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    Best chew toys for Weimaraners

    This is a specific conversation about Kong and chew toys — for serious chewers — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Good on you for making that call — antlers sit right at the edge of what's safe for powerful chewers, and tooth fractures are a real and expensive risk. The right chew toy for a serious chewer needs to be durable enough to last but not so hard it risks cracking teeth, and the right choice depends significantly on your dog's chewing style and jaw strength. To point you in the right direction: what breed and size is your dog, would you call them a moderate or full-on aggressive chewer, and what's driving the search — boredom, destructive chewing, anxiety, or just finding a safer alternative to what you've been using?
    He's a 2-year-old Weimaraner, about 32kg. Definitely an aggressive chewer — he destroyed the antlers pretty quickly. Mainly looking for a safer swap, but he does get a bit destructive when left alone so there's probably some boredom and mild anxiety in the mix too.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect profile to work with. Weimaraners at that weight and age are seriously powerful chewers — still young enough to be relentless about it, big enough to do real damage. Before I give you a recommendation, a couple of quick questions: how long is he typically left alone, and has he destroyed rubber toys before, or has he mostly had antlers and harder chews up to now?
    He's alone for maybe 3–4 hours on weekdays. He's never really had rubber toys — we went straight to antlers thinking they'd be tough enough. So no experience with rubber chews at all.
    inparticular.ai
    That's actually good news — no bad habits with rubber yet, and 3–4 hours is a manageable window to work with. Here's what I'd recommend: the Kong Extreme, in size XL for a dog his weight. It's made from Kong's toughest black rubber compound, specifically designed for power chewers, and it sits in the sweet spot — hard enough to last, but with just enough give that it won't crack teeth the way antlers can. Crucially, you can pack it with food — frozen peanut butter, wet food, kibble — which turns it from a chew toy into a proper mental challenge. For a Weimaraner with boredom and mild separation anxiety, that stuffed-and-frozen version will hold his attention far longer than a bare chew ever could. It's widely available on Amazon UK and well under £20 for the XL. Start with it frozen — it'll last longer per session and slow him down.
    View Kong Classic (Red) on AmazonView Kong Extreme (Black) on Amazon
    That sounds really sensible. Will the Kong Extreme actually hold up to a dog this powerful, or will he get through it quickly?
    inparticular.ai
    The Extreme is Kong's most durable compound and it's the one vets and behaviourists routinely recommend for exactly this type of dog. Most power chewers don't destroy them — they wear them down slowly over months rather than weeks. That said, no rubber toy is indestructible, so check it periodically for chunks or deep gouges and replace it if it starts breaking apart. For a 32kg Weimaraner the XL is the right size — go too small and it becomes a choking risk as it degrades. If you want a second toy to rotate in and keep things interesting, the West Paw Zogoflex Tux is another excellent stuffable option made from puncture-resistant material — but start with the Kong Extreme and see how he gets on.
    View West Paw Zogoflex Tux on Amazon
    Really helpful, thanks. I'll grab the XL Extreme and try the frozen stuffing method.
    inparticular.ai
    Good move. Freeze it the night before so it's solid when you leave — that first hour is when the anxiety peaks, and a frozen Kong will keep him focused through it. You've made a genuinely better call switching off antlers, and a dog like him will take to this well.

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

    CONTINUE THIS CONVERSATION →
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