Norse Cane Corso

Norse Cane Corso Preservation breeder and owner

Great read
02/18/2026

Great read

PYOMETRA CONTINUED...
Often, when pyometra is discussed, it quickly descends into an emotionally charged debate about neutering - if you simply remove their uterus they wouldn't get pyo.

What starts out as a discussion about how to mitigate the incidence of pyo quickly descends into Kaz, normally a lovely person, no doubt, hoping a stranger gets rabies.

Let's all just take a breath and consider the following:

Pyometra develops, it's thought, after repeated heat cycles in dogs that don't have pups at the end of it. Progesterone causes the uterine lining to thicken and at the same time suppresses immune defences in preparation for the new arrival that never comes. Fluid buildup then creates an ideal environment for bacteria (often ascending from the va**na), leading to infection and pus accumulation in the uterus.

Wild dogs (and dingoes and wolves) hardly suffer it at all, it's thought, because they mate. But as Beatrice highlights below, that's a myth. Most wild canids DO NOT get a chance to mate. In packs, you only have the leading male mating with the leading female and sometimes (if food is plenty) with the next female in order. The rest will NOT mate.

So that doesn't fit.

And then we have to consider the fact there is a strong breed effect - how can that be when they all have wombs and no litters?

So something else MUST be going on.

Here's the thing - raw promoting vets (and some groups in the UK have more than 30 on the books...) are reporting that pyo is seen far, far less in raw-fed dogs.

Now, you can take or leave that. I personally take it. They've not been wrong to date.

For years, they have been saying they are seeing far less bloat and pancreatitis in dogs and less kidney and dental disease in cats, too. Now the data is catching up. Soon we will have stats for cancer.

We all know that's high-carb kibble at play in those diseases. If you don't, read a book. Or a study. Or anything.

What was once definitely NOT related to diet is now pegged chiefly down to the (crap) diet.

YES you or your breed can be more disposed to INSERT ISSUE but, as they say, while genes may load the gun, environment pulls the trigger.

YES your breed may have a deep chest but if you feed him plant fibre that causes gas, you are risking bloat.

YES your breed may be more prone to kidney stones but meat based diets acidify the urine, making struvite crystal formation very difficult. High-carb kibble encourages them (particularly if DRY).

YES if your genes make you prone to breast cancer, don't eat sugar (including dogs...all the worrying studies are from dogs fed-high carb dry food, bet its far less likely in dogs fed right).

On and on.

Removing the uterus is one way to prevent pyo, but it MIGHT NOT BE the only way.

Simply recommending enormous operations without considering that seems a touch irresponsible, in my books, especially when removing the go**ds of a female dog has numerous downstream negative effects for the animal (see below, didn't want to bog down the piece).

At this point, folk always say "there are gonadal-sparing techniques" that our vets can do.

Yes "can" do, but don't do for the most part. I know of two vets in the UK doing so. None in Ireland. Any more out there, do let us know.

So, you forcing hysterectomies on dog owners dooms their pets to a a significant increase in numerous diseases, in the mistaken belief that aggressive neutering will reduce the amount of strays in a country being put down but this argument does not hold water. Ireland, UK and US have aggressive neutering policies in place and we have over-population problems too, compared to Sweden that does not recommend the practice and has no overpopulation problem.

Neutering IS NOT reducing our dog overpopulation problem. It's CLEARLY about enforcement of the laws we have in place, not hysterectomies.

Excess pups are coming from di****ad backyard breeders, di****ad puppy farms and di****ads as a whole (responsible people neuter / don't let their dogs wander).

Still today, the Irish govt tax incentivises puppy farms and does not punish owners of roaming dogs in any meaningful way. Sweden has automatic financial penalties in place for such owners. It's not rocket science.

The focus on the potentially harmful band-aid is increasing the risk of some nasty, lifelong issues for the dogs in question.

So, once again, we're all agreed if you don't have a uterus you won't get uterus issues....but let's keep our heads and explore a little further if diet is the petrol to the fire, before wishing viral deaths on everyone.

High-carb, plant-based kibble is perfect for E coli growth. Studies show dry-fed dogs have far more strains of E. coli in there than raw-fed dogs, most notably of B2 strain.

We know when meat eaters fed too much plant matter, particularly carbs, or heat-damaged proteins, this undigested matter hits the colon and feeds "other bacteria", like E.coli. It also alters the pH, allowing them to grow.

Now E.coli begin to competitively exclude the resident anaerobes like Clostridiales and Fusobacteria, which normally suppress E. coli, when they are resourced (fresh meat), and the process picks up pace.

But the invading B2 army needs an "easy ride" to infection-ville. Three things are needed for a successful invasion - numbers (check - high carb kibble grows it) but also the right terrain (check - intact bitch in oestrous) and finally weakened defences (numerous studies show high carb, ultraprocessed kibble is highly inflammatory for dogs, induces gut dysbiosis AND fuels gut disease, CHECK CHECK CHECK).

Dry feeding provides the numbers AND smashes the defences.

In the wrong dog at the wrong time, this is potentially devastating.

How much a part of the problem it is, remains to be seen.

IF THE ABOVE IS THE CASE WHY DID MY RAW FED DOG GET PYO.......because raw-fed dogs are not immune to gut dysbiosis and courses of antibiotics. While absolutely we know more dry-fed dogs suffer the condition, raw-fed dogs can get tummy trouble too, no doubt. The hormones involved in season-time alone are enough to fuel it. Add in a period of stress or a chemical wormer or illness, who knows. Anyone can get unlucky. It's just in dry-fed dogs, the bad guys are encouraged.

***

THE DOWNSIDES OF NEUTERING A BITCH TO AVOID PYO...THAT MIGHT BE DIET-RELATED...
❌ Neutered rotties have an approximate one in four-lifetime risk for osteosarcoma (versus the background figure of 0.1%).
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/veterinary-science/articles/10.3389/fvets.2025.1532039/full

❌ Females neutered younger than 12 months have a markedly higher risk of developing hemangiosarcoma
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2196736

❌ 7 % of German Shepherd females neutered before one year of age develop urinary incontinence vs 0 % of the intact females, in one cohort.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5645870/

❌ Female dogs that keep their s*x hormones are 3 to 10 times more likely to be healthy in old age compared to those altered earlier.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5861885/

❌ More than twice the risk of cruciate ligament rupture in neutered dogs.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39679821/

❌ Spayed females are about 5 times more likely to develop intervertebral disc herniation than intact females (and if spayed before 12 months, they were almost 10 times more likely to develop the problem).
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6236875/

❌ large cohort analysis reveals early gonadectomy is associated with far higher risk of osteoarthritis and other orthopaedic disorders.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10713818/

❌ and contrary to popular belief, two recent studies found removing the s*x hormones of both males and females resulted in MORE aggression, not less (ranging from 20% more to double the level of aggression).
https://www.psychologytoday.com/ie/blog/canine-corner/201702/are-there-behavior-changes-when-dogs-are-spayed-or-neutered

This is why I advocate so strongly for raw feeding.
02/14/2026

This is why I advocate so strongly for raw feeding.

Some brands passed and some brands failed: a new investigation by the Clean Label Project tested 79 of the most popular pet foods and found that dry kibble consistently had the highest levels of heavy metals, plastic-related chemicals, and acrylamide, a compound formed during high-heat processing.
Compared to fresh and frozen foods, kibble contained:

• ~21× more lead and mercury
• 13× more arsenic
• 6× more cadmium
• 24× more acrylamide, with one product testing at 780 ppb

Plastic-associated chemicals like BPA, BPS, and DEHP were also highest in dry food and lowest in fresh and frozen products.

Researchers note that because many dogs eat the same dry food every day for years, long-term exposure and accumulation of contaminants in organs like the liver and kidneys may contribute to chronic disease and potentially increase cancer risk.

Link in comments to read more about which brands passed and failed:

01/27/2026
01/23/2026
Accurate. Read the signs and energy
01/17/2026

Accurate. Read the signs and energy

01/16/2026

Not every person is meant to carry the weight of certain genetics. And that isn’t arrogance, it’s responsibility.

These dogs weren’t created for aesthetics.
They were created for purpose. For work. For stability under pressure. For clarity of mind and strength of nerve. Their genetics carry generations of intention, not trend.

But today, people choose them for how they look.
The power. The intimidation. The status. The image.

And when looks are chosen over genetics, the dog pays the price.

Because a working-bred nervous system placed in unprepared hands doesn’t become “impressive.”
It becomes confused. Frustrated. Overstimulated. Labeled as aggressive, anxious, reactive, or broken.

These dogs don’t need control for the sake of control.
They need guidance.

They don’t need pressure used without purpose.
They need structure that creates security, fulfillment that meets their genetics, and clarity in communication.

They don’t need to be possessed.
They need to be partnered with.

A Malinois without purpose becomes frantic.
A Cane Corso without guidance becomes insecure.
A Doberman without trust becomes defensive.
A German Shepherd without balance becomes unstable.
A Pit Bull without direction becomes misunderstood.
A Heeler without an outlet becomes destructive.

None of those outcomes are the dog’s fault.

We created these breeds to be powerful, driven, sensitive, and intelligent.
Then we punish them for being exactly what we designed.

The tragedy isn’t that these dogs are “too much.”
The tragedy is that too many people take them without being enough.

Enough knowledge.
Enough patience.
Enough structure.
Enough accountability.

Owning a powerful breed should never be about image.
It should be about honoring the responsibility that comes with their genetics.

Because these dogs don’t exist to serve ego.
They exist to work beside capable hands and steady minds.

And when they land in the wrong ones, we don’t just fail the dog. We erase the very purpose they were born for.

01/14/2026

First, no one wants unwanted litters! 🐶 Spay and neuter has saved countless lives, but the issue is more complex than we once thought.

A massive review of 40+ years of veterinary records (over 2 million dogs) revealed something important: neutered dogs, especially spayed females, were more likely to develop hemangiosarcoma, one of the most aggressive canine cancers. Spayed females faced up to a 72% higher risk, while neutered males had a smaller but still measurable increase, mainly for spleen tumors, not heart ones. Even after researchers matched dogs by age and time period, the link stayed strong, showing this isn’t just about early spay/neuter trends but how hormonal shifts can influence other body systems. The takeaway? Each dog’s biology, breed, and hormones matter…and when it comes to lifelong health, one size doesn’t fit all.

These findings remind us that traditional spay/neuter may carry risks, and alternative sterilization techniques, like ovary-sparing spay or vasectomy, should be considered to support long-term health.

PMCID: PMC7155881

Exposure. Not socialization. Important distinction
01/07/2026

Exposure. Not socialization. Important distinction

01/07/2026

In light of the recent news coming out of Nova Scotia, I thought it prudent to address a couple things. Not because I have any opinion on what happened in the situation; but because it raised a couple of critical points I wanted to speak on.

We need to be aware that, as much as we love our dogs, they are animals. This means instincts and prey drive. Essential is buying from a responsible, ethical breeder. Next is the training you do with them. Without fair consistent training, that establishes your relationship with them; they will rely solely on those instincts.

The other point is one of multiple dog households. When they are in a pack, they are more likely to act like the animals they are, as opposed to our trained companions. If you have that mindset, you are more likely to exercise the appropriate cautions and pick up on initial signs. So what do I mean in practical terms. For me, when I have a “pack” out together I am engaging them regularly. If we are doing a pack walk and I am just letting them run and sniff and be dogs, I recall regularly. So they are reminded they are operating under my structure and guidance. Structured play is also a good idea. Either you with them (fetch etc), or simply supervising their play and interrupt excessive rough housing. Alternately, exercising less dogs at a time. At minimum, multiple dogs should always be under supervision when roaming freely.

Again to reinforce, this is simply an opportunity to educate. It is NOT in any way based on any speculations about recent events. I will not engage any discussion on that.

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