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 a 13-week Wheaten Terrier is right in the thick of it — those needle teeth are falling out and the urge to chew everything in sight is completely overwhelming for them. Having the right chew toys available makes a genuine difference: they need to be firm enough to satisfy but safe for developing teeth, and ideally chillable to soothe sore gums. How old is your puppy, what breed, and is the main concern the chewing itself or protecting specific things in the home?
She's 13 weeks, a Soft Coated Wheaten Terrier. The chewing is the main thing but I'd love something that keeps her mentally busy too — she gets bored really fast and then destroys things. I don't want to spend a fortune though.
inparticular.ai
A Wheaten at 13 weeks who gets bored fast — yes, that tracks completely. They're clever dogs and the teething frustration compounds the mischief. Before I point you anywhere, can I ask: does she go after soft things like cushions and shoes, hard things like chair legs and skirting boards, or is it fairly indiscriminate right now?
Honestly everything, but she seems to especially love the corner of the sofa and my slippers. Soft and firm both.
inparticular.ai
That's useful — she's not being picky, she just wants resistance and something to work at. For a puppy that needs both teething relief and mental engagement on a budget, I'd go straight to the Kong Puppy. It's the pink or blue rubber version made specifically for puppy teeth — softer than the adult Classic so it won't damage her developing mouth, but firm enough to give real satisfaction. The key is what you do with it: stuff it with a bit of wet food or peanut butter and freeze it for a few hours before giving it to her. Frozen stuffing means she has to work to get the food out, which kills boredom, and the cold rubber actively soothes inflamed gums. It redirects her from the sofa because it's more rewarding than a furniture corner. A size Small is right for a Wheaten at this age, and they're around £8–10 on Amazon UK — genuinely one of the best pounds-per-hour-of-occupation toys you'll find.
That sounds really practical actually. Can I use it every day or will she get bored of it?
inparticular.ai
She won't get bored if you vary the stuffing — that's what keeps it novel. One day a spoonful of wet puppy food, another day a smear of plain peanut butter (xylitol-free, important to check the label), another day a few pieces of her kibble softened with water. The toy itself stays the same but her brain treats it as a new puzzle each time because the reward is different. A lot of owners buy two so one is always in the freezer ready to go — at £8–10 each it's still cheaper than one session of sofa corner repair.
Ha, very fair point. I'll get two. Thanks, this is really helpful.
inparticular.ai
Perfect plan. Two Kongs in rotation and a freezer full of stuffing and you'll get through this teething phase with your slippers mostly intact. It does pass — usually by 16–20 weeks the worst of it eases off. Good luck with her!
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.