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    Rubber ring toy for teething Greyhound puppy

    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
    A 13-week-old Greyhound with gum irritation — your vet is steering you in exactly the right direction. Greyhounds have notoriously thin, sensitive skin and their gum tissue is no different, so a softer rubber ring toy is a genuinely sensible choice rather than the harder nylon chews that work fine for stockier breeds. Teething is one of the most intense periods of puppyhood, and having the right toy available — firm enough to satisfy the urge to chew but gentle enough not to aggravate those delicate gums, and ideally chillable to bring some relief — really does change how much your sofa suffers. Did the vet say anything specific about hardness level, and is the chewing currently focused on furniture or is it more that your pup is clearly uncomfortable and gnawing on anything within reach?
    Mostly discomfort I think — she's chewing her own paws and my fingers more than the furniture. The vet just said rubber ring, nothing more specific than that.
    inparticular.ai
    Paw-chewing and mouthing fingers is classic sore-gum behaviour — she's looking for gentle counter-pressure rather than a serious destructive chew, which actually makes the choice easier. For a Greyhound at this age I'd go with the KONG Puppy Ring. It's made from KONG's puppy-specific rubber formula, which is noticeably softer than their adult range and designed precisely for developing teeth and sensitive gums. The ring shape means she can hold it between her paws and work around the whole surface, and crucially you can wet it and freeze it — even 20 minutes in the freezer makes a real difference when gums are inflamed. The size to get is Small. It's widely available on Amazon UK and it's the one I'd reach for first given what your vet said.
    View Kong Classic (Red) on AmazonView Kong Puppy (Blue/Pink) on Amazon
    That sounds good. How long does a puppy usually need this kind of soft rubber toy before she can move onto something firmer?
    inparticular.ai
    Greyhounds are usually through the worst of teething by around 16 to 20 weeks, though some pups are still a bit sensitive up to 6 months when the larger molars come through. A practical sign to watch for is when she stops seeking your fingers and paws and starts going after tougher textures — at that point you can introduce something like a standard KONG Classic alongside the ring rather than replacing it straight away. For Greyhounds I'd stay away from very hard nylon or antler chews even as adults; the softer rubber and rope toys tend to suit the breed long-term. The puppy ring will likely stay useful well beyond the acute teething phase just as an everyday chew outlet.
    View Split Elk Antler Chew on Amazon
    Good to know. Can I stuff the ring with anything to make it more interesting?
    inparticular.ai
    The KONG Puppy Ring isn't designed to be stuffed the way the Classic is — it's a solid ring rather than hollow — but you can absolutely smear a little something on the surface to add interest. A thin layer of plain cream cheese, unsalted peanut butter, or KONG's own Puppy Easy Treat paste works well. Freeze it with the paste on and you get both the flavour interest and the gum-soothing cold in one go. Keep portions very small at 13 weeks; you're not feeding her from it, just making it more rewarding than your fingers.

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

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