You love your dog more than you thought possible.
And that love comes with a quiet, constant question: Am I doing enough?
I’ve asked myself that same thing every single day for twelve years. Twelve years of muddy paws on clean floors. Twelve years of vet bills and chewed-up shoes.
Twelve years of learning what works. And what doesn’t. The hard way.
No fancy degrees. Just real life. Real mistakes.
Real love.
This isn’t another list of “feed them well, walk them daily” basics. You already know that. What you need is something deeper.
Something that actually changes how your dog feels. Not just how they look.
That’s why I wrote Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog.
It’s full of pet care tips for dogs that work. Not theory. Not trends.
Just things I’ve tested (and) watched my dogs thrive on.
You’ll get clear, simple steps. No fluff. No jargon.
Just what helps.
By the end, you’ll know exactly how to make your dog happier. Healthier. More alive.
Let’s start.
Beyond the Bowl: What Your Dog Actually Needs
I stopped buying kibble based on the bag’s color. Or the word “natural.” Or the picture of a happy dog mid-air.
Great health starts with great food. Not marketing.
You need to read the label. Not the front. The back.
The first three ingredients matter most. They should be named meat sources (like) chicken, not “poultry meal” or “meat by-products.” If water is #1, that’s fine (it’s wet food). But if corn gluten meal shows up before turkey?
Walk away.
I’ve seen dogs thrive on simple meals built around real food. And I’ve seen them itch, gas, and poop poorly on “premium” brands hiding filler behind fancy names.
Here’s what I feed my dog as snacks (no) vet visits required:
- Carrots
- Blueberries
3.
Green beans
- Cooked chicken breast (no seasoning)
- Plain pumpkin (canned, unsweetened)
Toxic foods? Grapes. Chocolate.
Onions. Garlic. Xylitol gum.
Avocado pits. Don’t test this list.
Water isn’t optional. It’s non-negotiable.
Your dog needs constant access to fresh, clean water. Not water that’s been sitting since breakfast. Not water in a plastic bowl you rinse once a week.
Use stainless steel or ceramic bowls. Wash them daily. Bacteria builds up fast (especially) in warm weather (or near your coffee maker, which is weirdly common).
I use a water fountain. Not because it’s cute. Because my dog ignored still water for two weeks straight until I plugged one in.
She drinks 3x more now.
That’s why I wrote Pet Advice (not) just recipes, but real habits that stick.
Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog is about skipping the noise and feeding like you mean it.
A Tired Dog Is a Happy Dog: Not Just Walks
I used to think if I walked my terrier mix twice a day, we were golden.
Then she started chewing the baseboards. Not once. Every single day.
Physical exercise matters (yes.) But mental exercise is just as non-negotiable.
A bored dog isn’t lazy. It’s under-stimulated. And it will find its own job.
Small dogs? Don’t assume they need less. My neighbor’s Chihuahua runs laps around her living room like it’s the Olympics.
High-energy breeds? They’ll out-walk you and your patience if you skip mental work.
Try scent walks instead of power walks. Let them sniff every fire hydrant, bush, and suspicious leaf. That’s work.
Real work.
Puzzle feeders? Start simple. A muffin tin with tennis balls over kibble.
Done.
“Find the treat” games take 90 seconds. Hide one piece under a cup. Let them figure it out.
Then up the ante.
Teach a new trick. Even “touch” with their nose. Takes five minutes.
Burns more brain fuel than three miles.
Rotate toys weekly. Same toy = same old news. Swap in one new thing.
Watch how fast they re-engage.
I gave my terrier a snuffle mat on a Tuesday. By Thursday, the baseboards were untouched. Not perfect (but) better.
And she slept through the night.
Ten minutes of focused mental activity hits harder than forty-five minutes of pacing the yard.
You don’t need fancy gear or hours.
You need consistency. You need attention. You need to stop pretending walking is enough.
Llblogpet advice for dogs by lovelolablog 2 says it plainly: tired brains make calm bodies.
Try it for three days. See if your dog stops side-eyeing your shoes like they’re next on the menu.
Grooming Is Health. Not Just a Spa Day
I brush my dog before coffee. Not because I love it. Because skipping it means mats, skin issues, and vet bills.
Grooming isn’t about making your dog Instagram-ready. It’s early detection. A quick check while brushing can catch ticks, hot spots, or lumps before they get serious.
You’re already touching your dog every day. So why not turn that into part of their health routine?
Here’s my bare-bones weekly checklist:
- Brush the coat. Every. Single. Week. Why? Mats pull skin. Tangled fur traps moisture and bacteria. And brushing spreads natural oils (no) fancy conditioner needed.
- Peek in those ears. Redness? Smell like corn chips? That’s yeast. Time to call your vet (not) grab the peroxide.
- Brush teeth. Yes, really. Use dog toothpaste. Start with one tooth. Build up. (I keep mine next to my own toothbrush. Shame works.)
Want stress-free sessions? Keep them under five minutes. Treat like it’s gold.
Stop before they’re done.
Nail trimming? Don’t guess where the quick is. Look for the pink triangle in light nails.
On black nails? Trim tiny bits. If you see grayish oval tissue.
Stop. That’s the quick. Cut it, and it bleeds.
And hurts.
Bathing? Once every 4. 6 weeks. More than that strips oils.
Use dog shampoo. Human stuff dries them out. (Yes, even baby shampoo.
Just don’t.)
The Infoguide for kittens llblogpet covers similar basics for cats (same) logic applies. Health first. Looks second.
Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog says it plainly: grooming is care you can’t outsource. You do it. You watch.
You notice.
Your Dog’s Monthly Nose-to-Tail Check

I check my dog like I check my own oil level. Not because I’m a mechanic. Because I’m the one who sees her every day.
You are the first line of defense. Not your vet. You.
You notice the subtle shift before it becomes a crisis.
Here’s what I do once a month:
Look in her eyes. Any cloudiness or yellow tint? Peek in her ears (redness,) odor, gunk?
Run my hands over her ribs, neck, belly (feel) for new lumps or heat. Flip her paws (cracked) pads, torn nails, weird growths between toes. Watch her appetite and energy.
Not just what she eats, but how she eats it.
This isn’t vet care. It’s awareness. It’s showing up informed (not) replacing expertise.
Call the vet if you see:
- Vomiting that lasts more than 24 hours
- Lethargy so deep she won’t lift her head
Lumps are normal. New lumps are not.
(Pro tip: Take a photo each month. Compare.)
You don’t need fancy tools. Just attention. And time.
I covered this topic over in Llblogpet Advice for.
That’s all it takes to catch something early.
For deeper guidance on spotting red flags, I rely on Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog.
Your Dog Doesn’t Need Perfect (Just) Present
I’ve been there. Staring at the dog food aisle. Wondering if that limp is serious.
Skipping the brush because who has time.
You want to be the best dog parent. But overwhelm kills consistency.
That’s why Llblogpet Advice for Dogs by Lovelolablog sticks to four real things: food that fits your dog, movement that matches their energy, grooming that prevents problems, and checkups before issues blow up.
None of it requires a degree. Or ten hours a week.
It just needs you to pick one thing. Today.
Not all four. Not even two. Just one.
Try the grooming tip this week. Or swap one meal for something simpler and cleaner.
Your dog doesn’t care about perfection. They care that you showed up.
And they’ll show you (with) more tail wags, better energy, fewer vet trips.
So go ahead. Pick one. Do it.
Watch what happens.
Your dog already knows you’re trying. Now prove it.


Susana Richersonear writes for pethubnest focusing on digital tools, smart gadgets, and trends that make pet ownership easier. Her articles guide readers toward modern solutions for everyday pet needs.

