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    Australian Cattle Dog puppy chewed stuffing

    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
    Eating the stuffing is a real warning sign — fabric toys just aren't built for a breed like yours. Teething is one of the most intense periods of puppyhood, and Australian Cattle Dogs are working dogs with serious jaw drive even at 15 weeks. Having the right chew toys available — ones that are firm enough to satisfy but safe for developing teeth, and ideally chillable to soothe sore gums — makes a genuine difference to how much destruction happens. Before I point you somewhere specific: is the main concern stopping the ingestion risk, or are there particular things in the home — furniture, cables, shoes — that are already taking the hit?
    Both really. She's eaten stuffing twice now which freaked me out, and she's also started on the corner of the sofa. She's 15 weeks, female, about 6kg already.
    inparticular.ai
    That weight at 15 weeks tells me she's going to be a solid dog, and ACDs are bred to work all day — that jaw is not going to get tired. Fabric toys with stuffing are genuinely dangerous for this breed at any age, not just during teething, so it's good you're switching now. The sofa corner is textbook teething displacement — she needs something to really sink into. What has she shown any interest in at all? Any toys she's engaged with longer than a few minutes, even briefly?
    She liked a rubber ring for a day or two but got bored. She seems to want to really chew and tear, not just mouth things.
    inparticular.ai
    That tracks perfectly — she wants resistance and something that gives a little as she chews, which is exactly what satisfies the teething urge. A plain rubber ring doesn't have enough going on. My clear recommendation is the Kong Puppy toy — specifically the red one, which is made from a softer rubber compound than the adult Kong but still far tougher than anything fabric. You can stuff it with a bit of wet food or paste and then freeze it, which does two things: it extends the chewing session significantly, and the cold actively soothes inflamed gums. For a 6kg ACD pup, go for the medium size. It won't shred, there's nothing to ingest, and it redirects the tearing instinct into something structured. Keep two so one is always in the freezer ready to go.
    View Kong Classic (Red) on AmazonView Kong Puppy (Blue/Pink) on Amazon
    Is the puppy Kong actually tough enough for her though? I've heard ACDs can destroy Kongs.
    inparticular.ai
    Fair question, and you're right that adult ACDs can absolutely wreck a standard Kong. At 15 weeks her teeth are still baby teeth — they're sharp but the jaw pressure isn't what it will be. The puppy Kong formula is softer than the adult version precisely because harder rubber can damage milk teeth. So right now, it's the correct call. When she loses her baby teeth around 5–6 months and her adult teeth are in, you'll want to move to the black Kong Extreme, which is the toughest rubber Kong makes and genuinely does hold up to power chewers. Think of the puppy Kong as the right tool for this stage, not forever.
    View Kong Extreme (Black) on Amazon
    That makes sense. And will it actually stop her going for the sofa?
    inparticular.ai
    It will help a lot, especially if the frozen Kong appears right around the times she's been targeting the sofa — often that's when she's slightly bored or overstimulated. The key is making the Kong the most interesting thing available in that moment, which is why stuffing and freezing it matters more than just handing over an empty one. If the sofa corner is already damaged and she's returning to the same spot, covering it temporarily with a deterrent spray — something like Grannick's Bitter Apple — alongside the Kong redirection tends to break the habit faster. But the Kong is the core fix.
    View Grannick's Bitter Apple Spray on Amazon

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

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