This is a specific conversation about Pet cameras — watching them when you're away — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Your vet has asked for footage of food guarding behaviour — that's actually a really smart first step, because what looks like guarding to an owner can vary a lot in intensity and trigger, and a behaviourist or vet needs to see it rather than hear a description. Pet cameras range from basic motion-activated models to two-way audio and treat-dispensing ones, and the right choice depends on what you actually want to do with it. For a documentation job like this, the priority is clear video quality, reliable motion detection, and ideally night vision if feeding ever happens in lower light. Is this just for an Akita, what does feeding time typically look like — bowl on the floor, in a separate room? — and do you want something you can also use day-to-day after you've got the footage your vet needs?
Yes, it's just for our Akita, he's four years old. He eats in the kitchen, bowl on the floor. The guarding seems to happen when anyone walks near him while he's eating. We'd probably keep using the camera afterwards just to keep an eye on him generally.
inparticular.ai
Good detail — that's a classic proximity trigger, and your vet will want to see the full sequence: how early he reacts as someone approaches, whether there's stiffening or vocalising before any snap or lunge, and how long the behaviour lasts after the person moves away. For that kind of documentation, you need a camera with a wide field of view so the whole kitchen area is in frame, solid motion-triggered recording so you're not scrubbing through hours of nothing, and sharp enough resolution that body language is actually readable. Does he tend to guard only during the meal itself, or does he also guard the bowl when it's empty?
Mainly during the meal. Once the food's gone he seems fine. We've not noticed him guarding the empty bowl.
inparticular.ai
That's useful — it narrows the trigger to the food being present, which is helpful context for your vet. Right, here's my recommendation: the Furbo 360° Dog Camera. It rotates to give a full 360-degree view, so you can capture the whole kitchen without needing to position it perfectly, and the HD video with night vision means footage is clear even in a dimly lit kitchen. Motion and sound alerts mean it'll start recording when he goes near the bowl, and you can review clips directly in the app to pick out the ones that show the behaviour clearly before sending them to your vet. The two-way audio and treat tossing are features you won't need for this job, but they're genuinely useful for general monitoring once your vet has what they need. It's straightforward to set up on a shelf or worktop and doesn't require any drilling. That's the one I'd go for.
That sounds good. Will the camera moving — the rotation — spook him or affect his behaviour while we're trying to film it?
inparticular.ai
Fair concern, and honestly worth thinking about. The 360° rotation on the Furbo is for setup and manual control via the app — it doesn't spin constantly or track movement automatically, so once you've positioned the view on the bowl area and left it, it just sits still. He'll likely ignore it within a meal or two, the same way dogs habituate to any new object in a familiar space. If you want to be cautious, set it up a few days before you start trying to capture footage so it's just part of the furniture by the time you're recording in earnest. That way what your vet sees is his normal behaviour, not a dog distracted by a new gadget.
That makes sense. I'll go with the Furbo 360°. Thanks — really helpful.
inparticular.ai
Good luck with it. Capture a few different mealtimes if you can — variation in who walks past, how close they get, that kind of thing — so your vet gets a proper picture rather than one incident. Hope the assessment goes well and gives you a clear path forward with him.