The Red Dog Co

The Red Dog Co The Red Dog Company was born out of the frustration of not being able to find a comfortable bed that stood the test of time and looked great.
(4)

We're obsessed with making the best luxury dog beds, mats, & collars available.

Made in Great Britain.

Orange Boy opened his eyes on day twelve.
08/10/2024

Orange Boy opened his eyes on day twelve.

The Red Dog Pack is growing, Islay had six lovely pups last week.
01/10/2024

The Red Dog Pack is growing, Islay had six lovely pups last week.

After five second places, and numerous other awards, I’m delighted to report that Islay is now a field trial winner!    ...
18/12/2023

After five second places, and numerous other awards, I’m delighted to report that Islay is now a field trial winner!

Our new Oval Beds are available in Willow and Cerulean - here’s Islay rocking the Cerulean.
23/03/2023

Our new Oval Beds are available in Willow and Cerulean - here’s Islay rocking the Cerulean.

What are elbow calluses?Elbow calluses are hairless patches of thickened skin found over bony prominences, such as elbow...
17/10/2022

What are elbow calluses?

Elbow calluses are hairless patches of thickened skin found over bony prominences, such as elbows. These unsightly areas of skin are common in dogs, especially in short coated large and giant breeds such as Labrador Retriever, Rottweiler, Great Dane and Bullmastiff.

What causes them?

Calluses are usually caused by frequently lying on hard surfaces and if remedies are not put in place, the calluses can become more than a cosmetic issue with secondary infections causing inflammation and discomfort. The dry, elephant-like, thickened skin can crack and allow bacteria to multiply causing infection. Hair follicles can become impacted in the skin, acting like foreign bodies and inciting further reaction. Surface ulceration can form as well as fistulas that allow infection to track more deeply. Some dogs will form hygromas over bony prominences. These differ from calluses in that they are capsule-enclosed, fluid-filled swellings that develop under the skin as a result of repeat trauma. Hygromas act as cushions to protect the joint. Like calluses, they are often a cosmetic issue but can also become secondarily infected causing discomfort.

The importance of the right sleeping surface

It’s important to encourage bed use, especially for those large breed dogs that are predisposed to forming elbow calluses or hygromas. Ideally have multiple supportive beds and mats around the home to give them choice and reduce the likelihood of sleeping on the floor. In warm weather large dogs tend to want to stretch out to cool off. Rather than allow them to crash out on the cool, hard stone floor, encourage them on to their supportive, soft mat. A Red Dog Company Mat without sides will allow large dogs to stretch out whilst supporting the joints and protecting the soft tissues and skin over the elbows. The natural wool topper helps with thermoregulation.

The Red Dog Company also make a Giant Mat specifically for the larger breeds which are prone to elbow calluses.

Body Condition Score

Large breed and giant breed dogs are more prone to callus formation and even more so if they are overweight. Overweight small breed dogs such as Dachshunds can form calluses on their sternum. By keeping your dog slim as an adult and into their senior years, it has great all round health benefits. Check out the WSAVA Body Condition Score Chart and aim to keep your dog at 4-5/9. Senior dogs, with their thinner, less elastic skin and their more sedentary lifestyle are at increased risk for callus formation. As well as tiring more easily and needing more time to rest in recovery, older dogs’ increased incidence of arthritis often means they rest more.

Prevention is better than cure

By taking some simple precautions, you can minimise the risk of calluses forming. If calluses have already formed, they will not go away as long as the trauma and pressure to the bony prominence continues. The callus itself will not be painful but if secondary infection forms, this can be. Your dog may show signs of discomfort by limping or trying to lick the thickened, traumatised area of skin. A moist surface oozing with blood or discharge, redness, inflammation and warmth would all suggest that secondary infection is present and a vet visit is indicated.

Alison graduated from Cambridge University, in Veterinary medicine and surgery, in 1999. She initially worked in mixed practice before concentrating on domestic animals for the next 16 years. When Alison isn’t working as a vet, she is helping The Red Dog Company make the very best beds, mats and accessories available.

What are elbow calluses?Elbow calluses are hairless patches of thickened skin found over bony prominences, such as elbow...
17/10/2022

What are elbow calluses?

Elbow calluses are hairless patches of thickened skin found over bony prominences, such as elbows. These unsightly areas of skin are common in dogs, especially in short coated large and giant breeds such as Labrador Retriever, Rottweiler, Great Dane and Bullmastiff.

What causes them?

Calluses are usually caused by frequently lying on hard surfaces and if remedies are not put in place, the calluses can become more than a cosmetic issue with secondary infections causing inflammation and discomfort. The dry, elephant-like, thickened skin can crack and allow bacteria to multiply causing infection. Hair follicles can become impacted in the skin, acting like foreign bodies and inciting further reaction. Surface ulceration can form as well as fistulas that allow infection to track more deeply. Some dogs will form hygromas over bony prominences. These differ from calluses in that they are capsule-enclosed, fluid-filled swellings that develop under the skin as a result of repeat trauma. Hygromas act as cushions to protect the joint. Like calluses, they are often a cosmetic issue but can also become secondarily infected causing discomfort.

The importance of the right sleeping surface

It’s important to encourage bed use, especially for those large breed dogs that are predisposed to forming elbow calluses or hygromas. Ideally have multiple supportive beds and mats around the home to give them choice and reduce the likelihood of sleeping on the floor.
In warm weather large dogs tend to want to stretch out to cool off. Rather than allow them to crash out on the cool, hard stone floor, encourage them on to their supportive, soft mat. A Red Dog Company Mat without sides will allow large dogs to stretch out whilst supporting the joints and protecting the soft tissues and skin over the elbows. The natural wool topper helps with thermoregulation.

The Red Dog Company also make a Giant Mat specifically for the larger breeds which are prone to elbow calluses.

Body Condition Score

Large breed and giant breed dogs are more prone to callus formation and even more so if they are overweight. Overweight small breed dogs such as Dachshunds can form calluses on their sternum. By keeping your dog slim as an adult and into their senior years, it has great all round health benefits. Check out the WSAVA Body Condition Score Chart and aim to keep your dog at 4-5/9. Senior dogs, with their thinner, less elastic skin and their more sedentary lifestyle are at increased risk for callus formation. As well as tiring more easily and needing more time to rest in recovery, older dogs’ increased incidence of arthritis often means they rest more.

Prevention is better than cure

By taking some simple precautions, you can minimise the risk of calluses forming. If calluses have already formed, they will not go away as long as the trauma and pressure to the bony prominence continues. The callus itself will not be painful but if secondary infection forms, this can be. Your dog may show signs of discomfort by limping or trying to lick the thickened, traumatised area of skin. A moist surface oozing with blood or discharge, redness, inflammation and warmth would all suggest that secondary infection is present and a vet visit is indicated.

Alison graduated from Cambridge University, in Veterinary medicine and surgery, in 1999. She initially worked in mixed practice before concentrating on domestic animals for the next 16 years. When Alison isn’t working as a vet, she is helping The Red Dog Company make the very best beds, mats and accessories available.

We met all sorts of lovely new customers at Burghley 2022.
04/09/2022

We met all sorts of lovely new customers at Burghley 2022.

The Glorious TwelfthAn absolute privilege to be out on the North York Moors for the first day of the new season. The aus...
15/08/2022

The Glorious Twelfth

An absolute privilege to be out on the North York Moors for the first day of the new season. The auspicious event was a field trial organised by the Norfolk and Suffolk HPR Field Trial Club. We started early to avoid the heat with Islay running at number one. Conditions were perfect, running into a gentle headwind, on shortish heather. She quartered the ground nicely and soon came on to a staunch point. The bird was duly shot and she was sent for the retrieve. This wasn't entirely straight forward, as she had to pick the bird from amongst a small covey, but Islay didn't let that distract her. She dropped the retrieve on the way back, but quickly gathered the bird up and delivered it to hand. This was a slightly dicey moment, as if she had been judged to have put the bird down we would have been eliminated. Luckily she wasn't, and we had what was possibly the first grouse of the year, safely in the bag at just after seven. Her second run was very short and uneventful, as the judges rattled through the card before the day heated up. A German Longhaired Pointer was awarded second place, Islay third, and a German Wirehaired Pointer received a certificate of merit. All in all a great day and fantastic start to the season.

When Nick is not gallivanting around the country working his dogs, he is helping to design the very best dog beds and accessories for The Red Dog Company.

Many thanks to for organising the day and for the photo.

Wool Roll Mat - helping keep Yogi cool in the summer and warm in the winter.
16/07/2022

Wool Roll Mat - helping keep Yogi cool in the summer and warm in the winter.

22/06/2022

Extra Large Dog Bed We've listened - a big dog needs a big bed. Our Giant Mat measures 140cm x 90cm x 15cm. The mattress is based on our original proprietary orthopaedic memory foam mattress. However, for the XL, we've doubled the thickness to provide support for dogs weighing up to 120kg. Giant Bre...

21/06/2022

Why use a Slip Lead? A Slip Lead is simply a running noose with a handle. It is the lead of choice for many working dogs and also makes a great choice for many other applications. Due to the risk of getting caught up, dogs involved in activities ranging from sporting purposes, to rescue work, are ex...

Yogi doing a bit of product testing. Neoprene jackets are the best,but a good fit is essential.
19/06/2022

Yogi doing a bit of product testing. Neoprene jackets are the best,
but a good fit is essential.

If you are at Badminton this weekend come and say hello.
06/05/2022

If you are at Badminton this weekend come and say hello.

07/03/2022

Yogi and I had a great time pointing grouse in the Yorkshire Dales this weekend, and it will be Islay’s turn in a couple of weeks. I’ll always be grateful to the Kennel Club, as it was their inaugural Pointing Breeds Training Weekend about fifteen years ago, that first revealed to me what pointing dogs are born to do.

When Nick is not gallivanting around the country working his dogs, he is helping to design the very best dog beds and accessories for The Red Dog Company.

The second half of the season started with us back on partridge in Lincolnshire. Islay didn’t run particularly well. To ...
07/02/2022

The second half of the season started with us back on partridge in Lincolnshire. Islay didn’t run particularly well. To make sure we don’t get eliminated for missing game, I’ve become too controlling, and the result is she now keeps checking back with me, looking for instruction, and interrupting the flow of her hunting. She is usually careful, so I was surprised when she bumped a pheasant, and we were promptly put out.

The next trial, on partridge and pheasant in Kent, was closer to home. The trial was on mustard, amongst other things, and there was plenty of game about. The wind was tricky, as the smallish fields were bounded by tall trees, causing rotor and other funny local effects. Islay’s running was still a little stunted and it was clear she still needed a few outings with me leaving the whistle well alone. She had a blind retrieve on her first run and a good HPR on her second. Four dogs went to water, and three succeeded. My best guess was we that we were in second place, but in the end, we were awarded third place.

Three days later we were in Derbyshire, working hedgerows for pheasant and partridge. Yogi had won a first here the previous season, but the ground didn’t suit Islay, who hasn’t the best coat for forcing her way through thick bramble. Nonetheless, on her first run she quickly came on point, but the bird lifted before the guns could get into position. Moments later she came on point again, and this time the guns shot the bird, and she made an easy retrieve. She put the bird down to get a better grip, but as she didn’t look at me for instruction, or mess around, I don’t think it did us any harm. The second run was less impressive; once again she came on point in less than a minute, but despite entering the thick hedge, she couldn’t produce the bird. She emerged unsuccessful and we hunted on. She came on point again, and again she was unable to produce the bird. I knew we hadn’t impressed on the second run, but at least we were one of the three that made it to water. Only two made it to the awards, a nice little Wire-haired Vizsla who’d made some fantastic retrieves got a first, and we were awarded a disappointing, but justified, Certificate of Merit.

At the end of October were back in Kent. There was a tricky wind on the first run that I hoped the judges recognised. To avoid over controlling her I was keeping commands to a minimum. We did not find any game in what I worried must have looked like a rather chaotic run - I needn’t have been concerned, as the debrief revealed the judges knew exactly what was going on. The second run was much more straightforward. The wind had settled down and the birds were plentiful and sitting tight. Unfortunately, I called her off a bird, a serious handler error, and we subsequently missed the bird - so we were out. It was a fantastic trial with some great dog work to watch. First and second went to Vizslas, third and fourth to Wire-haired Vizslas, and a certificate of merit to another Vizsla - so a great day for the gingers!

We had a six week enforced break as Islay came in to season. It was December before we ran again, this time on sugar beat in Norfolk. We were running number one, directly into wind. She quartered the ground well and quickly came on point, a c**k pheasant was shot and smartly retrieved without drama – job done. Our second run was a trickier quartering backwind. Islay did get a nice point but was unable to flush the bird because of a stock fence in between her and the bird. We crossed the fence but by then the bird had legged it. I was disappointed not to have a second HPR but felt we were in good shape, nonetheless. We didn’t need or get another run, but the judges ran some others on for a considerable amount of time so they could fill their cards. All four dogs that made it to water survived and gained awards. I was disappointed with our third place and asked one of the judges for some feedback. He felt the ground treatment on our first run had been poor but improved on our second run. My first run had been at the beginning of a very long day, and I can only think he had another dog in mind. ‘If you can’t take a joke, you shouldn’t have entered’ as they say.

A few days later we were back in Kent, on now familiar ground, working mustard and spinneys. Islay had an unproductive point in the woods and a classic HPR in the mustard. The judges spent some time examining the bird, so there was obviously some doubt over whether she had damaged it. In the event the judges gave us the benefit of the doubt, something they did again with a hen bird that flushed from the edge of our beat. The water was uneventful, and we were a awarded a Certificate of Merit. The Kennel Club field trial rules make numerous references to giving the dog the benefit of doubt and I appreciated the positive approach.

The next trial, on the same ground in Kent, couldn’t have been more different. Islay hunted well in straightforward conditions and was soon rewarded with a simple hunt, point, and retrieve on a partridge. Moments later a c**k pheasant lifted and was shot, Islay was steady to shot, and marked the bird down. One judge asked aloud if Islay had already covered the ground. I replied that she had not, and had only between upwind of the pheasant, to retrieve the partridge – it turns out this question was for his fellow judge not me. Eventually Islay was sent for the retrieve, when she got there she put her head down to pick up the bird, but lifted her head twice, before gathering it. When I presented the still alive bird, the judge gave me a dressing down for arguing, and took great pleasure in telling me I was out for ‘blinking game’ and to ‘look it up’ in the regulations. The closest I could find is that ‘a good retrieve will include a quick and unfussy pick-up followed by a fast return’.

The middle of January saw us down in the West Country which made a pleasant change. It was a frosty day with light winds so I expected it to be hard for the dogs. I was running number nine and pleased to see that dogs were finding and holding birds, which just goes to show how difficult it is to understand scenting conditions. Islay came on point, but when asked to flush it became apparent that the bird was injured, and she duly retrieved it – an HPR of sorts. She hunted on and again came on point, but we were unable to produce the bird. On her second run I knew we needed to do something more so let her have her head in a backwind. She cast out well ahead where she came on point. She held the point, while I and the guns got up to her, and then produced a pair of pheasants. Both birds were shot at; Islay watched a lightly touched bird away, so required a bit of handling to gather the downed bird that the judges wanted. Islay and a GSP were invited to water in a fast flowing river Exe, where they both did well, despite being swept downstream. The GSP had really impressed, and I was pleased with our second place.

We had another cold day with light winds in Cheshire woodland. This time the dogs struggled to find, let alone hold their birds, which were not in plentiful supply. Islay was the last dog standing, but although she had two good retrieves, she just couldn’t get a point. The judges really gave us every opportunity, but despite their best efforts, there were no awards.

We were happy to be in Hampshire, running on fantastic ground, just fifteen minutes from home. I let her run on the r**e, which meant she went far and wide, but I later discovered the judges hadn’t appreciated the ground treatment. A pheasant got up from behind us, which was shot, and scruffily retrieved. It was a situation I hadn’t really encountered before, where the dog had to be handled from 60 yards ahead of me to 20 yards behind me.
The second run was much better, she had a good point on pheasant but was a little sticky on the flush, followed by a very quick retrieve. Several dogs hunted with real enthusiasm, a Bracco Italiano really impressed, but refused to pick a woodc**k. Two dogs went to water, which I didn’t enjoy due to the proximity of a busy road, but we both succeeded. A lovely Vizsla got second and we were awarded a Certificate of Merit.

Next, we were back in Kent but on new ground. On her first run Islay worked the field edges reasonably, and although some of the bramble was too thick for her to enter, she came on point at the base of some conifers. She flushed her bird on command, but there was no easy shot, and the guns failed to connect. On her second run she hunted with pace in woods but again encountered very thick bramble. She produced another bird, but it was unsighted by guns. The judges were doing all they could to give Islay the opportunity to fill her card and continued to run her on. A bird lifted from the cover she was working and this time it was shot. I was called up forward for an easy retrieve, as the bird was lying close by, and out in the open. Despite being a simple seen water retrieve, it was set up slightly awkwardly, and Islay and the two other dogs failed– so there were no awards. I was obviously disappointed, but I knew we hadn’t done enough for a first, so it wasn’t the end of the world.

The final trial of the season was in Nottinghamshire. We were running first, and Islay started off on hedgerows, and then a strip of cover crop, which she hunted with more gusto. I knew the birds would be jumpy, and as soon as she came on point, I asked the judge if we could flush the bird; I was told to wait for the other gun, which was a shame, because when I eventually asked her to produce the bird it had run on. She worked forward but failed to relocate and produce the bird. The judge said that we shouldn’t have lost contact with the bird, and we were out. This is the first time I’ve been put out for failing to produce a bird, although the judge sought me out at the end of the trial and said we had actually been put out for poor ground treatment.

We ran in twenty trials, made it to water eleven times, and gained nine awards. A first place, which only took Yogi two trials, continues to allude Islay. I enjoyed the camaraderie, learnt a lot, and saw some great dog work.

Next season I will be campaigning both Islay and Yogi – onwards and upwards!

When Nick is not gallivanting around the country taking part in Field Trials, he is helping to design the very best dog beds and accessories for The Red Dog Company.

Dogs spend many hours a day and night in their beds and even more so if they are suffering with arthritis. Their bed nee...
25/11/2021

Dogs spend many hours a day and night in their beds and even more so if they are suffering with arthritis. Their bed needs to be in an easily accessible and draft free, warm part of the house with non slip flooring by the bed.

Read more in our latest blog from our resident Vet...

Choosing a bed for a dog with Arthritis Dogs spend many hours a day and night in their beds and even more so if they are suffering with arthritis. Their bed needs to be in an easily accessible and draft free, warm part of the house with non slip flooring by the bed. The bed should have easy access i...

A must for anyone with more that a passing interest in HPRs. Filled with fascinating insights from the author who has pe...
05/11/2021

A must for anyone with more that a passing interest in HPRs. Filled with fascinating insights from the author who has personally observed the various breeds in the field. Thoroughly researched, and beautifully illustrated, it’s hand downs the best book on the subject I’ve come across. Published in Canada, we’ve imported a box of books, and more will be on the way if required.

The calm before the storm….The Spirit of Christmas Fair is back at London Olympia from the 1st to the 7th of November.Th...
30/10/2021

The calm before the storm….The Spirit of Christmas Fair is back at London Olympia from the 1st to the 7th of November.
The Red Dog Company will be there, and we are looking forward to welcoming old friends, and meeting new ones.

EH82 will save you 25% on tickets.

Address

The Old Stables, Manor Farm, West Worldham
Alton
GU343BD

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5:30pm
Tuesday 9am - 5:30pm
Wednesday 9am - 5:30pm
Thursday 9am - 5:30pm
Friday 9am - 5:30pm

Telephone

+448081961400

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