This is a specific conversation about Dog gut health — probiotics and digestive support — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A bonded pair of rescues on different diets — that's a lovely situation to navigate, and actually quite common with Whippets since they can have sensitive stomachs at the best of times. Probiotics can make a genuine difference for dogs, but quality and strain specificity vary enormously, and what helps one dog may do nothing for another. Before I suggest anything, it'd help to know: how old are each of them, what are they currently eating and why the diets differ, and what symptoms are you seeing — loose stools, wind, irregular digestion? And have you had either of them checked by a vet since rehoming?
They're both around 4 years old, rehomed about six months ago. Pip is on a plain chicken and rice diet because she had really bad loose stools when we first got her — that's settled a bit but still not fully normal. Remy is fine digestively but he's underweight so he's on a higher-calorie food. Neither has been to the vet specifically for gut issues, though they had a general health check when we rehomed them.
inparticular.ai
That makes a lot of sense. Pip's loose stools are really common in rescue dogs — stress, change of environment, and dietary upheaval all knock the gut microbiome around. The fact that chicken and rice has helped but not fully resolved it suggests her gut flora is still recovering rather than there being an underlying disease issue. Remy sounds straightforward — his gut isn't struggling, but if he's absorbing nutrients poorly that could be a subtle factor in the weight issue. A vet check specifically around Pip's ongoing loose stools would be worth doing if it hasn't fully resolved in another few weeks, just to rule out giardia or a persistent sensitivity. For now though — are you happy managing them with separate supplements, or would you prefer one product you could give both of them?
Ideally one product if possible, but I'm open to two if there's a good reason. I just don't want to over-supplement Remy if he doesn't need it.
inparticular.ai
Completely reasonable. Here's my thinking: for Pip, you genuinely need a probiotic with active, well-documented strains and some prebiotic fibre support to help rebuild her microbiome — not just a sprinkle of dried bacteria. For Remy, a gentle probiotic won't harm him and may actually support nutrient absorption, which is quietly relevant if you're trying to get weight onto him. So one good product dosed appropriately for each actually makes sense here. I'd recommend YuMOVE Digestive Care — it contains Enterococcus faecium (a properly studied canine-specific probiotic strain), prebiotic FOS, and a digestive enzyme blend. It's a powder you add to food, which makes it easy to dose separately. Give Pip the full recommended amount for her weight and Remy a half-dose to start. It's widely available on Amazon UK, reasonably priced for two dogs, and has a strong track record with sensitive rescue dogs specifically.
That sounds manageable. Should I expect to see a difference in Pip quite quickly, or is it a slow build?
inparticular.ai
With a probiotic like YuMOVE Digestive Care, most owners see some improvement in stool consistency within two to three weeks, but the meaningful gut flora rebuilding takes closer to six to eight weeks of consistent use. Don't judge it at day five. The other thing worth doing alongside the supplement is gradually transitioning Pip off the chicken and rice onto a complete, easily digestible commercial food — she can't stay on that long-term as it's nutritionally incomplete. Something like a single-protein sensitive kibble or wet food. Once her gut is more stable with the probiotic support, her system should handle a proper diet much better. If after six to eight weeks on YuMOVE her stools still aren't consistently formed, that's when I'd go back to the vet — it may indicate a sensitivity that needs dietary investigation rather than just supplementation.
Really helpful, thank you. I'll order the YuMOVE and start looking at a sensitive food for Pip too.
inparticular.ai
That's the right plan. One product, two dogs, sensible dosing — and a clear timeline to know whether it's working. Good luck with them both; Whippets are brilliant dogs and rescues in particular often just need a few months of consistency to really settle. If Pip's not improving in six to eight weeks, don't hesitate to push for a vet stool test before trying anything else.