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    Best teething toys for Jack Russell puppies

    This is a specific conversation about Puppy teething — surviving it and protecting your home — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Teething is one of the most intense periods of puppyhood — and honestly, having the right chew toys available makes a genuine difference to how much of your furniture survives it. The best ones are firm enough to satisfy that urge to gnaw, safe for developing teeth, and ideally chillable to soothe sore gums. To point you in the right direction: how old is your puppy, what breed are they, and is your main concern the chewing itself or protecting specific things in the home?
    She's 9 weeks old, a Jack Russell. Mainly the chewing — she's already going for my chair legs. I'd rather get a multipack so I've got plenty to rotate through without spending a fortune.
    inparticular.ai
    Nine weeks is right at the start of teething, so you're smart to get ahead of it now. Jack Russells are tenacious little chewers for their size — they have real drive and they don't give up easily, so you do want something with some resistance to it. A multipack is a great call at this stage because rotation genuinely helps; when one becomes familiar, a fresh one recaptures their attention and steers them away from the furniture. Can I ask — does she seem to prefer softer rubbery textures or harder nylon-style things? And has she shown any reaction to cold, like if she's been mouthing anything from the fridge?
    She seems to like chewy rubbery things so far. I haven't tried cold yet but I'm open to it if it helps.
    inparticular.ai
    Cold definitely helps — it numbs the gums a bit and they often settle much faster when they're sore. Given she's 9 weeks, small breed, and you want rubbery textures in a value multipack, I'd go with the Rosewood Puppy Teething Multipack. It typically comes with a mix of rubber chews in different shapes and textures, sized appropriately for small breeds, and importantly they're soft enough for a puppy her age without being so flimsy that a determined Jack Russell destroys them in minutes. You can pop the rubber ones in the freezer for 20 minutes before handing them over — that combination of satisfying resistance and cold relief is genuinely effective at this stage. It's widely available on Amazon UK and good value for what you get across the pack.
    That sounds ideal. Is there anything I should avoid buying at this age?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes — avoid anything too hard at 9 weeks. Nylon or hard rubber toys marketed for 'aggressive chewers' are too much for baby teeth and can cause micro-fractures you won't even notice until later. Rope toys are fine supervised but they shred and puppies swallow the fibres, so don't leave her alone with those. Antlers and hooves are also a no at this age — brilliant later, but the jaw isn't ready yet. Stick to softer rubber now, and as she gets to 4–5 months and her adult teeth start coming through, you can introduce firmer options. The Rosewood pack should take you comfortably through this first phase.
    Perfect, that's really helpful. I'll grab that multipack and try freezing a couple of them.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a great plan. Keep a couple in the freezer on rotation so there's always a cold one ready when she gets grumpy — it really does take the edge off for them. And if she does go for the chair legs, a firm 'no', swap straight to the cold toy, and praise when she takes it. Consistency with that swap is what actually shifts the behaviour over time. Good luck with her — Jack Russells are a handful but brilliant dogs.

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

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