ChatterBank10 mins ago
why dont we see it anymore
14 Answers
white dog poo ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As a couple of the answers have already suggested, when did you last see a dog chewing a bone? They used to be a standard element of any dog's diet, helping to sharpen its teeth and provide it with plenty of calcium. In the absence of that natural calcium, the whiteness in the f�ces simply disappeared.
White poo is the calcium left behind as the water evaporates, and the organic components of the crap are consumed leaving the inorganic stuff behind.
Dogs don't eat as much bone as they used to. Tighter regulation on dogs pooing on pavements means that poo doesnt hang around for long in public places like it used to, giving it less opportunity to dry out and turn white
Dogs don't eat as much bone as they used to. Tighter regulation on dogs pooing on pavements means that poo doesnt hang around for long in public places like it used to, giving it less opportunity to dry out and turn white
I agree that it is from the bones and apart from the fact you don't see dogs running around freely like you did when I was a kid - which is good, hopefully the lack of it is also caused by more people cleaning up after their dogs. I think it's more the former than the latter though. It's such a shame that a lot of dogs don't get marrowbones any more because it's not only nutritious for them, but it also occupies their minds for hours on end. Also the leftovers from the dinner table: if the dog will eat them, isn't it much better than binning them - and much better for the dog than canned mush or biscuit meal?