
- Fill syringe up to the notch corresponding to your dogs weight
- Designed to work in poisoning emergencies to inducing vomiting in dogs
- Product information With bottle
For dogs only! Not for cats or humans!! Each year countless dogs are killed by accidental ingestion of chocolate, rat poison, antifreeze and prescription pills. If your pet got into something poisonous, you always want to call your veterinarian or an animal poison control center first. Why? Because sometimes you can cause more injury or harm if you induce vomiting when it’s not appropriate. If instructed to induce vomiting, the STAT!Syringe is designed to quickly administer the proper dose of hydrogen peroxide 3%. It is a must have for every dog first aid kit.
How to Induce Vomiting in Dogs:
You will need:
- Standard household Hydrogen Peroxide 3% (do not use any other type!)
- STAT!Syringe
- Paper towels. Fill the STAT!Syringe up to the notch corresponding to your dogs weight with the 3% Hydrogen Peroxide.
Place the soft tip of the syringe into the side of your dogs mouth and angle it toward the cheek. Slowly press the plunger of the syringe until the entire dose is delivered.
You may repeat this dose for a maximum of two times but wait at least 15 mins between doses. Walking your dog around may help to expedite the process. If still does not vomit after another 10 minutes, bring your dog and the chemical bottle or other toxin to the vet at once as the vet may have stronger products to induce vomiting. It worked! Now what? Vomiting is a quick fix, intended to get the offending substance out of the animals system and to give you time to get to your veterinarian; a trip to the vet is still warranted for precautionary measures. Depending on what was ingested, activated charcoal may need to be given by a healthcare provider to help bind any residual poison and to prevent further absorption.
Because there may be important clues needing to be discovered, be sure to save the vomitus to show your veterinarian. When to induce vomiting? If you come home to discover your dog has eaten chocolate, sugarless gum, fertilizer, alcohol, grapes, mushrooms, or prescription meds. See the pet first aid book included in our kit for more comprehensive list.
Sandra –
OMG this saved my poor dog paw! We were camping and he got cut in the creek. I’m so glad I had this kit!
Full of items that can actually make a difference. Well worth the price.