Animal Welfare Professionals

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  • 1.  Quarantine Animals Enrichment

    Posted 05-20-2025 12:06 PM

    Looking for some positive and safe enrichment to engage with dangerous dogs. We are required to house multiple pets, with severe bite history sometimes for months while we address outcome. I know we are trying to mitigate behavior with medication, and owner visits when applicable, but was curious if any of you have been successful in providing enrichment for these types of patients?


    #Behavior,TrainingandEnrichment

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    Jacqui Ruby-Major
    Clinical Manager
    Fresno Animal Center
    CA
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  • 2.  RE: Quarantine Animals Enrichment

    Posted 05-20-2025 02:14 PM

    This is a great question and a topic that I'd love to continue to learn and grow in. With that said, I've worked with similar long-term cases involving dangerous animals in captivity with bite histories, and enrichment has been a vital part of supporting their welfare and reducing stress. For dogs who can't be handled safely, we focus on low-contact enrichment that keeps staff safe but still gives the dog choice, mental stimulation, and comfort.

    Some ideas that have worked well for us:

    • Scent work using cardboard boxes, snuffle mats, or hidden treats

    • Frozen food toys (like KONGs) delivered with a grabber or treat pole

    • PVC or remote treat dispensers (like Pet Tutor or even DIY tubes)

    • Audio and visual enrichment (calming music, dog-safe videos, mirror play)

    • Novel scent items (lavender, hay, other animal scents) in mesh bags hung safely

    We rotate these to keep things fresh, and always tailor the approach to the dog's individual behavior and triggers. Safety is key, so we use tools to deliver enrichment without direct contact and train staff to observe and document behavior changes.

    I'd love to hear more ideas on this topic, too-I'm always looking for new and safe ways to engage challenging animals with enriching, low-stress activities!



    ------------------------------
    Kimberly Nnowalue
    Founder & Executive Director
    Sierra Overlook Animal Rescue
    CA
    ------------------------------



  • 3.  RE: Quarantine Animals Enrichment

    Posted 05-20-2025 05:40 PM

    These are a wonderful place to start. I really do like being able to incorporate a myriad of positive enrichment. Thank you!

    I was curious if you have an studies or reference material about the audio or visual enrichment, I'm curious if we can try and mix in some different ideas.



    ------------------------------
    Jacqui Ruby-Major
    Clinical Manager
    Fresno Animal Center
    CA
    ------------------------------



  • 4.  RE: Quarantine Animals Enrichment

    Posted 05-21-2025 03:02 AM
    Following for the kennel enrichment ideas.  :) 

    On Tue, May 20, 2025 at 8:39 PM Jacqui Ruby-Major via Maddie's Pet Forum <Mail@maddiesfund.org> wrote:
    These are a wonderful place to start. I really do like being able to incorporate a myriad of positive enrichment. Thank you! I was curious if... -posted to the "Animal Welfare Professionals" community
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    May 20, 2025 5:40 PM
    Jacqui Ruby-Major

    These are a wonderful place to start. I really do like being able to incorporate a myriad of positive enrichment. Thank you!

    I was curious if you have an studies or reference material about the audio or visual enrichment, I'm curious if we can try and mix in some different ideas.



    ------------------------------
    Jacqui Ruby-Major
    Clinical Manager
    Fresno Animal Center
    CA
    ------------------------------
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    Original Message:
    Sent: 5/20/2025 8:40:00 PM
    From: Jacqui Ruby-Major
    Subject: RE: Quarantine Animals Enrichment

    These are a wonderful place to start. I really do like being able to incorporate a myriad of positive enrichment. Thank you!

    I was curious if you have an studies or reference material about the audio or visual enrichment, I'm curious if we can try and mix in some different ideas.



    ------------------------------
    Jacqui Ruby-Major
    Clinical Manager
    Fresno Animal Center
    CA
    ------------------------------

    Original Message:
    Sent: 05-20-2025 01:38 PM
    From: Kimberly Nnowalue
    Subject: Quarantine Animals Enrichment

    This is a great question and a topic that I'd love to continue to learn and grow in. With that said, I've worked with similar long-term cases involving dangerous animals in captivity with bite histories, and enrichment has been a vital part of supporting their welfare and reducing stress. For dogs who can't be handled safely, we focus on low-contact enrichment that keeps staff safe but still gives the dog choice, mental stimulation, and comfort.

    Some ideas that have worked well for us:

    • Scent work using cardboard boxes, snuffle mats, or hidden treats

    • Frozen food toys (like KONGs) delivered with a grabber or treat pole

    • PVC or remote treat dispensers (like Pet Tutor or even DIY tubes)

    • Audio and visual enrichment (calming music, dog-safe videos, mirror play)

    • Novel scent items (lavender, hay, other animal scents) in mesh bags hung safely

    We rotate these to keep things fresh, and always tailor the approach to the dog's individual behavior and triggers. Safety is key, so we use tools to deliver enrichment without direct contact and train staff to observe and document behavior changes.

    I'd love to hear more ideas on this topic, too-I'm always looking for new and safe ways to engage challenging animals with enriching, low-stress activities!



    ------------------------------
    Kimberly Nnowalue
    Founder & Executive Director
    Sierra Overlook Animal Rescue
    CA


  • 5.  RE: Quarantine Animals Enrichment

    Posted 05-21-2025 08:06 AM

    Absolutely, I've had some success working with dogs who have severe bite histories, and I totally understand how challenging and emotionally draining it can be. One thing that's helped me is providing enrichment that doesn't require direct interaction-like puzzle feeders, snuffle mats, or frozen Kongs filled with high-value treats. These allow the dogs to engage their brains and reduce stress without putting staff at risk.

    Additionally, I've found that scent-based enrichment-like rotating new smells (lavender, vanilla, or even just old t-shirts with safe animal scents)-can be really calming. Music or audiobooks played at a low volume also sometimes help regulate their environment and reduce arousal. Just be sure to observe how each individual reacts-what works wonders for one dog might agitate another. Hang in there; your effort truly matters.



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    Jayne M
    Pet Care
    Pet Care
    FL
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