This is a specific conversation about Slow feeder bowls — stopping dogs eating too fast — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A Jack Russell living with an elderly owner on hard floors is actually a really important setup to get right — a bowl that skids across the kitchen during meals is a trip hazard for you and frustrating for the dog. Before I suggest anything, it's worth knowing that dogs who eat too fast are at real risk of bloat — which can be life-threatening in larger breeds but still causes painful gas and vomiting in small dogs like Jack Russells — and a well-chosen slow feeder can genuinely halve their eating time. Can you tell me: how fast is your Jack Russell currently eating their meals, roughly how much do they eat per sitting, and have you noticed any vomiting or gassiness afterwards?
She hoovers it up in about 30 seconds flat, maybe half a cup of kibble. She does burp and sometimes brings a bit back up right after eating. I'm 74 and live alone so I need something that won't slide around — I can't be chasing a bowl across the floor.
inparticular.ai
That 30-second inhale followed by burping and regurgitation is a classic sign she's eating far too fast — the food comes back up before it even has a chance to settle. Totally fixable with the right bowl. And you're absolutely right to flag the sliding issue — that's a safety concern I take seriously. What surface is she eating on, tile or wood?
Ceramic tile in the kitchen. Everything slides on it.
inparticular.ai
Ceramic tile is the toughest surface for this — even heavy bowls can creep. Here's what I'd recommend: the Outward Hound Fun Feeder Slow Bowl in the small size. It has a deep rubber base that grips tile really well, and the maze pattern inside forces a Jack Russell to work around the ridges rather than just scooping. For half a cup of kibble it works perfectly — not too complex that she gets frustrated, but enough to stretch that 30 seconds out to three or four minutes. It's also lightweight for you to pick up and wash, and it's dishwasher safe. Available on Amazon UK for around £10–12. That burping and regurgitation should stop within a few days of switching.
That sounds ideal. Is it easy to clean? I've got arthritis in my hands so scrubbing fiddly things is hard.
inparticular.ai
Good question — it goes straight in the dishwasher top rack, which is genuinely the easiest option. If you hand wash, the ridges are rounded rather than sharp-edged, so a soft brush goes through them without much effort. No tight corners that trap food. For arthritis, dishwasher is the way to go and it handles it well.
Perfect, I'll order that one. Thank you so much.
inparticular.ai
You're very welcome. Go for the small size — it's the right fit for a Jack Russell and half a cup of kibble sits in it neatly. You should notice the regurgitation stop quite quickly once she's slowing down. If she ever gets clever and starts nudging it into a corner to pin it, a small silicone placemat underneath adds another layer of grip. Hope it makes mealtimes calmer for both of you.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.