Pet Safety on Thanksgiving

Jennifer Heiner-Pisano
2 min readNov 22, 2021

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Sales professional Jennifer Heiner serves as a retail director of a New Jersey-based running company that markets a line of running apparel. Jennifer Heiner is an animal lover and an owner of an English bulldog. Dogs offer their owners entertainment, companionship, and love. Scientific studies have added that owning and spending time with a dog boost physical and emotional health. A graduate of Lehigh University, Jennifer Heiner has served as the retail director of a successful New Jersey running company since 2019. Outside of work, Jennifer Heiner enjoys running, working with various animal rescue organizations, and taking care of her English bulldog.

Pets are inherently part of our families, and we love to share special moments and holidays with our pets, such as the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday. There are plenty of hazards, however, to the holidays and we need to make sure we are aware of them and take steps to keep our cats and dogs and other pets safe.

We also love to share our meals with our dogs and cats, but there are certain foods that are toxic and can cause a range of issues, from mild to serious. The best plan is not share our Thanksgiving dinner with them at all, but you want to give them a little taste, here is a great breakdown of Green Light (safe to have) and Red light foods (toxic and dangerous) for our pets.

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Jennifer Heiner-Pisano
Jennifer Heiner-Pisano

Written by Jennifer Heiner-Pisano

A six time marathon competitor, Jennifer Heiner-Pisano volunteers with the New York Road Runners and enjoys all aspects of the running experience.

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