Feeding Your Pets
Jimmy Moore had a post on his blog a few days back about low-carbing for pets. I feed my dog Layla a raw meat and veggies diet, what is affectionately termed BARF (Bones And Raw Food). That is the last time I will use that term because it doesn’t really strike my fancy. Anywho, when we first got her a few weeks back, she was on standard kibble as I hadn’t gone to the butcher to get real food for her. She would sometimes eat it all and usually not. I’d let her eat what she wanted, then mix in some applesauce to get her to finish it. Now, she’s only 5 months old, so she was obviously still quite active on that diet, but I tried out adding in some other stuff to see how she reacted. Raw buffalo roast scraps, raw beef liver, sardines, tuna, a lamb bone - she made short work of all of them. Well, not the lamb bone, but she gnawed on it for hours getting every scrap of meat off. Maybe 2 weeks ago, I switched her to a diet of raw chicken necks and “veggie slop”. As of now, she’s eating 4 chicken necks at each of 2 meals per day (sometimes I feed her three meals on the weekends cause she’s quite the eater) and 3-4 spoonfuls of veggie mix. The mix this week was made with a stalk of celery, garlic, 4 or 5 carrots, some spinach, a pound of raw liver, 3 eggs (including the shell for calcium), broccoli, 2 apples, coconut oil, and fish oil. The veggie mix is intended to mimic the remnants of food that a dog would encounter when digging into a kill’s digestive tract. She eats it up and continues licking the bowl like she’s trying to take the shine off. Once she gets a touch bigger, I’m going to move her to chicken backs.
So what’s my point, right? The point is that you take care of your own health and eat a natural, whole foods-based diet that is in line with your evolutionary heritage as a meat-eating omnivore. Why do you not give your pet the same pleasure? With the amount of money many people spend on pampering their little darlings, it amazes me that they settle for standard mass-produced dog or cat food. The big problem with nearly every commercial pet food is that they contain grains. Dogs and cats are not, and have never been, grain eaters. Dogs are omnivorous, much like humans, but with an even greater shift towards the carnivore end of the scale. Cats on the other hand, are pretty much obligatory carnivores. Cats eat meat, meat, meat. Dogs eat meat and a little bit of other stuff. Now the dog food commercials say such asinine things as “plenty of carbs to give him energy” in reference to your dog. It’s marketing! Dog’s don’t need carbohydrates. Cats especially don’t need carbohydrates. I have my doubts about the types of protein and fat used in those feeds as well. Some people’s dogs thrive on some of the higher end brands, but the low-end stuff is probably not going to be very good for your dog/cat.
People talk about the dangers of a raw food diet and, no doubt, there are some. But dogs can and do choke to death on kibble as well. The risk-reward tradeoff to have a dog that doesn’t spend its last few years with arthritis and overweight is well worth it. Once your dog learns to chew properly and is acclimated to a diet of raw meat, which may require some work to get him/her back to a natural gut environment, the risk is minimal. My dog’s coat is shiny and soft and she loves feeding time now. She’s still playful as can be and loves to go out for a run. Here is a link to Dr. Billinghurst’s website: http://www.barfworld.com/html/learn_more/what_is_barf.shtml. He has written a couple books about this type of diet. Check it out…your dog or cat will appreciate getting back in tune with his or her wild side.
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Carol on 27 Feb 2007 at 7:29 am #
That was a very enlightening article on pet diet.Now I think I would feed my pets more of raw food and meat from now on.Carol
Scott Kustes on 27 Feb 2007 at 8:54 am #
Hey Carol, thanks for stopping by. I definitely agree with going to more of a raw diet, but I forgot to mention that there is another option for those afraid of the risk of pathogens or bones: a cooked meat diet. Raw meat is better, but cooked meat is still a better option than commercial, grain-laden foods. I’m going to put together a follow-up to this post to describe a few more things I’ve found through my research into proper diet for my dog.
Frank on 26 May 2007 at 11:16 am #
Hey Scott, love your blog.
I have two cats and I’ve been trying to move towards a more natural diet for them. I started using wellness grain free wet food, which they will eat after a sitting on the plate a while, and frozen raw chicken nuggets from Northwest Naturals, which one of my cats will eat after it sits in the bowl a while. The nuggets are pretty cool, they come frozen in a bag, and have additional vitamins in there like Taurine to make nutrionally complete. I also am switching to nature’s variety grain free kibble, since my cats are addicted to kibble. It has a coating of raw meat. I have to mix a little with what they’re eating now, because a total switch before didn’t go so well. So gradually I’m working on it. I’m lucky that a great pet store is near me which stocks these kinds of foods. As far as table scraps, the cats are picky. Sometimes they eat them, like cooked turkey or grassfed ground beef, and sometimes they won’t.
Thursday 080731 : Emergent Fitness on 31 Jul 2008 at 12:58 pm #
[...] crazy for spending more for higher quality food. Here is a link from Modern Forager about a raw food dog diet. I may be spending more now, but having had a dog that developed very bad arthritis the [...]