This is a specific conversation about Dog arthritis — what actually helps — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
You've already tried twice with joint chews and hit a wall both times — that's genuinely frustrating, especially when you know your dog needs the support. Most arthritis products for dogs are either underdosed or poorly matched to the individual — size, age, and severity all change what actually works, and palatability is a very real dealbreaker with older dogs who've become pickier. Before I point you somewhere useful, tell me a bit more: what breed and age is your dog, and what are you noticing day to day — morning stiffness, reluctance on stairs, slowing down on walks?
She's an 11-year-old Bearded Collie. We've tried two different joint chews — one she just wouldn't touch, the other she ate for about a week then refused. She's definitely slowing down on walks and is really stiff first thing in the morning. Getting up from lying down looks uncomfortable.
inparticular.ai
That picture — stiffness on rising, slowing on walks, reluctance to get up — is very typical of moderate arthritis in an older working-type breed like a Beardie. They carry a fair bit of muscle mass even into old age, which masks how much joint discomfort they're actually in. The chew refusal is the real obstacle here: some dogs are simply done with supplements presented as treats, especially once they've learned what's inside. The good news is there's a much better format for a dog like yours.
inparticular.ai
I'd point you firmly toward YuMOVE PLUS Joint Supplement for Dogs — specifically the liquid version. It's a concentrated formula with a meaningful dose of ActivEase green-lipped mussel, glucosamine, and hyaluronic acid, and crucially it's designed to be poured straight onto food rather than eaten as a treat. For a fussy 11-year-old who's already rejected two chew formats, this sidesteps the palatability problem entirely. The PLUS formulation is the higher-strength version, which is the right call for a dog showing symptoms at this level rather than a younger dog on a maintenance dose. Most owners notice a difference in mobility and morning stiffness within four to six weeks.
That makes sense. Is the liquid actually easy to hide in food, or do dogs still notice it?
inparticular.ai
It mixes in well and has a mild, slightly fishy smell that tends to read as 'food' rather than 'supplement' to most dogs — especially when you pour it over wet food or add it to something warm like a little broth. Dogs who've actively rejected chews often accept the liquid without any issue at all, because there's no separate texture or taste to pick out. If she gets wet food, that's your easiest route. If she's on dry, adding a small splash of warm water first helps it coat the kibble evenly.
Great. And is there anything else I should be doing alongside a supplement for a dog her age?
inparticular.ai
Yes — the supplement does meaningful work, but it works best alongside a few practical changes. Keep her walks shorter and more frequent rather than one long outing that leaves her stiff the next day. Warmth helps a lot: a good orthopedic bed off cold floors makes a real difference overnight, which is when a lot of that morning stiffness builds. If she isn't already on a weight-checked diet, even a small reduction in body weight takes significant pressure off joints at her age. And it's worth having a vet check whether a course of prescription anti-inflammatories might be appropriate alongside the supplement if the stiffness is marked — they work through a different mechanism and can complement what the supplement is doing rather than replacing it.