Dogs like to eat some fertilizers such as blood and bone and Dynamic Lifter. These can cause serious problems if ingested in reasonable quantities, so keep bags tightly sealed and use products according to label instructions.
This product may be harmful to pets, especially dogs, if consumed. Avoid heaping Yates Dynamic Lifter Plus Blood & Bone as this may attract dogs. Cultivate into the surface and water well to help prevent dogs consuming. Store away from dogs.
Ingestion: Swallowing can result in nausea, vomiting and irritation of the gastrointestinal tract. Eye contact: May be an eye irritant.
Some types of fertiliser such as bone meal and blood meal can cause significant gastrointestinal upset (vomiting, diarrhoea, constipation) and possibly pancreatitis, especially if eaten in large quantities. Certain fertilisers may also contain bacterial or fungal toxins which can have serious side effects if ingested.
If you see your pet eat fertilizer, call your veterinarian or veterinarian hospital immediately. They will collect a thorough history, including packaging and/or the detailed label ingredients. It may be easier to look the specific product up online so the vet can easily evaluate the ingredient list.
Affected dogs show signs 30 minutes to 4 hours after ingesting the poison. Initially affected dogs become anxious and have an elevated body temperature. Panting is usually seen. Progressively they become worse and staggery.
Once in the hospital, your veterinarian may give your dog intravenous fluid, flush your dog's stomach, give your dog activated charcoal to absorb the toxin, or perform surgery. Supportive medications may help your dog's kidneys and liver process the poison and heal.
Dog owners should keep their pet on a leash or closely supervised when outdoors until the fertilizer is completely dry. After 48 hours, most fertilizers are considered safe for pets to roam around freely.
If your dog eats some grass that had fertilizer applied to it, it rarely leads to serious poisoning; that said, more serious signs can be seen when the product is directly ingested (i.e., right out of the bag). If ingested directly from the bag, the results can include tremors and seizures.
Dynamic Lifter is an organic, poultry manure-based product. Chicken manure just so happens to be a common fertiliser used on turf farms. Your standard Dynamic Lifter products are 100% chicken manure in an aged and pelletised form.
Yates Dynamic Lifter Long Life Complete
0 ) is an organic blended fertiliser comprising composted poultry manure, meat meal, fish meal, seaweed meal and zeolite.
Yates Dynamic Lifter Lawn Food contains composted chicken manure, blood & bone, fish meal and seaweed, for a lush and healthy lawn. It provides long lasting nutrients for sustained healthy lawn, and encourages earthworms and beneficial soil micro-organisms to promote healthy soil.
Is Yates Weed'n'Feed safe to use around pets and children? It is best to keep pets and children out of the area until the spray has dried. Applying on a day when weather conditions favour drying can reduce this time off your lawn.
Dynamic Lifter is a more balanced fertiliser when compared to Blood & Bone. While Dynamic Lifter has a poultry manure base and other added ingredients, Blood & Bone is 65% meat meal and contains cow manure. Essentially this means that the nutrient ratios of each product are different.
Like children, dogs and other pets also enjoy playing and running through the grass. But after fertilizing, it's also best practice to limit their use of the lawn for 24-72 hours.
Most commercial lawn fertilizers are toxic to dogs. Even if your dog is not technically allergic to them, make sure your canine companion is not exposed to them. Though most lawn fertilizers state they are safe once they are dry, your dog may still be affected by eating or licking the grass, or their feet and belly.
If the fertilizer comes in pellet form, you should wait at least one full day before letting your pet into the area. The pellets do not absorb as easily as a liquid fertilizer. Liquid, on the other hand, absorbs more quickly, so pets can be let back onto the yard once it is clear that the fertilizer is absorbed.
25% of poisoned pets recover within two hours. Of the pets that take longer to recover, many can be treated at home with the advice of your veterinarian or with advice from the ASPCA Poison Control Center (telephone 1-888-426-4435).
No. Milk is unlikely to be helpful in the vast majority of poisoning situations and can sometimes make things worse. Most pets are lactose intolerant and giving milk can cause or worsen stomach upset symptoms.
Typically, mild cases of poisoning have high recovery rates. In severe poisoning cases or cases where treatment was delayed the chance of recovery is extremely low. When pets do recover from severe poisoning there can also be long-term damage to their overall health.
A professional may ask you to induce vomiting at home with hydrogen peroxide. For this reason, you should try to always keep an unopened, non-expired bottle of hydrogen peroxide in your home (old hydrogen peroxide will not usually work). You will give the hydrogen peroxide to your dog by mouth.
Induce vomiting.
If you are sure that vomiting will not pose further risk to your dog or you are directed by veterinary or poison control personnel to do so, you can easily and safely cause your dog to vomit. A 1:1 solution of 3% hydrogen peroxide and water will do the trick.
If the animal is unconscious, the stomach may be flushed with a stomach tube, or surgery on the stomach may be needed. Laxatives and medications used to empty the bowels may be recommended in some instances to help remove the poison from the gastrointestinal tract.