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
Three Bull Terriers across three life stages — that's a proper chewing household, and it does mean one solution won't cover everyone. The right chew toy for a serious chewer needs to be durable enough to last but not so hard it risks cracking teeth, and that balance shifts depending on age and jaw strength. Bull Terriers are powerful, determined chewers as a breed, so I want to understand each dog a little better. Can you tell me roughly how aggressively each of the three chews — are any of them destroyers who go through toys in minutes, or more persistent but methodical? And what's driving the search right now — is one of them causing problems, or are you just trying to get ahead of it sensibly?
The 4-year-old is the real destroyer — he's gone through three rubber toys in the last month. The 1-year-old is still finding her feet but definitely chews hard. The 7-year-old is calmer now but still loves a good chew. Trying to find something that works for all three without buying completely different product lines.
inparticular.ai
That's a really useful breakdown. The 4-year-old is clearly your benchmark — if a toy can't survive him, it won't earn its place in the house. For a dog that's destroying rubber toys monthly, the Kong Extreme is the right call. It's made from Kong's toughest black rubber compound, specifically designed for power chewers, and it's a meaningfully different product to the standard red Kong. I'd put him on a Large or XL depending on his exact size. For your 1-year-old, the standard red Kong Classic in a Medium is actually the better fit — she's still developing her jaw and bite patterns, and the Classic has enough give that it won't put unnecessary stress on her teeth while she's still growing. The 7-year-old is the easiest to sort: the Classic in an appropriate size is perfect for a mature, calmer chewer who still wants engagement. The stuffing routine keeps all three mentally occupied too, which matters for Bull Terriers.
So the Extreme is worth the extra cost for the 4-year-old specifically? And can you stuff all three the same way?
inparticular.ai
For a dog destroying toys monthly, yes — the Extreme pays for itself almost immediately just in not replacing cheaper toys. It's noticeably denser and tougher than the Classic, and for a power-chewing Bull Terrier in his prime it's the appropriate tool. On stuffing: broadly yes, the same approach works across all three. A smear of peanut butter or wet food inside, frozen overnight, extends the challenge for all of them. The one adjustment I'd make is that the 7-year-old may appreciate slightly softer fillings — something like plain yogurt or mashed banana rather than a dense pâté — just to be gentle on his teeth. At seven, Bull Terriers can start to show some tooth wear, so keeping fillings on the softer side is a sensible habit.
That's really helpful. Should I be worried about the 7-year-old chewing at all at his age?
inparticular.ai
Not at all — chewing is genuinely good for older dogs, mentally and physically, as long as the toy is appropriate. The concern with senior dogs isn't the chewing itself but the hardness of what they're chewing. Avoid anything marketed as 'indestructible' that's made from very hard nylon or compressed materials — those are the real tooth-cracking culprits, especially on older enamel. The red Kong Classic is soft enough to be safe for a 7-year-old Bull Terrier who's a moderate chewer. What you want to watch is whether he's engaging with it happily or seems to be struggling — that's usually a sign of dental discomfort rather than a toy problem. Otherwise, keep him chewing. It's enrichment, and Bull Terriers need that at every age.
Perfect. So to confirm — Kong Extreme for the 4-year-old, Kong Classic for the other two. I'll go with that.
inparticular.ai
Exactly right. Kong Extreme in a Large or XL for the 4-year-old, Kong Classic in the size appropriate to each of the other two — Medium for your 1-year-old is a safe starting point, and the same or a Large for the 7-year-old depending on his build. Freeze them stuffed and you'll get good, sustained engagement from all three. Both are widely available on Amazon UK. You've got a sensible, age-graded setup that should hold up well.