Acorns Can Pose a Danger to Dogs

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Not that anyone asked, but my favorite tree in the whole world is the oak tree. We have dozens of species of oaks in California, and where I grew up, in the great Sacramento Valley, the Valley Oak (Quercus lobata) is the most ubiquitous and also the largest oak tree around. They live to be hundreds of years old and grow into massive, photogenic shapes. When my husband and I bought the property where we have lived for the past (almost) three years, one of the key selling points was the magnificent hundred-year-old Valley Oak that stands in front of the house, and several other smaller Valley Oaks sprinkled around the property, along with some lesser oak varieties, the Blue Oak and the Live Oak.

Here’s the down side of living with oak trees, one that I never fully appreciated until now: acorns. So. Many. Acorns. And while all the oak trees are producing them, the Valley Oak makes some of the largest ones; they exceed the size of a standard tube of lip balm. Their distinctive “caps”, too, are a hazard. When they separate from the acorn, they become a separate large, hard, marble-shaped hazard.

The Valley Oak in our front yard: Magnificent and a prolific producer of acorns

Acorns underfoot on the lawn. (“Ow! OW!”)

Acorns getting mowed by the mower (turning the mower into a dangerous, projectile-throwing machine).

And worst of all: Dogs chewing on and (sometimes) eating the acorns.

California kids grow up with the information that the native indigenous people in California harvested the acorns and made them a staple of their diet – and every California kid who lives near an oak tree tries to reenact this. You gather acorns, peel off the skin to expose what appears to be a big, delicious nut, and find some rocks capable of grinding the nuts into a coarse flour. The goal is to then add some water and use your hands to mix the flour and water into a dough and try to make a tortilla. At some point in the process, you dip your finger into the flour and lick it, or take a little bite of the dough, and – ACK! Blech! It’s bitter!

When California kids get a little older, they learn that acorns are full of bitter tannins, and that the native people used to leach the flour with water, sometimes many times, to remove the bitter substance and make the acorns safe to eat.

And, as vet-bill-paying adults, we learn that in addition to being bitter-tasting, these tannins can be toxic to humans, horses, and dogs. Shoot!

Tannins in acorns can be toxic to dogs

I know several people whose dogs get sort of addicted to chewing the bitter-tasting nuts and end up with an extremely upset stomach – and in severe cases, kidney failure and death. A dog who becomes inappetent after eating acorns requires immediate veterinary care. My sister had a little dog who, at least once a year, would require a vet visit after sneaking a few acorns. She liked them after it had rained a time or two in the fall, when the nuts have gotten soaked with rainwater and fermented slightly – which seemed to increase their toxicity.

It took me about 10 minutes to collect this bucketful of nuts and caps.

Despite the wealth of nuts littering my property in the fall, neither of my dogs has been interested in picking them up or chewing them, even speculatively, and up until now, neither have any of my foster dogs. That is, until my most recent foster dog arrived. I have to keep a very close eye on Coco, who has become inexplicably drawn to chewing on the acorns, to the extent that I basically can’t have her out of my sight on my fenced, two-acre property. Wah!

Like my sister’s dog from years ago, Coco is (thankfully) uninterested in the dry ones that cover most of my property, and is mostly drawn to the ones that have been soaked by the sprinklers on my front lawn. While this is quite a lot, given the GINORMOUS Valley Oak, the pride of our property, at least it’s just those. So it’s my new evening hobby: hanging out on the front lawn in the evenings with my dogs, throwing the ball for Woody, watching Woody and Coco wrestle, watching Otto watch for feral cats and squirrels … and picking up acorns from the lawn, and dumping them in our “green waste” barrel. I probably have a few more weeks to enjoy this new hobby before the tree’s supply is done and I can relax again.

Have you ever had trouble with an acorn-eating dog? Spread the word about this danger.

42 COMMENTS

  1. My young Miniature Schnauzer ate some and got very ill. Thankfully, we got her through it but I now have to keep a close eye on her and the other dogs during acorn season. Our Basset Hound would be get them stuck in her paws and bring them inside sometimes so I have to be vigilant inside the house too. The schnauzer still tries to eat them although she’s now a senior with few teeth left.

  2. We have several oak trees and our dogs have always ignored them until Levi, likewise, initially a foster. Levi is a 30lb blind mix of probably jrt and perhaps beagle.. We live on an acre so he has to wear a soft muzzle when he’s outside with our other dogs. One midnight emergency vet visit prompted by bloody vomit and I started clearing the yard of acorns. I use a pooper scooper. Levi is a little more than 1 year old. Thankfully acorn season is almost past. Picking up acorns now extends my daily yard pick up because with his will, he’ll find a way. I hope he outgrows eating anything and everything someday. Gotta love his persistence.

  3. Thank you. I’m wondering if my standard poodle and his diarrhea problem has been due to that? I live in Georgia and the acorns are falling like crazy! He has a very sensitive stomach anyway. So now I’m going to be making sure I walk the yard with him during this time

  4. Our issue was a wild cherry tree, but we found a BRILLIANT solution: Shop-Vac! Did I look ridiculous vacuuming my back yard? Yes. Did the Shop-Vac pick up all the cherries, even the small ones that slid through the tines of the rake? Yes! Did my dogs stop grazing like deer? Yes. Totally worth it. Invest and look ridiculous 🙂

  5. Not exactly on point, but since I have horses and GSDs and live oaks (Florida), I had to add that my Tennessee Walker colicked and died from eating acorns. So, if some horses eat acorns and some dogs like horse poop, another possibility for trouble. We have to pay attention to what our animals pick up around our property, easier said than done! My favorite phrase is: “Leave It!”

  6. Good to know. My min pin, Brutus decided they were a delicacy, along with the 1/2 eaten doughnut and a few other choice finds. I watch him like a hawk, because if it’s remotely eatable he’s on it. That day he got thru a couple acorns with no upset, so all was well. Since then we walk on the other side of the street. I didn’t know they were toxic, they just seemed like something we didn’t need to mess with.

  7. My 15 lb. dog swallowed one when he was little. I didn’t know this until he became frantic a few hours later and I had to rush him to the emergency room. The vet’s x-ray couldn’t tell what was happening, so gave him heavy sedation and pain killers. Five days later a football-shaped acorn came out in his poop, re-hydrated like a grape. His vet said really he should have been operated on because the acorn was too large to go down his digestive tract. Thank God it didn’t have a cap on it or it would have scraped its way all the way down.