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    Best puzzle feeder for a Greyhound in a flat

    This is a specific conversation about Puzzle feeders for dogs — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A Greyhound in a high-rise with no garden — that's a setup where mental enrichment really earns its keep. Puzzle feeders genuinely do two useful things: they slow down fast eaters (which cuts bloat risk and aids digestion) and they give dogs a job to do, which matters a lot when outdoor exercise is limited. The catch is difficulty level — too easy and the dog checks out after 30 seconds, too hard and they walk off frustrated. To point you at the right thing: what's your Greyhound's persistence like when something doesn't work immediately — do they stick at it or give up quickly? And are you mainly after enrichment, or is fast gulping also a problem you want to solve?
    She's a 2-year-old ex-racing greyhound, so she's pretty calm indoors but gets bored. She tends to give up if something is too tricky — not super persistent. Fast eating isn't really the issue, it's more about keeping her brain occupied since we can't just let her run around outside.
    inparticular.ai
    That's really helpful. Ex-racers are interesting — they're intelligent but they've never been taught to problem-solve, so they can get flat quickly if a puzzle feels punishing. You want something that gives her a genuine challenge without a steep learning curve, and that holds her attention for more than a few minutes. What are you currently feeding her — kibble, wet food, or would you use something like peanut butter or yoghurt as a puzzle topping?
    Mostly kibble but I'd be happy to use wet food or something spreadable if it works better.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — spreadable food is actually ideal here. My recommendation is the LickiMat Wobble. It's a textured silicone bowl on a weighted base that rocks as she licks, which adds just enough unpredictability to keep her engaged without ever frustrating her. Spread something like wet food, peanut butter, or plain yoghurt into the grooves and it turns a two-minute meal into a ten-to-fifteen minute focused session. For a low-persistence dog, that balance is exactly right — she gets real mental stimulation, but she won't hit a wall and disengage. It's also easy to clean in the dishwasher, which matters when you're using it daily in a flat. The wobble motion is particularly good for Greyhounds because it rewards calm, sustained licking rather than pawing or nosing, which suits their temperament well.
    That sounds really good actually. Will one session a day be enough enrichment for her, or should I be doing more?
    inparticular.ai
    One LickiMat session is a solid baseline, but for a young ex-racer in a flat I'd suggest two shorter sessions rather than one long one — morning and evening works well. You can also vary the fillings to keep it novel; rotating between wet food, a smear of peanut butter, and frozen Greek yoghurt means the same product gives her something different each time. If you find she polishes it too fast even with spreading it thin, freeze it overnight — that easily doubles the duration. Combined with whatever walks she's getting, two sessions a day will make a real difference to her calmness indoors.
    Brilliant, I'll go for it. Thanks so much.
    inparticular.ai
    Great choice for her situation. The LickiMat Wobble is widely available on Amazon UK — just search that exact name and it comes up immediately, usually with next-day delivery. Freeze the first one before you give it to her so she gets a longer session right from the start. Good luck with her — ex-racers are wonderful dogs once they figure out how to switch off.

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