Nah, dogs can just survive a fair bit of chocolate and a Tate's bag doesn't have much in there. They're thin cookies with scattered chips, it's not like it's a solid bar or something.
Nothing freaks out a dog owner more than when their dog gets ahold of chocolate. Once mine somehow found a 70% cacao bar that I had and ate a lot of it, foil wrapper & all🤦🏼♀️. One of the scariest moments I had with her. I miss that goofball
My dog once ate like half a bag of wrapped dark chocolates, we managed to get him to throw most of it up though since we caught him pretty quickly after it happened and he was fine, that dog is crazy he’s always been obsessed with eating chocolate for some reason 😂
The surprising truth is that dogs can eat lots of chocolate and be fine. A dog got into my chocolate stash and ate a whole Lindt bar and a bunch of chocolate buttons. I was freaking out and got my brother to call a vet line because I was too panicked to talk coherently. Turns out a Bassett Hound can eat all that and not even experience any ill effects.
my golden ate an entire chocolate easter bunny and was fine, chocolate isnt technically lethal to dogs, or it is, but its also lethal to humans, its just that dogs have a lower tolerance to it than we do
An important thing to know about dogs and chocolate is that, chances are, nothing will happen if they eat some chocolate. It’s still not wise to give them any if you don’t know for sure, of course, but they will usually have no effects from it, and at most have an upset stomach and maybe some diarrhea. That said! It also depends on your dog’s breed and size. For example, my mother’s big pitbull at an entire new thing of Oreo cookies with chocolate filling (he found where she hid it) and had no side effects from it. That’s probably because of his size. But there are breeds where even a little of it can be deadly. So it’s best to find out what breed your dog is and has in them to be safe, and generally not give them any unless you know a tiny bit is fine once in a while. Also an interesting side fact! Onions are dangerous to dogs as well, as we know, but so is garlic! They belong in the same family of species and has the same things in it that onions does that makes them dangerous to dogs!
@@Lucy-fn9rj You’re wrong with that… well, somewhat anyway. It does matter what breed they are. My mother worked for Paws for Hope, and she taught me a lot of what I know about dogs. She told me a certain breed was far more susceptible to chocolate than others, but I can’t remember which one was. But weight does indeed play a huge factor in it as well, as well as every dog being different. Though we can all agree giving dogs chocolate in general is a bad idea. Especially dark chocolate, since that has more of the chemical that is poisonous to them in it.
The doc doesn't know the recipe and thus can't help calculate the dose. Maybe they could try to vacuum the stomach but that surely would cost a lot. I'd try to find out whether there is a risk first as well
The chocolate looks light so I think it’s milk chocolate which has less theobromine in it then dark or baker’s chocolate has. There’s a way to find out how much chocolate you should worry about your dog eating (google: dog chocolate toxicity .. maybe put by weight or by chocolate type in the search). But dogs can eat a lot of chocolate before it’s dangerous for them if it’s not dark or baker’s chocolate. As for cocoa powder it has a very low level of theobromine
My yellow lab once ate an entire Kirkland brand bag of semisweet chocolate chips. She projectile vomited 5 times that night. She was fine after. True story.
@@lucasrampasso3428it’s a joke about Andrew Tate, the “influencer” that only intellectually impaired people pay attention to, who is facing human trafficking charges.
I think its dependent on the dogs weight so if its a medium to big dog it'd take a lot I think its like an ounce per pound of dog, so if your dog weighs 50-100 pounds i think the sugar content in the cookie is going to be more dangerous then the, like, half ounce of chocolate per cookie.
My cat got into a wrapped box of pralines once, I found him chewing one and thought he'd eaten all of them. £100 trip to the vet and found nothing wrong with him. I ended up finding all the chocolates hidden under my bed each one chewed once and left there.
The vet is going to tell you to either wait and see, or to cherish the last moments. Especially if you don't know the amount of deadly substances the dog ingested.
Most chocolate, especially milk chocolate, has such a low amount of bromine that it would take a ridiculous amount before it is toxic. Dark chocolate is more toxic, but even that takes a lot.
Baltimore's Otterbein's chocolate chip cookies, hands down blows Tate's away. If you've never had it, the second you're driving down 95 and see a Royal Farms sign, stop. Get them and their spicy chicken tenders and ask for them fresh. RoFo beats the brakes off Sheetz and Wawas every single day.
one time I made a batch of chocolate chip cookies for my mom to take to a friend of the family's. said Friends dog ate most of the cookies when they're back was turned. the dog threw most of it back up much to its displeasure and everyone else's.
One of my childhood dogs was a chocolate lab named sienna, she was known for her love of chocolate. Once she ate a whole pound of fudge and was completely fine
That's not even close to true. Milk chocolate can be fatal if a dog eats an ounce per pound of body weight, or 1/16 of their body weight. Dark chocolate and baking chocolate even less than that can be fatal.