Use Cases

Pet journal app: track your dog’s health and training by voice (2025)

A practical voice-first pet journal workflow — capture behavior, meds, and funny moments during walks, then keep everything searchable as Markdown in iCloud.

Pet journal app: track your dog’s health and training by voice (2025)

Quick answer: Create one folder per pet, add a Siri phrase that opens Brain Dump, and use the same 20‑second script every time: “Title → what happened → one measurable detail.” Review your notes before vet visits or training sessions so you can describe patterns clearly.

Why a pet journal beats “I’ll remember”

You won’t.

Not because you don’t care—because pet details are tiny and constant:

When you’re stressed, your memory turns into vibes. Vets and trainers need specifics.

A pet journal gives you receipts.

The 20‑second pet note script (copy this)

Speak this in order:

  1. Title (2–6 words)
  2. What happened (one sentence)
  3. One measurable detail (time, duration, amount, count)

Examples:

Title: Ear scratching.
He scratched his left ear after dinner.
Started ~7:10 pm, lasted 3 minutes, no yelp.

Title: Loose stool.
Softer stool on the morning walk.
8:05 am, after new treats yesterday.

That’s enough to be useful later.

Folder structure (simple, searchable, future-proof)

Keep it boring:

One monthly file per pet keeps it readable. If you prefer weekly files, that works too.

When to record (so you actually do it)

Pick moments you already have the phone out.

What to track (the “vet/trainer useful” list)

Make it hands‑free (the setup that sticks)

If you’re walking a dog, typing is the wrong interface.

Use a Siri phrase to open Brain Dump ready to capture. If you want one running file (instead of many notes), use the append flow.

Related:

Troubleshooting

References

  1. Dictate text on iPhone — Apple Supporthttps://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/iph2c0651d2/ios
  2. Use Siri to run shortcuts with your voice — Apple Supporthttps://support.apple.com/guide/shortcuts/apd07c25bb38/ios