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    Safe chew toys after squeaker incident

    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
    Swallowing a squeaker at 10 weeks is genuinely frightening, and I completely understand why you're being cautious now — that's exactly the right response. Teething is one of the most intense periods of puppyhood, and with a Husky you've got a breed that will chew with real purpose even at this age. Having the right toys available — firm enough to satisfy, safe for developing teeth, ideally chillable to soothe sore gums, and with absolutely no detachable parts — makes a huge difference to how much destruction happens and how much anxiety you carry. Can I ask: how is your puppy doing after the squeaker incident, and is your main worry now about finding something safe to chew, or are you also trying to protect specific things in the house?
    She's fine thankfully, the vet said it passed. But I'm now terrified of buying the wrong thing again. She's 10 weeks old, a Siberian Husky, and honestly I just want something I can trust completely — no squeakers, no parts that can come off. She's already destroying everything she can get hold of.
    inparticular.ai
    Really relieved she's okay. And yes, at 10 weeks a Husky is already showing you what the next year is going to look like — they are serious chewers from the start. Before I point you toward something specific, one quick thing: is she doing most of her chewing on soft things like fabric and cushions, or is she going for harder items like furniture legs and shoes? It helps me make sure the toy I suggest actually satisfies the kind of chewing she's doing.
    Mostly soft things at the moment — my slippers, a cushion she dragged off the sofa, a tea towel. But I imagine that'll change as she gets older.
    inparticular.ai
    That makes perfect sense — at 10 weeks her mouth is still tender, so she's drawn to softer textures. But you're right that it will change fast, especially with a Husky. What I'd recommend right now is the Kong Puppy — the pink or blue one, which is specifically made for puppy teeth rather than adult dogs. It's made from a softer natural rubber compound than the classic Kong, so it's gentle enough for her developing teeth and gums, but there are absolutely no squeakers, no detachable parts, nothing that can be chewed off and swallowed. It's one solid piece of rubber. You can stuff the hollow centre with a little puppy-safe paste or wet food and freeze it, which does two things: keeps her occupied longer and soothes the gum soreness that's driving a lot of the chewing. Kong is the brand that vets and behaviourists recommend most consistently, and for a pup who's already had a scare with a cheap toy, the build quality difference is immediately obvious. For a 10-week Husky I'd go for the small size to start, moving to medium as she grows.
    View Kong Classic (Red) on AmazonView Kong Puppy (Blue/Pink) on Amazon
    That sounds really good actually. Is it okay to freeze it straight away, even at her age? And how long should I let her have it at a time?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes, freezing is absolutely fine from this age — it's actually one of the best things you can do right now because her gums are actively sore and the cold genuinely helps. Just make sure whatever you stuff it with is puppy-safe: plain puppy wet food, a little unsalted peanut butter (check it contains no xylitol), or just smear the inside with a tiny bit of puppy paste. On timing — I'd treat it as a supervised activity to begin with, not because the Kong itself is risky, but just so you can watch how she interacts with it and build your own confidence back up after what happened. Once you've seen her using it properly, most owners leave their Husky with it freely. The rubber is tough enough that even as she gets older and her bite gets stronger, she won't be breaking pieces off it.
    Perfect. I'll order the small Kong Puppy today. Thanks for not just telling me any old toy would be fine — I needed someone to actually take the squeaker thing seriously.
    inparticular.ai
    It absolutely deserved to be taken seriously — you trusted a product and it let you down, and that changes how you approach every purchase after it. The Kong Puppy is genuinely one of the few things I'd recommend without any caveats in this situation. Get the small, freeze it stuffed, and let her work through some of that teething energy safely. You're already thinking about this the right way.

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

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