In This Issue
Private equity firm invests in growing pet business
Big success predicted for Little BigPaw in 2018
Dog advent calendar is a Christmas bestseller
BSB Products launches Carnilove canned food for cats
Pet firm named in Top 100 franchise list
National Obesity Awareness Week should include pets
Natures Menu launches new website
Fish4Dogs creche has starring role at theatre performance
Sharples bring back popular dog toy
Tetra expands on popular Starter Line aquarium range
Get your own copy of Pet Trade Xtra
High street pet store in danger of closure
Getting fit in 2018 with CSJ
easyJet forms pet-sitting partnership with experts
Eukanuba celebrates 7th consecutive year as lead sponsor of Crufts
FURminator announced as official grooming partner at Crufts
Royal Canin boosts marketing team
Fabulous free activities at Squire's Pet Weekend
Fun and healthy treats from Vet's Kitchen
The best of the previous Pet Trade Xtra
Lack of local business blamed for pet shop closure
The biggest UK pet news stories of 2017
Owner's warning after dog ate dead fish
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Owner's warning after dog ate dead fish
 

A grieving pet owner has warned dog walkers to be vigilant after his golden retriever died within minutes of eating a dead fish washed up on a beach.


Mike Hamilton said his dog Hattie became unwell after a trip to Cley next the Sea, Norfolk, on 31 December.


Hattie along with Mr Hamilton's spaniel Bramble, who is now seriously ill, had been scavenging along the tide line.


The RNLI warned owners to be vigilant, while the Environment Agency said it hoped to take samples from the fish.


An Environment Agency spokeswoman said many fish had been washed up along the north Norfolk beach in recent storms.


Mr Hamilton, of Quidenham, Norfolk, said Hattie would have a post-mortem examination on Wednesday.


"What we found so distressing was the speed we lost Hattie - that was really shocking," he said.

The Environment Agency said a number of fish, starfish and marine life had been washed up at the beach following a spate of storms

Cocker spaniel Bramble has received antibiotics and rehydration treatment after she also became ill hours after Hattie's death.


Hattie and Bramble had been picking up and eating bits of washed-up fish and starfish, while his other three dogs played in the sea.


On the walk back to the car, the four-year-old retriever started vomiting, which Mr Hamilton and his partner Julie Thomas initially blamed on her swallowing seawater.


But just an hour later, he found Hattie dead in the back of the car after driving home.


"We are not trying to spread panic, we are just saying be mindful, be vigilant," said Mr Hamilton.


Norfolk Wildlife Trust advised dog walkers to keep pets under "close supervision".


It warned dogs should not "eat anything washed up on the shore, as some dead animals can be toxic".

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