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    Cane Corso puppy teething — safe chew toys

    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 with a Cane Corso it hits differently — even at 10 weeks these dogs have jaw strength that can destroy toys designed for most other breeds, which turns a soothing chew into a choking hazard fast. Having the right toy available — firm enough to satisfy that urge, safe for developing teeth, and ideally something you can chill to ease sore gums — genuinely changes how much of your home survives the next few months. Can you tell me how old your pup is exactly, what's prompting the worry right now — the chewing itself, or is something specific already getting destroyed?
    He's 10 weeks old, already a Cane Corso. I bought a rubber chew toy from the pet shop and he had chunks off it within about 20 minutes. I'm worried he's going to swallow a piece.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a completely valid concern and honestly not an overreaction — swallowing chunks of soft rubber at 10 weeks is a real risk. Standard puppy toys are rated for average bite pressure, and a Cane Corso at 10 weeks is already outside that range. You need something rated for extreme chewers from day one, not when he's older. What does he gravitate toward — does he want to carry things around, or is he mostly just grinding and gnawing in one spot?
    Mostly just clamping down and grinding. He finds a spot on the sofa leg and just works at it.
    inparticular.ai
    Classic — he wants sustained pressure relief, not play. For that, the Kong Extreme Puppy is the one I'd go to first. It's made from their black rubber compound, which is their toughest formulation and specifically designed for power chewers. The puppy version is slightly softer than the adult Extreme to protect developing teeth, but it's still dramatically more resistant than anything sold as a general puppy toy. Critically, it's designed so that even aggressive chewers can't break off chunks — the rubber deforms rather than fractures. You can stuff the hollow centre with something like wet food and freeze it, which gives him that sustained grinding session and the cold helps with gum soreness. One thing — get the Large, not the size labelled for his current weight. He'll grow into it within weeks, and the smaller ones are too easy for his jaw to fully compress.
    View Kong Classic (Red) on AmazonView Kong Extreme (Black) on Amazon
    That sounds good. Is it actually safe for a 10-week-old though? I don't want to damage his adult teeth coming through.
    inparticular.ai
    Good question and it's the right thing to ask. The Extreme Puppy is softer than the adult Extreme — Kong specifically made this distinction because puppy teeth and developing adult teeth below the gumline can be damaged by anything too rigid. The rule of thumb vets often use is: if you press your thumbnail into the toy and it doesn't leave any indent at all, it's too hard. The Extreme Puppy passes that test — it has give, just far more structural integrity than the standard coloured rubber. What you want to avoid are hard nylon bones and antlers at this age. Those are the ones that crack teeth. Frozen Kong stuffed with food sits in a safe middle ground — firm enough to satisfy, not so hard it causes damage.
    Perfect, I'll order the large. Should I get more than one so I can rotate them from the freezer?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes, two is ideal. One in the freezer, one in use — that way you always have a cold one ready and it becomes a routine he looks forward to. It also means when he goes for the sofa leg you have something to immediately redirect him to rather than a scramble. At 10 weeks the redirect has to be instant or the moment's gone. Two Kongs in rotation is genuinely one of the most practical setups for this breed at this age.

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

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