This depends upon the dog and the pork bones involved. I'll briefly summarize the major considerations below.
1. The smaller the dog, the worse the idea of feeding bones to it. This is because bone shards can become lodged in the stomach or intestinal tract and cause lacerations of the GI tract, which are medical emergencies. Larger dogs have larger diameter tubes for the bones to pass through, reducing the risk of lacerations.
2. The more food-motivated the dog, the worse the idea of feeding bones to it. This is because dogs that practically inhale their food are at increased risk of not chewing the bone down into digestable pieces. As the bone fragments become larger when they are swallowed, the dog's risk of an intestinal laceration increases.
3. Cooked bones are generally worse that uncooked bones. This is because bones become more brittle when cooked, and therefore are more likely to shatter into sharp pieces rather than crumble when chewed.
4. Larger, knobbier bones are generally better than slim or small bones. This is because a larger bone (like a femur knuckle) is far to big for the dog to wrap its jaw around and shatter - he has to gnaw and scrape at the bone and get bone dust rather than bone shards into his mouth. Rib bones can be easily shattered in one bite, particularly by a large dog.
From the above, you can draw your own conclusions about whether or not your dog can safely eat pork bones, and which pork bones you want to feed him. In the wild, wolves eat bones all the time, and a dog's digestive tract is very similar to a wolf's. In general, if you have a large pork knuckle or ham bone that you want to give your large-breed dog that takes 20 minutes to chew and eat his supper kibble, that's probably OK. I would strongly recommend not feeding leftover rib bones to your Dachshund that is affectionately called the "Amazing Doxie Vacuum" for his ability to suck down food in seconds.
Because pork bones are prone to splintering easily, it is not advisable to feed dogs any form of pork bone. Beef bones are acceptable though.
With pork bones, should the dog ingest such a splinter, it could become lodged in the dogs throat, stomach, or even bowel, causing extreme pain and distress. The same applies to chicken bones.
Bones and raw or cooked meat, such as chicken or beef. Just like most normal dogs :)
no cooked lamb bones splinter you can only give it to them raw.
It's not good to give dogs any kind of cooked bones because they can splinter and lodge in their neck. Only give them raw bones (beef or any other).
No Not Cooked Chicken Bones!!!!
Dogs should not eat small bones.
No, they should only eat bones made for dogs in the treat deparment for dogs.
It is not recommended to give dogs pig bones to eat. Pig bones can splinter and pose a choking hazard or cause internal injuries to dogs when ingested. It's safer to provide dogs with specially designed chew toys or bones that are safe for them to chew on.
It depends. Meat: Chicken, Turkey, Rabbit, Beef, Ribs with no bones, and Fish fully cooked!
you can give him or her it with the bone in .. or out .. theyll eat it . my dogs are totally raw fed .. and will eat half achicken raw . bones and skin the lot .. in summer they get rabbits .. whole . with skin bone and innards intact .. they eat the lot . including the head .. dogs were and are meant to crunch bones and digest raw food and bones .. but never ever ever give your dog a cooked bone of any size shape or kind. cooking alters the molecular structure of bones and it can and will splinter . those splinters are capable of puncturing your dogs stomach and intestines causing internal bleeding . and death .. they can also end up inside the body cavity and puncture internal organs .. its not nice . so stay away from cooked bones
Cooked.
Yes.
No.