u/Baileycharlie

Do any of those "no chew" sprays actually work?

Do any of those "no chew" sprays actually work?

Our 10 month old Cavalier Henry is doing great but he's always been a teether/chewer, haha. He's not destructive for the most part and he absolutely loves his multiple chew toys( he breaks thru most eventually) and his bully sticks.

However , we can't get him to stop biting and chewing thru his big comfy day bed. He drags it around and is trying to chew holes in it and the zipper. This is his 3rd bed too as we had to throw two out already. Do any of those sprays work well enough to deter chewing on something?

TIA..

u/Baileycharlie — 7 days ago
▲ 3 r/REI

Just curious if a little birdie has told anyone if the Flash series backpacks will be 30% off during the upcoming Anniversary sale?

TIA...

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u/Baileycharlie — 17 days ago

I have a 2018 Jeep Wrangler JLU 2.0 Turbo ( E-Torque). I did synthetic oil to start with way back when but after my complimentary oil changes were used up, the dealership said synthetic isn't necessary so most oil changes since then were regular 5W-30 oil and not synthetic.

Currently, going on a 8 hour round trip road trip soon and had fluids topped etc , and put on lift to check something else at trusted mechanic I use near my place of work. Long story short, there is evidence of minor oil leak from either oil filter housing compartment or rear main seal. I will make an appt soon to have diagnosed and estimate for cost of repair. I was down half a quart. He topped it off and said perfectly safe to drive but to just check oil before and after trip. Maybe bring a quart of oil with me to be safe.

If I wanted to start using synthetic , can I add a quart or half a quart as needed to what's in there now? What's a solid choice readily available at any Autozone? If I should only add conventional, what's a good choice for a regular 5W-30 oil to add?

113K miles on it, never any issues with it going on 8 years.

Thanks

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u/Baileycharlie — 22 days ago

Our grass in one area where our "Henry" does his potty has really been negatively impacted. We are truly not that OCD about the lawn, but if there is a simple way to still use the backyard lawn as his most convenient potty area without destroying the grass, has anyone tried the recommendation of pouring some water immediately after where there they go pee to dilute any nitrogen impacts on the grass.??

It seems like a simple solution. The mulch area isn't big enough and we are constantly having to wipe his paws off after because he gets so dirty.

Just curious if anyone has tried the water trick with much success?

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u/Baileycharlie — 25 days ago