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
Greyhounds are actually one of the breeds where bowl setup genuinely matters. They're deep-chested, which raises their bloat risk, and a 7-year-old rescue may also have some joint stiffness that makes bending down uncomfortable. Bowl type and height affect both digestion and comfort more than most people realise — a raised feeder at the right height can reduce gulping and strain at the same time. To point you to the best value option, can you tell me roughly how tall your Greyhound is at the shoulder, whether they eat quickly, and what you're currently feeding from?
She's about 70cm at the shoulder. She does eat pretty fast actually, wolfs it down. At the moment she's just using a basic plastic bowl on the floor. Nothing special. I'm on a pension so I don't want to spend a fortune but I want to do right by her.
inparticular.ai
That combination — fast eater, deep-chested breed, bowl on the floor — is exactly the setup vets flag as higher risk for bloat. The good news is you don't need to spend much to fix it. The two things that would make a real difference are a raised stand to bring the bowl off the floor, and a slow feeder bowl to reduce how fast she's eating. Can I ask one more thing: is she on dry kibble, wet food, or a mix? That changes which slow feeder design works best.
Dry kibble mostly, sometimes a bit of wet food mixed in.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — that makes it straightforward. My recommendation is the Outward Hound Fun Feeder Slo-Bowl in the large size, paired with a basic adjustable raised stand. The Fun Feeder is a well-made slow feeder with a ridge maze that genuinely slows eating — it's widely used, easy to clean, and for a large dog costs around £10–12 on Amazon UK. For the stand, a simple two-bowl adjustable raised feeder stand (the kind with a wooden or metal frame) costs around £15–20 and you'd just sit the slow feeder bowl inside or on top. Total outlay around £25–30, which is good value for what it does for a dog like hers. The raised height for a 70cm Greyhound should ideally bring the bowl to around elbow height — roughly 30–35cm off the ground — so look for a stand that adjusts to that range.
That sounds very reasonable actually. Is the slow feeder definitely safe for her teeth? She's a rescue and I don't know much about her history.
inparticular.ai
Yes, completely safe. The ridges in a slow feeder like the Fun Feeder are smooth silicone or food-grade plastic — there's nothing sharp or hard. She'll just have to nose the kibble out from between the ridges, which slows her down naturally. Greyhounds sometimes take a meal or two to get used to it, but most adapt quickly. If she's ever had dental issues you're worried about, a licki-mat style feeder works for wet food days — but for dry kibble the Fun Feeder is fine.
Brilliant, thank you. I'll look those up now. Really helpful.
inparticular.ai
Glad that helps. You're doing exactly the right thing — small changes to how she eats can make a real difference for a deep-chested dog. The Outward Hound Fun Feeder large and a basic adjustable raised stand is a solid, affordable setup that should serve her well for years. Hope she takes to it quickly.