Skip to product information
1 of 10

West Paw

West Paw Tux

West Paw Tux

Regular price $31.00 NZD
Regular price $35.00 NZD Sale price $31.00 NZD
Sale Sold out
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity

West Paw Tux Treat Dispensing Toy - Tough Chewer Freezable Puzzle

If you've been through a graveyard of destroyed and shredded puzzle toys, meet the Tux. This is the puzzle feeder toy built for chewers!

The Tux's unique shape and durable Zogoflex® material stand up to determined jaws while providing the kind of long-lasting enrichment that satisfies dogs mentally.

Stuff it with treats, freeze it into a Tux-cicle, or use it for fetch after the goodies are gone. It's the multi-use enrichment tool that earns its keep.

At Your Whole Dog, the Tux is a firm favourite - it’s built for dedicated chewers and is perfect for stuffing with all sorts of delicious treats. Your dog will work hard to get every last morsel.

Why choose the West Paw Tux

Tough and durable

Actually built for chewers, the Tux has survived our household's most determined chompers

Frozen fun – Tux-cicles

Fill it with broth, gravy, or wet food, then freeze it to create a Tux-cicle that’ll keep your dog cool and engaged during hot months.

Layers of variety

Stuff with layers (kibble + wet food + yogurt) for variety feeding 

Interactive puzzle toy

The shallow cavity makes it perfect for short-snouted dogs, offering a safer and easier challenge for pups with flatter faces.

Multi-use fun

After the treats are gone, the Tux still offers entertainment - bounces unpredictably and keeps dogs occupied

Safe and non-toxic

Made in the USA from BPA-free, latex-free, and phthalate-free materials, the Tux is dishwasher safe (top rack) for easy cleanup.

Sizes 

Small: 4" / 10 cm
Large: 5" / 13 cm

Colours

Blue, orange, green

Safety note

The Tux is an enrichment feeding toy, not a leave-alone chew toy. Supervise during use and remove once empty or when play is finished. While incredibly durable, replace if damaged.

Pro tip

Start easy and gradually increase difficulty. Too challenging = frustration, not enrichment.

View full details