New Dog Checklist: Everything You Need Before Adoption Day
Bringing home a new dog is exciting, but it can also turn into a stressful mess if you're not ready. This episode walks you through the essential supplies you need before adoption day—from food and bowls to harnesses, toys, and emergency cleaning products. Whether you're adopting a puppy, an adult dog, or a senior rescue, having everything set up beforehand means you can focus on helping your new dog adjust instead of panicking over what you forgot to buy. Kenji Takahashi breaks down what actually matters, what to skip, and how to pick the right gear for your dog's age, size, and needs.
Key Takeaways
- You need to buy food that matches your dog's exact age and size, not just any dog food. Puppies need more protein and fat to grow, senior dogs need fewer calories and stuff that helps their joints, and large breed puppies need special calcium levels so their bones grow right. Always check the bag to make sure it says the right life stage and has real meat in the first few ingredients.
- Stainless steel bowls are better than plastic because plastic gets scratched up and bacteria hides in those scratches, plus puppies can chew through plastic. The bowl should also be the right depth for your dog's face shape—flat-faced dogs like Bulldogs need shallow bowls, and dogs with long snouts can use deeper ones.
- A harness is way better for walks than just a collar because it spreads out the pressure across your dog's chest instead of choking their neck. Front-clip harnesses help stop pulling because when your dog tries to run forward, it turns them back toward you instead.
- You'll need an enzymatic cleaner for accidents because regular cleaners don't actually get rid of the pee smell that dogs can still smell. If your dog can still smell it, they'll keep peeing in the same spot. Enzymatic cleaners use special bacteria to destroy the smell completely, not just cover it up.
- Don't wait until there's an emergency to figure out where the 24-hour vet is or to build a first aid kit. Have gauze, antiseptic, a thermometer, tweezers, and your vet's number saved in your phone before your dog even gets home, because emergencies always happen at the worst times and most emergency vets want payment before they'll treat your pet.
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Hill's Science Diet Adult Dry Dog Food
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