This is a specific conversation about Dog supplements — what's actually worth it — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A 10-year-old Irish Wolfhound getting vet advice on joints and weight together — that's a really specific and sensible conversation to be having. The supplement market for dogs is enormous and mostly unnecessary, but this is exactly the kind of situation where targeted support genuinely makes sense. Irish Wolfhounds have a short lifespan and their joints take a real beating, and weight management matters a lot at this age because extra pounds accelerate joint decline fast. To point you toward the right thing: what's the current weight situation — is your dog actually overweight, or is the vet being proactive? And what joint symptoms are you seeing, if any?
She's about 5kg over what the vet wants. She's not limping but she's slower getting up in the morning and the vet said her hips looked stiff on examination. The vet mentioned glucosamine but didn't recommend a specific product.
inparticular.ai
That picture makes a lot of sense — morning stiffness without full lameness is classic early hip and joint deterioration, and in a giant breed at ten that's not surprising at all. The 5kg excess is significant for a Wolfhound because the breed already has so much mass over those joints. Glucosamine is the right call here, but I'd want her on something that combines it with chondroitin and ideally some omega-3s, because they work together better than glucosamine alone. Can I ask — is she on a joint-supportive diet already, or standard adult food?
Just standard senior kibble at the moment. Nothing specific for joints.
inparticular.ai
Okay, that's helpful. Standard senior kibble is fine but it won't have therapeutic levels of anything joint-related. Here's what I'd actually recommend: YuMOVE Joint Supplement for Large Dogs — the one specifically formulated for dogs over 25kg. It's a well-researched product with a genuine evidence base, which is rare in this category. It contains glucosamine, chondroitin, and green-lipped mussel as an omega-3 source, and for a dog with early stiffness rather than severe arthritis, it's the right starting point. For a Wolfhound her size you'd be looking at the higher dose. It won't help with the weight directly, but reducing joint inflammation often makes dogs more comfortable moving, which supports gentle activity — and that's your weight management lever alongside portion control. The vet's instinct to address both together is right, but the supplement does the joint side; the weight side is about food management.
How long before it starts working? And is there anything I should watch out for?
inparticular.ai
Most owners report noticing a difference in mobility and morning stiffness within four to six weeks, though the full effect builds over about three months — so don't judge it too early. YuMOVE is well tolerated and side effects are uncommon, but as with anything containing shellfish-derived ingredients, if your dog has any known seafood sensitivities it's worth flagging to your vet first. Given her age and the vet involvement here, I'd also suggest booking a recheck at about the three-month mark so they can reassess hip stiffness and the weight trajectory together. That gives you a clear before-and-after picture.
That's really useful. I'll go with that and mention the three-month check-in to the vet.
inparticular.ai
That sounds like exactly the right plan. YuMOVE Large Breed is widely available on Amazon UK — just make sure you're getting the large breed version and not the standard one, because the dosing is different and she needs the higher concentration. Good luck with her. Ten is a real age for a Wolfhound and it sounds like she's in good hands.