Question
Q: Does anyone have any strategies for limiting how much water my puppy will drink at one time?
My female Yorkshire Terrier is coming on to five months old. Ever since we got her she has always vomited after drinking too much water. I first noticed this when we would play. We'd play fetch, run around the kitchen a bunch, she would stop for water (lapping up quite a bit), run around some more and then vomit it all.
I brought this up with the vet and they were not concerned -- said it was fairly common. Their recommendation was to take away water during play time, or give it to my puppy myself, and it give it back afterwards.
I've been doing that for a while (last two months) and it has been good but now as soon as she has access to her water she drinks it like it's going out of style. Sure enough, it comes back up ten seconds later.
At this point I've taken the water away completely (past two days) and I'm giving her water in small bursts here and there. My problem is that I just have no idea how much water a puppy needs, or when. It would be much easier if she would simply control her water intake.
- It always comes back up ten to fifteen seconds after she drinks.
- When I am giving the water I let her take about 10 laps max.
- When she has access she'll go for 30 to 40 laps.
- I've tried using ice cubes but she waits for them to melt and then drinks it all.
- Her demeanor has not changed. She resumes playing right after regurgitating.
For clarity, these past two days in which I've been restricting her water she has not vomited at all.
Answer
First of all: I have no idea why she would drink so much that she imediately vomits afterwards.
A common problem - especially with small dogs - is pet food with a high grain content. The dog eats as much as she comfortably can, which fills her stomach. Then, when the water she drinks is mixed with the food in her stomach, the food swells up and cannot be contained comfortably in her stomach anymore, which induces vomiting. You might try mixing the food with some water before feeding her or changing food brands.
Apart from that, I see a possible behavior-related problem here that could increase her water intake even more.
By taking the water away from her you create an artificial scarcity. This in return causes her to value the scarce resources even more. In time it could spiral out of control to the point where she drinks every drop of water she can get to even if she isn't thirsty, simply because she learned that water is valuable and must be consumed immediately.
A better short term solution would be offering her small amounts many times a day. A quarter cup is really not a big amount, but try reducing the individual helping to half or less than that.
- Regularily refill her water bowl every 1 - 2 hours
- Refill her bowl 20 - 30 seconds after you saw her drinking. This should be long enough that she doesn't vomit, but short enough to reduce the feeling of scarcity
- Don't make a fuss about refilling her bowl. The more you actively call her attention to the water bowl, the more you artificially increase the value of the water.
That should allow you to reduce the amount of water she can drink at a given time without risking her dehydrating.
Observe how much she drinks and vomits with this configuration and report it to your vet if the vomiting doesn't stop or the amount she drinks seems very high for her body size.
Answered By - Elmy