
Life and times of the Alaskan snow corgi
without shell, cooked or raw; yogurt; garlic, yams, pumpkin, and any non-nightshade veggies, especially spinach; most fruits and berries; molasses, olive oil, coconut oil, kelp, apple cider vinegar. Big no-nos include citrus fruits, onion, rasins/grapes, chocolate, cooked bones, pork, turkey bones.



Turns out I didn't need to worry about checking all my house plants and yard plants for toxicity to pets. Gemma has a better nose than I do. She is batting 100 and is totally reliable as far as I can tell. She eats the tender shoots and buds of wild roses, dandelions, fiddle head ferns, horse tails, birch, spruce -- all of which are safe and healthy for people to eat too. Every dangerous wild plant we have run across is well sniffed, then ignored. Ditto the house plants. I panicked when she wolfed down a dropped leaf from the jade plant before I could grab it from her mouth, but turns out she was correct, not toxic to pets according to most internet sources and the fact that I still have a healthy dog! 
