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    Field First Aid Kit for Gundogs

    This is a specific conversation about Dog First Aid Kit — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    First shooting season with a Münsterländer — exciting, and smart that you're thinking about kit before you're standing in a field trying to improvise. Working dogs pick up thorns, cuts, and the occasional barbed wire argument. What kind of terrain are you mostly working — woodland, open farmland, or a mix?
    Mostly mixed — some woodland drives and stubble fields. He's fit and keen but this will be his first proper season so I want to be ready for anything.
    inparticular.ai
    Good mindset. Münsterländers are tough but they work hard and don't always notice when they've caught themselves. Woodland means bramble tears and thorn punctures, stubble can shred pads. Does he have any existing sensitivities, or are you starting from a clean slate health-wise?
    Clean slate — he's in great shape. I just want something compact I can carry in my game bag or shooting vest pocket.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect. Then I'd point you straight at the Canine First Aid Kit by Vet-Formulated Canine Care — specifically the compact field version sold under the Dogs First Aid Kit brand on Amazon UK. It's a flat zip pouch that fits in a vest pocket, and it contains the things you'll actually use: wound wash, sterile gauze, cohesive bandage, antiseptic wipes, a tick remover, and a foil blanket. It's been put together with working dogs in mind rather than the watered-down pet travel kits that are mostly plasters and leaflets.
    That sounds right. Is there anything it won't cover that I should add separately?
    inparticular.ai
    Two things worth adding from your own kit: a small pair of blunt-nosed scissors for cutting cohesive bandage or clearing matted fur around a wound, and Vetericyn Plus Wound Spray in a travel-size bottle. The wound spray is genuinely excellent for flushing thorns or cleaning up before you bandage — it's safe on eyes and mucous membranes too, which matters if he takes a branch to the face in cover. Keep those two alongside the kit and you're well set for the field.
    View Vetericyn Plus Wound Care Spray on Amazon
    Really useful, thank you. I'll order the kit and pick up the spray too.
    inparticular.ai
    Good luck with the season — first year with a keen Münsterländer is a real treat. Check the kit after every shoot day and replace anything you've used so it's always ready. If he does pick up a deeper puncture wound that looks like it's closing over the top, get that seen by your vet quickly rather than leaving it — punctures in working dogs can be deceptive.

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

    CONTINUE THIS CONVERSATION →
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