Serlig Dog Care

Serlig Dog Care: Complete Guides for Every Dog Owner

Serlig’s dog care guides cover everything a dog owner needs, from choosing the right breed and feeding a healthy diet, to training, understanding health symptoms, and caring for a senior dog. Whether you are a first-time owner or an experienced one, every guide at Serlig is built around one goal: give you clear, honest, research-backed answers you can actually use.

A note from Serlig: Dog care content on this page links to detailed, individual guides. For any specific health concern about your dog, always consult a licensed veterinarian. Serlig provides education, your vet provides diagnosis.

Owning a dog is one of life is most rewarding decisions. It is also one that comes with more questions than most people expect. What should I feed a German Shepherd puppy? Why is my dog is poop black? How much exercise is too much for a young Golden Retriever? Is my dog is coat change normal or a sign of something else?

These are the kinds of questions Serlig was built to answer clearly, honestly, and without burying the answer in three hundred words of filler. This page is your starting point: an organized guide to everything Serlig covers on dog care, with direct links to our most detailed resources.

Breed Guides: Know Your Dog Before You Get One (and After)

The single most important thing you can do as a dog owner is understand your breed not the idealized version you see on Instagram, but the real one. What energy levels actually look like day-to-day. What health conditions are common. What training challenges to expect. What the coat actually demands in terms of time and effort.

Serlig’s breed guides are built around that honest standard.

German Shepherd

The German Shepherd is one of the most popular and most misunderstood breeds in the world. Intelligent, loyal, and intensely hard-working, they are also demanding of your time, your consistency, and your training effort. Get it right and you have a phenomenal companion. Get it wrong and you have a bored, anxious dog that makes its feelings known through your furniture.

Our Ultimate German Shepherd Guide covers coat types, show lines versus working lines, common health risks (including hip and elbow dysplasia), and honest cost-of-ownership numbers. From there, you can explore:

Golden Retriever

Golden Retrievers have a reputation for being easy. That reputation is mostly earned they are friendly, trainable, and endlessly good-natured. But easy does not mean no effort. They shed constantly, they need real daily exercise, and they live to be involved in family life.

Our Ultimate Guide to Golden Retriever Exercise Needs is one of the most important things to read before bringing a Golden home especially if you have a puppy. Growth plates matter. Over-exercising a young Golden is one of the most common and most preventable mistakes new owners make.

Explore more:

Pugalier

A newer designer breed Pug crossed with Cavalier King Charles Spaniel the Pugalier has quietly become one of the most popular small companion dogs in Australia and the UK. Affectionate, low-energy, and apartment-friendly, they suit a wide range of owners. But the two parent breeds bring real inherited health risks that every potential owner needs to understand before they buy.

Dog Nutrition: What Your Dog Eats Shapes Everything Else

Food is the most consistent, controllable lever in your dog’s health. It affects weight, energy, coat quality, digestion, joint health, and longevity. It is also one of the most confusing categories in pet care the marketing language is dense, the debates are loud, and the contradictions are constant.

Serlig cuts through all of it.

Weight and Overfeeding

Obesity is the most common preventable health problem in dogs. Excess weight worsens joint problems, strains the heart, shortens the lifespan, and crucially is almost entirely within an owner’s control. If your dog is carrying extra weight, the food and treat choices you make every day are the solution.

Understanding Dog Food Labels

Not all dog food is equal and the label is where the truth hides. Serlig’s nutrition guides teach you to read past the marketing to the things that actually matter: named protein sources, AAFCO statements, guaranteed analysis, and whether a qualified nutritionist is behind the formula.

Dog Health: Reading the Signs Before They Become Problems

Dogs cannot tell you when something is wrong. They show you through their behavior, their energy levels, their coat, and yes, their stool. Learning to read those signals early is one of the most valuable things a dog owner can develop.

Stool and Digestive Health

Stool color and consistency are among the earliest, most reliable indicators of what is happening inside your dog’s digestive system. A healthy dog produces brown, firm, moist, easy-to-pick-up stool. Anything outside that range is worth noting and some colors warrant immediate action.

Everyday Health Habits

Beyond watching for warning signs, daily habits are what actually determine your dog’s long-term health. Exercise matched to their age and breed. Dental care that most owners underestimate. Regular vet check-ups that catch problems before they become expensive. And an understanding that what is normal for one breed can be a warning sign in another.

Serlig’s health content is always paired with a clear recommendation: when in doubt, see your vet. We will always tell you when something warrants professional attention and we mean it.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Serlig cover in dog care?

Serlig’s dog care section covers breed guides (German Shepherd, Golden Retriever, Pugalier, and more), nutrition and food label guidance, weight management, health symptom guides, training, and socialization. All content is research-informed and written in plain language.

How do I choose the right dog breed?

Start with an honest assessment of your lifestyle your activity level, living space, time available, and experience with dogs. Then read a breed guide that goes beyond temperament to cover exercise needs, grooming, health risks, and daily reality. Serlig’s breed guides are built to give you that complete picture.

How do I know if my dog food is good quality?

Check four things: a named meat should lead the ingredient list; an AAFCO complete and balanced statement should appear for the right life stage; the guaranteed analysis should be clear; and the maker should employ a qualified nutritionist. Our super premium dog food guide explains all of this in detail.

When should I take my dog to the vet?

Immediately for: black or tarry stool, pale gums, collapse, suspected poisoning, or severe vomiting and diarrhea. Soon for: persistent color changes in stool, limping, unexplained weight loss, or behavior changes. Annually (at minimum) for routine wellness checks twice yearly for senior dogs.

Start with the Guide That Fits You Best

Every dog owner is in a different place. Here is where Serlig suggests starting based on where you are:

  • Just got a dog or thinking about getting one: Begin with the relevant breed guide and our food label basics.
  • Struggling with weight or nutrition: Start with the weight loss food guide and the 10% treat rule.
  • Noticed something unusual: Go straight to the dog poop color chart and call your vet if the color is black, red, or the dog seems unwell.
  • Working on training: The German Shepherd training commands guide applies to almost any breed the principles are universal.

For the full picture of what Serlig is and how we approach pet care, visit our About page or read What Is Serlig?