Hollings Venison Filled Bone Natural Dog Treat

Hollings Venison Filled Bone Natural Dog Treat
Single Bone

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  • Single Bone £1.48

Description

Hollings Filled Bone is an n irresistibly tasty, natural treat for dogs.

This is packed with delicious meaty goodness providing a great tasting, beneficial and healthy longer lasting snack all dogs can enjoy any time of day.

Carefully prepared with 100% natural ingredients to ensure quality nutrition in every bone the Hollings filled bone venison is packed with natural flavour and goodness, and is the perfect treat for keeping your dog occupied and satisfied.

Each bone is individually wrapped to ensure a fresh and tasty bone treat, made with British and locally sourced bones to ensure quality and satisfaction every time. Perfect for feeding between meals as a tasty treat or reward for good behaviour the Hollings Filled Bone contains carefully select limited ingredients.

A natural bone with a natural meat filling it contains delicious animal fat blended with tasty venison and wheat encouraging your dog's individual desire to chew by providing a tempting centre no dog can resist.

Not only does it offer an irresistibly chewy and intensely meaty treat but it also helps to promote dental health with natural bones proven to be one of the best methods of cleaning a dogs teeth.

They naturally help to scrape away plaque and tartar through the natural chewing process, meaning each time your dog has a bone it's benefitting their oral hygiene too helping to keep teeth and gums clean and healthy, with nothing more than natural ingredients used every time.

Ingredients

  • Beef Bone, Venison Meal, Wheat, Fats & Oils.

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All prices include VAT where applicable.

Reviews (8)

Summary of Reviews for Hollings Venison Filled Bone Natural Dog Treat

Overall 4
Value For Money
Quality
Tastiness
Nutritional Value
Pet's Opinion
7 out of 8 (88%) customers would recommend this product.
5 stars (3 reviews)
4 stars (3 reviews)
3 stars (1 reviews)
2 stars (0 reviews)
1 stars (1 reviews)

Only verified purchasers of this product can leave a review.

45 Hollings Venison Filled Bone Natural Dog Treat
Verified Purchase

By on 12 April 2024

My 2 labrador furbabies absolutely loved these. It kept them quiet for a wee while too.😊

Customer recommends this product

55 Dogs love them
Verified Purchase

By on 4 April 2023

Bought these as they were reduced and so good value

Customer recommends this product

35 Bacon
Verified Purchase

By on 8 February 2021

My dog loves them, he's an akita...only problem is they have got much smaller, and he can't get into them, and waste alot

Customer recommends this product

15 Disappointing
Verified Purchase

By on 13 May 2020

They were very small and I would be worried about my dog swallowing them and getting them stuck in her throat. As she has not eaten them most of the following ratings are guess work

Customer does not recommend this product

45 Wouldn't purchase again
Verified Purchase

By on 3 April 2019

The bone was far too hard for my dog, would suit bigger dog though

Customer recommends this product

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Q & A

Below are some recent questions we've received regarding Hollings Venison Filled Bone Natural Dog Treat, including answers from our team.

25 November 2014 at 11:05am

Suitable for large puppies!

Georgina Bell

  • VioVet customer since 2014
  • From: West Midlands, United Kingdom

Hi VioVet,
I have 2 Labradors, 9 months old.
I was just wondering if filled bones were a suitable treat/occupier for them?
I always worry about them choking.
Can you please recommend some of your products for us to try.
Thank you

  • VioVet Staff

Firstly to put your question into context, I spent 27 years in veterinary practice (mostly dogs) before going full time with VioVet. Not once did I come across a dog choking due to trying to eat something. I guess it can happen, but it is so rare you should forget it. There are many things which can go wrong with eating inappropriate items, but choking is a very rare one. Occasionally a piece of "food" can get stuck somewhere eg. bone splinters between teeth, or large pieces which are swallowed but become wedged on their way down. This last category can be deadly serious, but they tend to get stuck much further down, not where they can cause choking. Items doing this are usually not dog chews in fact (large pieces of corn on the cob, raw potato, or other vegetable items in my experience). Dogs were designed to chew up and swallow pieces of bone, hide etc so they are mostly very good at it in fact. Personally I never saw a piece of bone or chew stuck anywhere, although they are known to happen. They are too rare to worry about. Very much more common are health problems due to obesity and dirty teeth in older dogs, so you should keep these things in mind and forget choking. Honest!

Ideally your dogs should have a variety of chews. Some hard like the bones you mention, but others based on cow hide. A large rawhide chew (we sell lots of types) are very good. It should be big enough to take time to chew up, but small enough to be interesting. That brings me nicely to the other point - dogs are becoming obese very commonly now, mostly because people want to feed them and they like eating. If your dogs do not bother with a hide chew, they are probably not hungry enough. If they stay like that, then they will gradually become too fat. Therefore I think that it is a good measure to see if a dog will spend a bit of time with a chew. If not, it is probably over-fed, not hungry and a likely candidate for getting very fat. Modern foods are so good that if dogs are allowed to eat all they want of them, they almost inevitably get too fat. Much better to limit the food, especially when they have finished most of their growing (as yours have).

The point of all this is that the type of chew is not that important. The main thing is that your dogs spend time gnawing/chewing and not just scoffing large quantities of very nice food. Choose whatever takes your fancy and see how it goes. None are at all likely to cause trouble. Not eating chews is much more of a health concern. Sometimes miss a meal and offer a large chew instead. Your dogs will not actually thank you for that, chews are hard work and usually much less tasty than dog food, but then should we spend all our mealtimes eating cream cakes?

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