Dog Toys: Nina Ottosson by Outward Hound Twister or Casino Puzzle Game
$12.50
$24.99
+57Deal Score
28,376 Views
Amazon has Nina Ottosson by Outward Hound Twister or Casino Puzzle Game Dog Toy (Level 3, Advanced) on sale for $12.50. Shipping is free w/ Amazon Prime or on orders of $25+.
Thanks to Deal Hunter daisybeetle for finding this deal
Amazon[amazon.com] has Nina Ottosson by Outward Hound Twister or Casino Puzzle Game Dog Toy (Level 3, Advanced) on sale for $12.50. Shipping is free w/ Amazon Prime or on orders $25+.
Model: Outward Hound Purple Twister Purple Puzzle Dog Toy, Large
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The Twister puzzle is decent. Our pup tends to pick it up by the bone locks to shake it around which usually unlocks at least one treat or so. Good for 10 - 20 minutes of entertainment before he starts dismantling it out of frustration.
Just a heads up, though, the rubber feet on the bottom are a bit of a choking hazard. They don't come off easily but if you have a dog that likes to find the weak points / seams on their toys, they'll probably find the tiny rubber feet pretty appealing.
Great, my dog loves the casino but doesn't get to go as much as he'd like.
Didn't like Twister. Dog just went crazy on it until stuff moved. Will try Casino this time.
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Our food motivated Golden solves twister in no time. I am getting two other ones listed in this thread to see if I can challenge him. The twister toy is solid. We had no issue with it.
I have the twister one for my goobers... Bella is better at it than Loki. For him I leave the white handle locks disengaged so all he has to do is slide the covers over. Now that they are quick with that I may need to start sliding those handles into place. Although I do wonder if I am not teaching them how to undo latches and it may be an issue in the mudroom where their bins of treats and foods are
We have this one for our beagle. It's one of the harder ones as the dog needs to release both the white pull tab to unlock the unit, and then move the unit cover over to get what's inside. The process is loud when they're banging on it to try and get it to open. Sometimes she uses the correct process to get what's inside, and sometimes she just pulls the covers off with her teeth. The covers due snap back into place pretty easily, so no harm done.
We have the Casino. We've only used it once so far. Just to busy with the younger puppy. It's ok. You should always teach the dog how to do it first. Ease them into the brain games so it is fun and not frustrating for them.
Just a heads up, these Outward Hound toys randomly pop up at TJ Maxx and Marshall's, at similar prices (probably Home Goods too but I haven't been) if you want more in the future but don't want to stock up right now. I've gotten the Casino for $12.99 there, so this is a good deal. Pup hasn't had a chance to use it yet / isn't advanced enough yet. Got the Twister and Dog Brick ($14.32, 43% off). Thanks!
Also I had a Prime Day $10 that I completely forgot about, so came out pretty cheap.
FYI, I bought this for my parent's standard poodle (the Twister one in the photo), and she's mostly unable to pull out the white locking mechanism because she can't even fit a single toe claw in the hole to paw them open and it sits too low to the ground to get her teeth around the pulls either. I tried tieing ribbon/cloth around some of the pulls but the rubber feet didn't stop it from just getting pulled to here when she tugged on it. I think these are better for small/medium dogs, or I guess big dogs who are highly food motivated and will just pick the thing up and shake it.
That's been my experience. I have a large dog. Not the brightest but very food driven. He claws at the handles until he gets the treats. Only takes him a few minutes now because he's had 5-6 sessions. He also tears up toys easily. The spinning puzzle has lasted well so far as I pick it up immediately after he's done.
That's been my experience. I have a large dog. Not the brightest but very food driven. He claws at the handles until he gets the treats. Only takes him a few minutes now because he's had 5-6 sessions. He also tears up toys easily. The spinning puzzle has lasted well so far as I pick it up immediately after he's done.
Ours just isn't food motivated enough I think. She's a standard poodle so quite smart, but my parents don't have carpet and those little feet don't keep the twister puzzle thing flat and secure on the ground. When she paws on at it for a while and it just moves the whole thing around she turns to us and gives us a 'Yo, I know you have thumbs' kind of look. Same look she gives us when she looks at her ball on the shelf, then us, then back at the ball, then baleful stare at us.
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Just a heads up, though, the rubber feet on the bottom are a bit of a choking hazard. They don't come off easily but if you have a dog that likes to find the weak points / seams on their toys, they'll probably find the tiny rubber feet pretty appealing.
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Definitely, definitely 246 bones.
Also I had a Prime Day $10 that I completely forgot about, so came out pretty cheap.
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Ours just isn't food motivated enough I think. She's a standard poodle so quite smart, but my parents don't have carpet and those little feet don't keep the twister puzzle thing flat and secure on the ground. When she paws on at it for a while and it just moves the whole thing around she turns to us and gives us a 'Yo, I know you have thumbs' kind of look. Same look she gives us when she looks at her ball on the shelf, then us, then back at the ball, then baleful stare at us.