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    Raised feeder for Dachshunds with spinal strain

    This is a specific conversation about Dog bowls and feeders — more important than you think — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Your vet is right to flag this — Dachshunds have a notoriously long spine and when they eat from a bowl on the floor, they're craning their neck downward repeatedly, which puts real stress on those discs. At seven years old that strain adds up, and a modest raise genuinely helps. Before I point you to something specific: how tall is your dog at the shoulder roughly, and is he eating wet food, dry kibble, or a mix? That affects which style works best.
    She's a standard Dachshund, maybe 25cm at the shoulder. She eats dry kibble mostly, sometimes a bit of wet food mixed in. No other health issues besides the back concern.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — that's helpful. For a standard Dachshund at that height you're looking for a raise of roughly 10–15cm, which brings the bowl up to a comfortable neck-neutral position without tipping her too far the other way. You don't want it so high she's straining upward either. Does she eat at a normal pace or does she tend to inhale her food quickly? Just checking whether we need to factor in a slow-feeder element too.
    She's a pretty normal eater, not particularly fast. Just want something sturdy that won't slide around and is the right height.
    inparticular.ai
    In that case, I'd go with the Neater Feeder Express in Small. It sits at around 10cm raised, which is well-suited to a standard Dachshund, has a solid no-tip base with non-slip feet, and comes with two stainless steel bowls — one for food, one for water. Stainless is ideal because it's easy to clean and doesn't harbour bacteria the way plastic does. The integrated tray also catches any spills, which is a small but genuinely useful detail for everyday use. It's widely available on Amazon UK and consistently well-reviewed for small-to-medium breeds with exactly this kind of vet-recommended setup. Given your vet's advice and her age, this is the most practical match I'd suggest.
    View Neater Feeder Express on Amazon
    That sounds good. Is there anything I should watch for when I first introduce the raised feeder?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes — a few things worth knowing. Some dogs are briefly uncertain about a new feeding setup, so if she hesitates at first just stay nearby and let her approach in her own time; most dogs adapt within a day or two. Make sure the feeder height isn't causing her to arch her neck upward — her neck should be roughly level or very slightly angled down when eating, not raised. And keep an eye on her posture over the first week or so. If your vet is happy with her progress, it's also worth mentioning at her next check-up so they can confirm the height looks right in person. Beyond that, you're really just looking for a cleaner, calmer mealtime — which this should give you.
    Really helpful, thank you. I'll go with the Neater Feeder Express.
    inparticular.ai
    Good choice — it's a solid, no-fuss product that does exactly what it says. Hope it makes mealtimes noticeably easier for her back. If anything doesn't feel right once it arrives, feel free to come back and we can look at adjustments.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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