








🐾 Elevate your dog’s treat game with long-lasting, healthy indulgence!
Jack&Pup 6 Inch Bully Sticks are premium, extra-thick dog chews made from 100% grass-fed, free-range beef sourced from hormone- and antibiotic-free cattle. Handpicked and USDA human-grade processed, these single-ingredient treats promote dental health by naturally reducing tartar and plaque. Their 30% greater thickness ensures extended chewing enjoyment, while a proprietary slow-roasting process locks in rich flavor and eliminates odors without additives, making them a safe, digestible, and fresh choice for medium dogs.









J**T
My dogs love it!
My dogs love these! Depending on your dog it can keep them entertained for a while. It takes one of my dogs a good 10 mins to consume this if she decides not to spend at least 20-30 mins deciding to hide it somewhere safe while it only takes my other dog a few minutes. Either way it’s gets them to go to their beds and settle.
M**O
Dog likes them
My dog loves this product. It keeps him entertained when there’s nothing to do and he loves chewing on them sometimes he eats them all the way down sometimes he doesn’t but he doesn’t enjoy chewing on them therefore I love the product.
K**.
My dogs are obsessed!
Why did you pick this product vs others?:My dogs are obsessed. They are both large and these are their treat in the evening. Half an hour of quiet.
T**Y
Expensive
My dogs loved these! However, they go quite fast for the price. They both finished each stick the same night (the larger dog had 2). 3 sticks for ~$14 is quite the expense!
A**T
BODHI LUVS JACKPUP
MY YORKIE PUPPY LUVS THESE. I USE A CUTTER TO CUT IN HALF WHILE HE IS YOUNG.
T**5
Causes Dog Tooth Fracture
I always prided myself in being a good dog mom and treated my dog to a daily bully as per vet instructions. Last month, the vet informed me my dog had two fractured teeth with root pulp exposed. I was shocked - I asked what could be the cause and was told, "Oh, the BULLIES." Wait, what? The very bullies all vets recommend cause tooth fractures?! What a racket - vets recommend the very thing that will have dogs in (eventually) for expensive tooth surgery.I have since learned the hard way that if you can't chew on it yourself without cracking your teeth, they can't either. For 6 years he had a daily bully, and then suddenly two teeth fractures in his 7th year. What was the remedy for the situation? A risky $850 surgery under full anesthesia to extract the two teeth that were fractured.Today my fur baby is doing well, he recovered very quickly from the surgery thanks be to God - BUT if there was one thing I wish I could change is ever having given him any bullies at all. Odds are bullies will eventually crack your dogs teeth and they could be living in pain without you knowing it for years. Dogs instinctually hide pain very well. Eventually, fractured teeth will get infected and/or cause systemic disease.I've since traded bullies for longer walks, and my muppet is actually happier. Just thought if I could spare any of you the distress of having to take your otherwise perfectly healthy dog in for risky surgery, it'd be worth the review.One last thing - If I could change a second thing, it would be not giving my dog kibble. Since the surgery I have been cooking for my dog and its so ridiculously easy I wish I had done it since day 1. If any one is curious, here is what I do:Prep: I pressure cook several pounds of inexpensive drumsticks for two hours in a little bit of water. Then I take the drumsticks, bone and and skin and all, and food process it until its a smooth paste. I save the water (its mostly collagen) for either soups for myself or I add one or two Tbsp of this to his daily food mix. I overnight slow cook chicken breast in plain water with a tiny bit of salt. I save the pulp from carrot juices I make daily for myself, with occasional beet pulp & apple pulp also (make sure whatever you’re juicing is pet safe). I buy a huge container of organic fat free greek yogurt from costco just for my muppet.Recipe: I take 4 oz of the drumstick/bone paste, 4 oz of plain slow cooked chicken breast, 4 oz of juicer pulp (carrots, beets, apples, celery, zucchini, etc.) and 4 oz fat free greek yogurt. Mix it all together, and that provides 3 servings of food for my 45 pound dog. I store this in the fridge and give him 1/3rd at meal times (he eats twice a day). I freeze all of these “recipe components” in dollar store ziplocks, already portioned out in 4 oz measures. I thaw as needed the day before in the fridge and mix it all the day of. You can swap vegetables and protein sources as you’d like, as long as everything is pet safe! Sometimes I add mushrooms (use only supermarket kind!).Optional Supplements: In the above recipe, I add one Turmeric capsule from Puritan's Pride, 1/8 tsp of ginger, 1 tsp dried parsley (great source of apigenin!), and a pinch of black pepper for better absorption. Many of our kitchen spices are sooo good for pets, but definitely do your research here because there are definitely some big no-no’s like onions - never give your dog onions!Alright, I hope this helps someone out there avoid making the same mistakes I did.
M**N
Dog lives and are effective.
My dog loves these. Her teeth have far less plaque on most of her teeth since starting these. She isn’t using the far back molars much to chew them so those have not improved much.
P**E
Not odor free. The stink is awful and gets on everything. Dog loves them.
Dog loves them. Not odor-free. They actually stink up everything they touch. It is really bad.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
3 weeks ago