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Ongoing Pet Food Recalls

Who could have imagined a month ago how the pet food recall could implode like this?

This started in mid-March, when Menu Foods, a contract manufacturer of wet pet foods, announced it was recalling dozens of products containing wheat gluten, which was traced to a new source in China. A fortnight later, investigators identified a contaminant, melamine, a chemical used in plastics.

Once the source of the ingredient was known, investigators sought to locate every place the ingredient had ended up – and the pet food recall expanded as more products made with the contaminated wheat gluten were found. As we went to press with the May issue, it seemed possible that the contamination of wheat gluten was limited to a sole shipment, and the number of places where the ingredient was used was finite – if not yet fully identified.

Just days later, that idea was disproved, as a number of dry pet foods, biscuits, and treats were found to have been made with the Chinese wheat gluten. The recall expanded day by day.

Then, an even more frightening shift in the news occurred, as reports surfaced that both corn gluten and rice protein concentrate sourced from China had also been found to contain melamine.

The news was the number one topic of conversation at Petfood Forum, a trade association conference held in Chicago in mid-April. The experts seemed most shocked about the discovery of contaminated rice protein; this is considered a “quality” ingredient, expensive, and is not in wide use in mass market pet food like corn gluten or wheat gluten. Suddenly, even the makers of “super-premium” pet foods – who had no doubt been relieved previously that the problems seemed limited to a different segment of the market – were scrambling to trace and test their ingredient sources. The most frequent comment I heard at the conference was “it could happen to any one of us.”

Dog Food Recall Precautions

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Each day has seen dozens more foods added to the recall list. The latest news, as this issue is going to press, is that hundreds of foods that don’t (according to their labels) contain any of the suspect ingredients are being recalled by Menu Foods (where they were manufactured) due to “cross contamination.”

Currently, there are thousands of recalled products – too many to list in our pages. Websites published by dog enthusiasts seem to offer the latest-breaking news of expanding recalls, including sites such as petfoodtracker.com, petconnection.com, and itchmo.com. If you don’t have internet access, contact the manufacturer of each of your dog’s foods and treats and ask if the products you have bought and fed to your pets have been recalled.

“An Open Secret” in China
On April 30, the New York Times broke the story wide open. Reporters for the paper visited chemical plants in northeast China that make melamine from coal – and sell it to companies that manufacture plant-based proteins.

The Times reporters learned that the Xuzhou Anying Biologic Technology Development Company, one of the companies that American regulators named as having shipped melamine-tainted wheat gluten to the United States, had posted ads on industry websites in China, looking for sources of melamine to use in their products.

The reporters also spoke to two animal feed producers who told them that the use of melamine in plant-protein products is common in China. Inclusion of the product in small amounts “fools” the tests used to determine the protein content in the ingredient, making it appear that the protein levels are greater than they actually are; the higher the protein, the higher its value, and the higher its profits.

What are they good for?
Many dog owners, reeling from the daily bad news, are still trying to figure out what plant-based proteins are doing in carnivore food –especially in high-priced, presumably top-quality foods.

Plant proteins are mainly used to boost the protein content of some pet foods, though they may also contribute other functions. As discussed in “Pet Food Disaster,” May 2007, wheat gluten is widely used to thicken and “bind” the processed “chunks” or “cuts” of ground and mixed meat and grain material (known as “meat analogue”) used in wet “cuts and gravy” food products.

Corn gluten is frequently used to complete the desired amino acid profile of the finished product in an economical way. Wheat gluten costs about two to three times as much as corn gluten.

Rice protein concentrate is considered a higher-quality plant protein than wheat gluten or corn gluten, as it contains more of the amino acids needed by dogs and cats and is more digestible. It’s generally more expensive than wheat gluten, and even costs more than some animal proteins.

In low-cost foods, plant proteins (especially the extremely inexpensive corn gluten) are frequently used as a less-expensive alternative to a higher inclusion of animal proteins.

In higher-end foods, plant proteins are sometimes included when a manufacturer is seeking to provide a sole source of animal protein in the product, but the species used cannot provide as much total protein as is desired in the formula. They may also be used when including more of the animal protein source would contribute too much of another nutrient, to potentially harmful levels.

This is often the case with lamb- or venison-based foods. Lamb and venison meal are lower-protein meals, with higher ash levels, and have a moderate risk of going rancid. Ash is present in these ingredients in proportion to the amount of bone included in the meal. Low-ash meals are available, but the price is very high. These meals are also very high in fat, which presents another problem for the formulator who is trying to increase the product’s protein without increasing the fat level too much.

This is why manufacturers will often supplement their lamb- or venison-based products with rice protein concentrate (which is higher in protein, lower in ash, and is a more stable product) to help achieve the desired protein levels while maintaining safe ash levels and decreasing the risk of rancidity.

Rice protein may also be used in foods that are formulated for animals who are allergic to or intolerant of animal proteins.

In our opinion, the inclusion of rice protein in a food is not a problem – unless the ingredient is contaminated with melamine! And the only way that the inclusion of melamine-contaminated rice protein in a food could be even worse news for a company is if “rice protein” wasn’t on the list of ingredients on a pet food label.

We’ve been telling people to read dog food labels since Whole Dog Journal’s inception. But what’s a consumer to do if the label doesn’t list what’s actually in the food?

Inaccurate labels
When Natural Balance announced that it was recalling four of its foods, saying that the products contained rice protein concentrate found to contain melamine, our immediate response was “What?” The labels of the named products did not list rice protein as an ingredient. The company said in its April 17 press release that the ingredient had only recently been added to some production runs of the four products. The ingredient lists of the four foods were quickly changed on the company’s website to reflect the inclusion of rice protein, but of course the bags and cans of food already in stores (and people’s homes) did not.

Most pet food companies fiddle with their ingredients from time to time, adding a bit of this or that, or removing ingredients that are difficult (or prohibitively expensive) to source or that pose processing challenges. But they are legally obligated to immediately update the package labels of the reformulated products to accurately reflect their contents.

There is a persistent myth that every pet food executive has heard (and many may have repeated), to the effect that federal labeling laws allow pet food makers a “grace period” of six months, in which they can change the ingredients of their foods without changing the label. This is not true.

Another shoe dropped when American Nutrition, the contract manufacturer that made Natural Balance’s wet foods and baked treats, announced a recall of 26 wet pet foods and two baked dog treats after learning that the rice protein it used in the foods was contaminated with melamine. Four foods not previously recalled by

Natural Balance were on American Nutrition’s recall list. Natural Balance issued a press release the same day, stating that American Nutrition had added rice protein to these four products without the consent or knowledge of Natural Balance. Canine Caviar, a company with two products on American Nutrition’s recall list, and Blue Buffalo (with nine products on the American Nutrition list), and others also have denied having any knowledge that rice protein was added to their foods.

American Nutrition has since published its own press release in response, saying (in part): “American Nutrition did not engage in any deliberate or intentionally wrongful conduct relative to the inclusion of rice protein in certain products it manufactures . . .

“American Nutrition is investigating the circumstances surrounding labeling, formulation, and related inter-company communications, but it is simply false to state that American Nutrition was engaged in any deliberately deceitful and/or unlawful conduct. Labeling responsibility is a cooperative effort between American Nutrition and its customers. American Nutrition believes, for their part, that they were compliant with all applicable label regulations. Additional information will be released as American Nutrition completes its own investigation and as they continue to cooperate fully with ongoing FDA and other governmental agency inquiries.”

I’ve toured American Nutrition’s cannery, and I’m aware that their computers and technicians generate “batch records” that note the amounts of each ingredient used as batches of food are mixed and cooked. Some pet food companies require copies of these records and actually review them. Usually, any deviations from the formula given to the co-packer must be approved by the pet food company whose name is on the label. In my opinion, it’s a bit disingenuous for a pet food company to claim they didn’t know what a co-packer was putting in their food.

But on the other hand, what are we to make of the “cross-contamination” claimed by Menu Foods?

We’re frustrated, given that we’ve spent 10 years telling our subscribers to read product labels – and make purchasing decisions based on the ingredients that are on the labels. Now, it seems to be developing that “what’s in the bag” (or can or pouch) is accurately described by the product labels only sometimes. The industry owes consumers some solutions; how can we ever trust that what’s in the package is what the label says it is?

This incident opens another can of worms – or we should say, reopens. Lawsuits were only recently settled following a 2003 dog-killing recall involving food made by a contract manufacturer that evidently didn’t contain what its labels said it contained. The co-packer pointed a finger at the formula provided by the pet food company, the company blamed the co-packer, and, thanks to the sealed nature of legal settlements, we’ll never know who or what was truly at fault.

Bring on the revolution!
Problems frequently present an opportunity for growth or change, and the crisis in the pet food industry is no different.

Eager to win back the trust of concerned buyers, pet food companies are putting far more rigorous quality-control practices into immediate use. Some are “embedding” company staffers at contract manufacturing facilities. Some are seeking their own manufacturing facilities. I’ve heard from a number of pet food companies who are pledging to begin using U.S.-sourced ingredients only. Everyone has stepped up their procedures for sourcing and testing their ingredients.

While we’re glad to hear about these planned improvements, we have to be a bit skeptical. How will the companies involved prove to us that these things have been accomplished?

I’m thrilled to hear that thousands of people (including Oprah Winfrey!) have started feeding their dogs home-prepared diets. I hope that Whole Dog Journal will help inform the people who stick to the practice over the long haul, to prevent health problems related to nutritional deficiencies, excesses, or imbalances caused by poorly designed diets or adherence to a single recipe.

Author Mary Straus has been slaving over our series of articles on the nuts and bolts of home-prepared diets for more than six months. The first one in a planned series of five or six articles appeared very fortuitously in our April issue; the third installment appears on page 3 of this issue.

In the long run, owners will have to determine where on the scale of fear and trust they stand. Guardians who have little faith in the pet food companies and much fear about commercial products will have little choice but to begin making home-prepared diets for their pets. Those on the other end of the scale – with little fear and lots of trust – will keep buying the products they and their dogs like. And many of us will probably take a middle path – at least until the recall headlines stop appearing daily.

Dog Food Reviews Follow-Up

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As a new subscriber to Whole Dog Journal, this is the first time I have received the issue that contains your recommended top quality dry food for dogs (February 2007). I was surprised that Solid Gold was not part of your list. I recently lost a 14-month-old Golden Retriever to cancer. Since that experience, pet food quality is my top priority for my dogs.

Marie Camirand Montreal, Canada

Solid Gold’s products did appear on our lists of “top dry foods” and top wet foods (March 2007). The dry products we highlighted were listed under their names: Hund-N-Flocken and Mmillennia.

 

I feed my three Border Collies Flint River Ranch food with an occasional treat of The Honest Kitchen and they are doing great. However, I noticed that Flint River Ranch was not on your list this year. Can you tell me why?

Barbara Berg Via e-mail

My sincere apologies for not explaining the omission of FRR’s dry food this year. As far as I know, nothing has changed about the food’s ingredients or manufacturing; it still meets our selection criteria. But every year I receive complaints from readers who are frustrated by the management style/business structure of this multi-level marketing company. Consumers either get no response, or a poor response, when they try to reach the “home office” – the people responsible for formulating and making the food. Consumers with questions or concerns about the pet food are encouraged, instead, to bring their questions to an independent distributor of the food near them. Often, these independent agents are unable to answer consumers’ questions about the food – and are even sometimes unable to find out the information from the “senior distributor” above them, much less the company representatives.

Recent events have demonstrated how important it is to be able to quickly and easily contact the maker of a dog food, to report problems, have confidence that the problems will be recorded and considered, and to receive quick and reliable answers to urgent questions. It’s been our experience, and that of many of our readers, that the folks in FRR’s corporate office discourage interaction with consumers. Given this persistent complaint, I decided to stop listing the products; it was no reflection whatsoever on the products themselves.

A phone number, please, for the company that sells Bioflow magnetic therapy products for dogs (as mentioned in “Help Rover Get Over It,” April 2007)? It’s incredibly annoying for those of us who don’t have a computer (and don’t plan to get one!) when only a website or e-mail address is given for a company or person.

Via e-mail

I’m very sorry about that; we usually take pains to include a phone number, not just a website address, for the companies whose products we recommend. The company can be reached (in the United Kingdom) at 011-44-155-939-5477. The address is Magnetise, Bwlch Bychan Farmhouse, Brynteg, Ceredigion, SA40 9UY.

The 5 Most Common Dog Training Mistakes

[Updated December 26, 2018]

You’ll never hear me say that coercive dog training methods don’t work; they can. Nor will you ever hear me say that positive training turns every dog into a model canine citizen. It doesn’t.

There is a big difference, however, between positive and coercive dog training. When methods that rely on the use of force and application of pain fail, it’s often because of the dog’s inability to tolerate coercion and intimidation. This can result in serious long-term behavioral damage and sometimes physical injury.

Dogs at the assertive end of the canine personality continuum may fight back assertively against coercive techniques, while those who are too soft to tolerate physical punishment may bite defensively or simply shut down. Positive dog training methods, however, are most likely to fail because of mistakes made in the implementation of the method. If you misuse your clicker (clicker training) and treats you may end up with a fat, happy, out-of-control dog, but you’re far less likely to do any long-term physical or psychological damage.

The ideal, of course, is to have a healthy, happy, well-behaved dog. In order to accomplish this with positive training methods, you’ll want to be sure to avoid the common mistakes described below.

Mistake #1: Confusing Positive Conditioning with Permissiveness

You may hear non-positive trainers insist that there has to be a negative consequence for a dog’s inappropriate behavior or he’ll never learn what’s not allowed. It might surprise you to hear that positive trainers don’t disagree. We just differ on the nature of the consequence. A well-implemented positive training program combines good management, to prevent the dog from having the opportunity to be reinforced for undesirable behavior, and negative punishment, in which the dog’s inappropriate behavior makes a good thing go away. Consider this comparison:

Dog Trainer
Trainer Ruthanna Levy properly manages a meeting between a teen at a park and her dog, Ziggy. She limits Ziggy’s reach without tension, instructs the boy on how to act, and clicks and rewards Ziggy’s gentle greeting.

Coercive dog training – Dog is on leash, goes to jump up on an approaching pedestrian. Handler gives a sharp correction (punishment) by jerking hard on the leash. Jumping up is punished; dog learns that bad things happen if he tries to jump up. Note that he may also learn that approaching people makes bad things happen, a possible foundation for future aggressive or fearful behavior with strangers.

Positive dog training – Dog is on leash, goes to jump up on an approaching pedestrian. Handler restrains dog so he can’t reach the stranger, and asks the stranger to stop and wait for the dog to sit before petting. Jumping up is managed; dog learns that jumping up gets nothing, but sitting makes good things happen, a foundation for future good manners/ polite greeting behavior.

Permissive dog training – Dog is on leash, goes to jump up on approaching stranger. Handler allows dog to jump up and stranger pets dog. Jumping up is reinforced; dog learns that jumping up makes good things happen, and will continue to jump up to greet visitors, perhaps even intensify his efforts to jump up.

Management plays a vital role in the “positive doesn’t equal permissive” piece of positive training. By removing the positive reinforcement for unwanted behaviors, you prevent your dog from being rewarded by them. This is true whether you’re restraining with a leash to prevent jumping up, crating to stop adolescent house-destruction, clearing tables to manage counter-surfing, putting tempting objects out of reach to avoid chewing, or any of a long list of other management applications.

Behaviors that aren’t rewarded in some way eventually extinguish, especially if you make it a point to reinforce an alternative and preferably incompatible behavior.

Mistake #2: Dependency on Luring

Unless you’re a dedicated pure shaper, if you train with positive methods you probably use luring to some degree.

Luring is using a treat to show your dog what you want him to do. To lure a “down,” for example, hold the treat in front of your dog’s nose while he’s sitting, then lower it a tiny bit toward the floor. As his nose follows the tidbit, “mark” the behavior that you want with the click! of a clicker or a verbal marker, such as the word “Yes!”, and feed him the treat.

Dog Training Techniques
Levy used a lure to teach Ziggy to put his head down and is fading its use in favor of a physical cue (her finger pointing down). At this stage, Ziggy more readily responds to the cue if Levy is bent over, as if she were about to use the lure.

Continue gradually moving the treat toward the floor, clicking and treating along the way, until he’s lying down. If at any time he stands up, say “Oops!” and have him sit again, then resume luring the down, moving the treat toward the floor in smaller increments this time.

Luring to teach behaviors is just fine. Forgetting to “fade” (gradually remove) the lure is not. If you don’t fade the lure early in the training process, you and your dog can become dependent on the presence of treats to get the behavior to happen. While I almost always have treats in my pockets or close by, I don’t want to have to rely on treats to get my dog to offer behaviors when I ask for them.

Here’s how to fade the lure with the “down” behavior:

1. Use the lure until the “down” happens easily – when you lure to the floor your dog follows into a down position immediately, with one click! and treat at the end. For most dogs this should only take a half-dozen or so repetitions.

2. Stand in front of your dog with your hands at your sides, a treat in the hand you’ve been using to lure with. If your dog mugs that hand for the treat, hide it behind your back.

3. With your dog sitting in front of you, ask for the “down.”

4. Wait a second or two, and if he doesn’t lie down (he probably won’t), lure him to the ground.

5. Repeat Steps 3 and 4 several times, sometimes waiting a little bit longer to lure, sometimes a little shorter.

6. If he’s not lying down when you ask after a half-dozen repetitions, start fading the lure in gradual steps. Ask for the “down,” pause, and when you lure, instead of moving the treat all the way to the floor, move it three-quarters of the way, and then whisk it behind your back, parallel to the floor (if you lift it up you’ll lure him back into a sit). Since he’s three-quarters of the way down, he’s likely to continue all the way to the floor, even though the treat is gone. If not, repeat again and go seven-eighths of the way to the floor.

7. Repeat Step 6, gradually decreasing the distance you lure toward the floor, until you’ve faded the lure completely.

You can apply this same process to any behavior you teach initially by luring. As soon as the dog can perform the behavior easily for the lure, begin fading. You are, in essence, translating for your dog, showing him that the word you’re using is the equivalent of the lure. When you say the verbal cue “down,” pause, and then lure, it’s as if you’re saying, “Dog, the word down means exactly the same thing as putting the treat in front of your nose and moving it toward the floor.”

Mistake #3: Dependence on Treats

Even if you do a good job of fading the lure, you can still find yourself dependent on treats – feeling like you have to click! and treat your dog every time he performs, or the behavior might go away.

This is known as a continuous schedule of reinforcement (CSR). Dogs can achieve superb, reliable behaviors on a CSR, but the behaviors are probably not very durable. If for some reason you stop giving a click! and treat for each repetition of the behavior, the dog will probably stop doing as you ask in fairly short order, since he no longer gets his primary reinforcer (the food).

Clicker Training
Trainer Sarah Richardson uses clicks and treats to teach Quaid to stay in the down position until he is released to eat from his bowl. Sometimes, though, dinner is the reward jackpot!

Enter the very important concept of intermittent reinforcement. When your dog performs reliably on a CSR, that is, offers the desired behavior in response to your cue at least eight out of ten times, it’s time to start reinforcing intermittently. In plain English, that means every once in a while you skip a click! and treat, and praise your dog instead. At first just skip an occasional click!, and as you practice this, over time you can skip more and more, until your dog works primarily for praise (or other life rewards).

If you include praise regularly as part of your clicker training – click!, treat, “Good dog!” your dog will have a very positive association with praise, and it will still have value even when the click! and treat are absent.

Note: In my training, a click! always means a food treat is coming. When I start using intermittent reinforcement, I don’t click! if I’m going to use praise alone. This helps to maintain the value and power of the clicker.

You can use other rewards as well, when you want to reinforce without a click! and treat. Anything your dog loves can be used as a reinforcer if you can figure out how to control your dog’s access to it and use it to reward desirable behaviors: a ball, a favorite toy, a car ride, a walk on-leash, or a scratch behind the ear.

Sometimes I reinforce my dogs for waiting politely at the door by opening the door and telling them they can run through. They get to dash outside and poop, pee, and play. These are all valuable “life rewards” – things that are naturally reinforcing to dogs.

Of course, sometimes they don’t get to run out the door. Intermittent reinforcement makes a behavior very durable. Like a gambler at a slot machines, your dog will keep playing the game because he’s learned it will eventually pay off.

Mistake #4: Poor Timing

Some trainers will tell you the consequence must happen within “x” amount of time in order for it to be effective; that is, in order for the dog to understand the connection between the behavior and the reward (or punishment). I’ve heard as much as five seconds (which I would suggest is far too long) and as little as one second (which is much more likely to be accurate).

Suffice it to say that the results are optimal when the consequence happens as close to the instant the behavior happens as possible. This is true whether the consequence is positive reinforcement (treat, praise, toy, play, petting), negative punishment (where the dog’s behavior makes a good thing go away), or “positive punishment” (where the dog’s behavior makes a bad thing happen). Of course, positive trainers studiously try to avoid using positive punishment.

Positive Dog Training
With good timing, you can mark the precise moment when your dog moves in a specific way (and then reward it), and eventually teach him to duplicate this move on cue.

The greatest value of a reward marker – such as the click! of a clicker or the word “yes!” – is that it enables you to have perfect timing. With a marker, you can always have perfect, or at least near-perfect timing, because the marker bridges the time gap between the behavior and the delivery of the treat. Of course the marker still has to be given the instant the behavior happens – or very close thereto – but it gives you a few seconds of breathing room in which to deliver the treat.

If you have poor timing, you may inadvertently but consistently reinforce a behavior other than the one you want your dog to perform. At best, this is confusing for the dog, slows learning, and is frustrating for both of you. At worst, you might reinforce the exact opposite of the behavior you’re trying to teach, and end up training your dog to do an entirely different behavior, perhaps even a highly undesirable one!

Let’s say you’re trying to teach your dog the polite greeting behavior of “sit” when he approaches visitors in your home. When your guests arrive, you have him on leash so you can manage his jumping up behavior. As your first guest enters the door, your dog executes a brilliant “sit” on the doormat! You fumble for your clicker, and just as you press the metal tongue he decides he’s not getting reinforced for the sit and jumps on Aunt Martha. Click! – and major oops! Of course you haven’t done terminal damage – unless Aunt Martha is 90 years old and breaks her hip when your dog knocked her down. But every time you’re too slow with your marker and it arrives when your dog is jumping up instead of sitting, you’re telling him that jumping is a good thing to do; it earns a marker and reward!

Herein lies one of the values of having a verbal marker, such as the word “Yes,” or a clicking sound you make with your tongue. If you’re caught off guard and you don’t have your clicker handy – just let loose your verbal marker and follow with one of the treats you always have in your pocket.

If you realize your timing is sloppy even with your clicker ready in hand, then do some clicker-timing practice. With your dog out of earshot, turn your television onto the sports channel and find a tennis match. Watch closely. Every time a player hits the ball, click! your clicker. When your click! regularly coincides with the “Thwack!” of the ball hitting the racket, you’re ready to go back to work with your dog. (Note: this sort of practice isn’t nearly as effective with golf or baseball.)

Mistake #5: Lacking Sufficient Courage of Your Convictions

When you’re training your dog and things don’t seem to be working as they should, it can be tempting to let yourself be led astray. You can always find a ready supply of friends, family members, and other animal care professionals who are happy to tell you that you need to correct, alpha roll, intimidate, and/or shock your recalcitrant dog into submission.

Perhaps you’re a crossover trainer and even your own past success using forceful methods prompts that little voice in your brain to say, “I could just jerk his collar one time…”

STOP!

One of the things we value so much about positive training is the trust it builds between dog and human. Your dog trusts that he can try behaviors without getting hurt – you’ll let him know when he’s right, but you won’t frighten or hurt him when he’s wrong. When you violate that trust, you risk negative behavioral consequences that are sometimes significant, ranging from aggression at one end of the spectrum, to shutting down, or learned helplessness, at the other.

When a dog becomes aggressive, his future becomes questionable. When a dog shuts down, losing his willingness to offer behaviors for fear he’ll be punished, it makes his training even more frustrating.

Aggression aside, using coercion along with positive training has serious consequences. If you punish your dog for failing to perform a cue that you “know” he knows, you “poison” that cue; in other words, you give him a negative association with it. The cue becomes ambiguous; the dog doesn’t know if it predicts “good stuff” (click! and treat) or “bad stuff” (punishment). This ambiguity creates stress, and can turn a happy working dog into one whose tail starts to lower and enthusiasm starts to wane.

A poisoned cue is very difficult, if not impossible, to rehabilitate. If you poison a cue you’re better off introducing a new one than trying to regain the consistently positive association with the old one.

You always have a choice as to how to behave with your dog. One of the many things I love about positive training is that if one way isn’t working, there are many more possibilities to try to get the behavior you want to reinforce, without resorting to coercion or intimidation. Use of force in an otherwise positive training program is detrimental to future training, as well as evidence of lack of creativity and lack of commitment to a pain/intimidation-free relationship with your dog.

At a recent seminar, the owner of a lovely Bernese Mountain Dog admitted to me that he “had” to use a forced retrieve (ear pinch) on his otherwise positively trained dog. I gently suggested that he didn’t “have” to, but rather he “chose” to use this pain-inducing method. I wasn’t surprised when we got to the shaping exercise in the seminar and the Berner sat next to his owner, staring unwaveringly into his eyes, not offering a single bit of behavior, while the rest of the dogs in the group happily engaged in the shaping game and learned to move toward, and eventually onto, their mats. His choice definitely affected his dog and their relationship.

Positive works. If you’re committed to positive training, you can find a way to teach a retrieve without pinching your dog’s ear, or overcome your own training challenge. There are plenty of great books, videos, positive trainers, and supportive e-mail lists that can help you through your training program. Or you can decide that teaching the retrieve isn’t important enough to lose your soul over, and find something else to do with your dog that doesn’t “require” the infliction of pain. It’s your choice. Choose wisely.

DOG TRAINING MISTAKES: OVERVIEW

1. Review your own training program to identify which of the training mistakes you might be making.

2. Implement changes to your training protocols to help you avoid the mistakes and improve the efficacy of your training.

3. If necessary, renew your commitment to positive training methods that encourage a relationship between you and your dog based on mutual trust, cooperation, and respect.

Special thanks to trainers Ruthanna Levy of Alameda, CA, and Sarah Richardson of Chico, CA, for demonstrating proper positive training techniques for this article.

Pat Miller, CBCC-KA, CPDT-KA, is Whole Dog Journal’s Training Editor. Miller lives in Hagerstown, Maryland, site of her Peaceable Paws training center. She is also the author of The Power of Positive Dog Training and Positive Perspectives: Love Your Dog, Train Your Dog.

Canine Allergies and Your Dog’s Health

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Ask a dozen health experts about allergies and you’ll get at least that many theories about what they are, why they happen, and how to fix them.

What’s interesting is that even when they disagree, most allergy theories point to the same underlying causes. This is because allergic reactions are symptoms of a deeper imbalance. Dogs don’t develop allergies because they are exposed to allergens. Dogs are exposed to allergens all the time, usually with no reaction. Dogs develop allergies with implications of skin problems because something has made them vulnerable, and the culprit is often a combination of diet, stress, conventional medical treatments, heredity, and environmental factors.

Dogs with Skin Problems

Four months ago we explored Candida albicans (“Canine Candida,” February 2007), considered by some to be a major factor in canine allergies. This article explores the links between canine allergies and leaky gut syndrome, a different species of yeast called Malassezia pachydermatis, and detoxification support.

Leaky Gut Syndrome in Dogs

Also known as intestinal permeability, leaky gut syndrome is exactly what it sounds like, a condition in which damage to the small intestine creates spaces between cells in the intestinal lining, spaces that are large enough to allow fragments of partially digested food, toxins, and bacteria to migrate from the intestinal tract into the bloodstream. The results include impaired digestion, incomplete absorption of nutrients, and the presence of what the immune system identifies as foreign invaders throughout the body. The immune system responds with its usual weapons, which produce inflammation and allergic reactions.

Soon the liver and kidneys, the body’s main filters, become overwhelmed, and toxins spill over into the bloodstream, which carries bacteria, toxins, and partially digested food particles to muscles and connective tissue throughout the body. Leaky gut syndrome is blamed for respiratory and skin allergies, arthritis, irritable bowel disease, autoimmune disorders, diabetes, and a host of other problems.

Leaky gut syndrome is a vicious cycle. Something (usually diet-related) causes injury to the small intestine, resulting in impaired digestion, which leads to bacterial overgrowth and other problems, resulting in further damage, and the cycle continues. Some of the conditions blamed for leaky gut syndrome include high-carbohydrate diets, antibiotics, parasites, yeast or fungal infections, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and mineral deficiencies. Some of these, such as parasite infestations, yeast or fungal infections, and mineral deficiencies, can result from the syndrome as well as help cause it.

At Reinhardt Ranch Holistic Nutrition Center for Pets in Elk Grove, California, nutritional consultant Elaine Reinhardt hears every day from people whose dogs have chronic allergies. “Leaky gut syndrome is at the root of many illnesses,” she says, “including autoimmune diseases, joint diseases, and allergic reactions. Since much of your immune function is in your gut, it makes sense to look there first. Certainly this is true when it comes to allergies.”

A large number of the dogs she works with were adopted from shelters or rescue groups. Most, she says, are underweight. Even in their new homes and on an improved diet, they can’t gain an ounce. Reinhardt suspects that conditions that interfere with their gaining weight, such as leaky gut syndrome and malabsorption, contribute to behavioral problems, hyperactivity, and other factors that prompted their previous owners to give them up. “Add all the health problems that come with leaky gut syndrome and an inflamed intestinal tract,” she says, “and the expense of conventional medical treatment, and I suspect that many of these dogs were given up because their owners couldn’t afford the time and expense their treatment required.”

Symptoms as varied as ear infections; seasonal or respiratory allergies; itchy skin; hair and coat problems; diarrhea; and an inability to gain weight can all stem from digestive problems, she says.

To heal the digestive tract, Reinhardt recommends an improved diet with higher-quality protein and the elimination of soy, corn, wheat, and chicken fat. “Soy, corn, and wheat are at the top of the list of foods that irritate canine digestion,” she says, “and I like to stay away from chicken fat because it contains residues of whatever the chicken was exposed to in the way of drugs and toxins. Fat from organically raised, pastured chickens is fine, but that’s not what you’ll find in commercial dog food.”

Reinhardt then recommends three supplements that she considers crucial for rapid healing and recovery: Seacure, probiotics, and digestive enzymes.

Seacure, described in “Securing Seacure” (April 2003) and “Accelerated Wound Healing” (August 2006), is a very fishy smelling powder made from fermented deep sea white fish. Because the fermentation process predigests the fish and breaks it into amino acids and peptides, which the body uses as building blocks to repair damaged tissue and speed healing, it requires no digestive effort and is assimilated on contact.

“I started taking Seacure seriously,” says Reinhardt, “when I gave it to some cats who were dying. They literally responded within 15 minutes. Their eyes went from dull to sparkling in that short a time. Since then, I’ve seen the same response again and again, including seriously ill and unresponsive dogs who sat up, began grooming themselves, wagged their tails, interacted with their owners, and took an interest in their surroundings, all within 15 minutes. I’m not saying that they all get well, but when any pet in dire straits responds dramatically, it’s wonderful.”

In most cases, she says, underweight dogs and dogs with allergy symptoms begin to improve within a few days, and within a month or two, they have gained weight, their coats have improved, bald spots have disappeared, and they no longer chew on their paws. “The food that goes in stays in,” she says. “It doesn’t come shooting out the other end as bright yellow diarrhea. Seacure provides the deep nourishment that helps with conditions across the board.”

Reinhardt usually starts with the label-recommended dose of ¼ teaspoon per 10 pounds of body weight per day, but for dogs weighing over 100 pounds, she finds that 2½ teaspoons works well. “Larger animals don’t necessarily need a greater dose,” she says, “and dogs who don’t need a lot of digestive support do well on half the recommended dose.”

Reinhardt says that when she adds probiotics (beneficial bacterial) and digestive enzymes, the dogs’ health improves even faster.

Some probiotics (see “Probiotics Boost Canine Overall Health,” August 2006) are labeled for pet or veterinary use. Among the many strains of probiotics for which canine health claims are made, one of the most interesting is Lactobacillus sporogenes. Unlike L. acidophilus and similar strains, L. sporogenes reproduces rapidly, so it acts faster in keeping yeasts and fungi in check. Some human product lines, such as Thorne Research, carry L. sporogenes supplements, which can be safely given to dogs.

Several canine probiotic supplements, such as Jarrow Formula’s Pet Dophilus Powder, contain Enterococcus faecium, a strain that is native to dogs and which some nutrition experts consider essential to canine health.

Enzyme products that have helped dogs with allergies include digestive enzymes that are added to food, such as Prozyme and NZymes, and systemic oral enzymes, such as Wobenzym and FlavenZym, which are given between meals on an empty stomach (see “Enzyme Therapy for Quicker Canine Injury Recovery,” January 2001, and “Digest These Benefits,” October 2005).

Reinhardt prefers PetLabs360 DigestAbles tablets. “They’re chewable,” she says, “so they can be fed directly to dogs or put in their food. They’re beef and cheese flavored, so even finicky dogs like them, and the results are excellent.”

Her favorite product for dogs suffering from airborne allergens is SeaVive, a companion product to Seacure. SeaVive contains Seacure, colostrum, Beta-1,3-D glucan, and vitamin C.

Another supplement that has helped dogs with all types of allergies is Willard Water (see “Willard Water,” June 2006), which can be added to drinking water or herbal tea and diluted and added to food to improve digestion and increase the assimilation of nutrients.

Malassezia

Malassezia pachydermatis is a yeast commonly found in the ears and on the skin of dogs. Held in check by the immune systems of healthy dogs, it can multiply until it becomes pathogenic in susceptible dogs, resulting in itchy, oily, or scaly skin, hair loss, redness or blackening of the skin, thickening of the skin, and an offensive greasy odor.

Affected areas tend to be the ears and skin folds on or around the face, elbow, underarm, and tail. Dogs with an overgrowth of Malassezia may lick their feet incessantly because of atopic or environmental allergies that accompany the yeast overgrowth. Cocker Spaniels, Basset Hounds, and West Highland White Terriers are said to be especially susceptible, but any dog can experience a Malassezia overgrowth.

Malassezia yeast cells can be identified under a microscope. A skin lesion can be scraped or swabbed, or a sample can be collected on scotch tape. Conventional veterinary treatment of Malassezia usually involves a shampoo containing one or more topical antifungal medications, such as miconazole, clortrimazole, or ketocanazole. Oral anti-fungal drugs are prescribed in cases that don’t respond to topical treatment.

Holistic veterinarian Susan Wynn, DVM, thinks that Melassezia, not Candida, is implicated in many itchy dogs’ uncomfortable plight. “Malassezia is a yeast species that can cause thickened, hyperpigmented skin, bad ears, fatigue, and lethargy,” she says. “Of course, Malassezia is also a secondary problem to whatever is going on with the dog. Malassezia is the primary yeast that causes opportunistic (secondary) infections in dogs and is diagnosed regularly on the skin or in the ears. Secondary infections by Candida albicans are possible but much more rare, and most of the holistic veterinarians I know treat leaky gut syndrome instead of candidiasis.”

Dr. Wynn does not believe treatment with anti-fungal medications or herbs is always necessary before giving an affected dog probiotics and changing the dog’s diet, and she emphasizes that leaky gut syndrome can occur independently of candida overgrowth.

For Malassezia-infected ears, Dr. Wynn recommends daily cleaning with vinegar diluted with an equal amount of water, which is a gentle way to lower the pH in the ear, making it less hospitable to yeasts and fungi. A pinch of boric acid has a similar effect (as described in “A New Old Ear Treatment,” June 2004). For topical treatment of the skin, Dr. Wynn recommends Selsun Blue shampoo or the application of a 10-percent tea tree oil spray, which has proven antifungal properties.

Our literature search of holistic treatments for Malassezia produced recommendations identical to holistic treatments for candidiasis. “You’ve discovered exactly the point,” says Dr. Wynn. “And if you look further, you will discover that the treatment is very much like what we recommend for any chronic allergic or immune-mediated disease, many of them centering on abnormal gut permeability.

Holistic Dog Care

“To wit, we have diseases that respond to diet changes, probiotics, and various herbal tonics or specifics, and we can only document the presence of fungi in some cases, so we look for a different cause. This is why so many veterinary practitioners look at chronic yeast infections as a problem that pops up in immunocompromised animals and not as the primary disease. Holistic treatments like improved diet and probiotics work, but they work directly on the immune system, strengthening the body so that it resists yeast, rather than by killing the yeast directly.”

Dr. Wynn almost never recommends conventional antifungals like Nystatin for Malassezia, finding that Selsun Blue shampoos works well for all but the most serious cases in combination with holistic treatment for leaky gut syndrome.

Detoxification Support

Most of us think of detoxification as something that happens when we go on a “detox” program of fasting, herbs, juices, or supplements that speed the body’s release of impurities. In fact, detoxification goes on constantly as the body breaks down and removes waste products.

If the liver receives the nutrients it needs to perform this function well, it maintains itself in a state of health. If the process is impaired, health suffers. Unfortunately, dogs are often overwhelmed with the burden of detoxification – and undernourished by low-quality commercial diets. This combination can contribute to leaky gut syndrome, yeast overgrowth, and a variety of allergy symptoms.

During the first stage of the detoxification process (Phase I), the body’s filters identify and separate waste products and toxins from the blood and lymph. Water-soluble material gets sent to the kidneys for excretion. Dehydration complicates this process, which is why consuming clean drinking water is so important. Additional nutrients are required by the liver to perform Phase II functions, the elimination of materials that couldn’t be made water-soluble in Phase I.

When a dog is deficient in key nutrients, backups and spillovers of waste products can occur. Partially processed toxins traveling through the bloodstream may find a home in fatty tissue, or they may stay in the blood, infect healthy tissue, and cause new illnesses. Incomplete detoxification and leaky gut syndrome (and the allergy symptoms they aggravate) can be corrected with an improved diet and supplements that support the digestive tract.

Seacure, described above, is an important whole-food source of amino acids and an aid to Phase II detoxification. Digestive enzymes taken between meals help support the process. So do whole-food nutritional supplements, such as Standard Process Canine Dermal Support, which targets skin conditions, or Canine Hepatic Support, which improves liver function.

Dogs are well known for finding their own treatments when given the opportunity. Renee Votta, an herbalist in New Braunfels, Texas, adopted a mixed-breed dog she found. “We had just had a huge flood, and many animals were homeless due to houses being destroyed and animals being caught in the river. I looked for her owners but no one claimed her.”

Votta named the dog Bonnie and took her to a veterinary clinic for spaying and to have the open sores on her legs treated. “She licked at them all the time,” says Votta. “Most were an inch wide and an inch long, some smaller and a few larger. The vet said they were caused by contact dermatitis having something to do with the grass, weeds, and green things that grow here all year. The vet said we would have to live with them because it’s the kind of problem that keeps coming back.”

That winter, Votta experimented with topical treatments. A mix of aloe vera, vitamin E, and olive oil worked best, but even though the sores got smaller, they never went away and new sores often developed.

One day, Votta realized that Bonnie, standing in a weed patch, was carefully harvesting cleavers (Galium aparine). “I couldn’t get over it,” she says. “Bonnie was ignoring all the other weeds. At that moment I realized that her condition had nothing to do with external factors. Her problems were inside her.”

Votta encouraged Bonnie to eat all the cleavers she wanted from the yard, plus she made cleavers tea to add to the dog’s water. She also added minced cleavers and raw garlic to Bonnie’s dry food.

Within a month, all of the sores on Bonnie’s legs cleared up and in the eight years since, she has never had another open sore. She continues to graze on cleavers, especially when the plants first emerge in the spring. “Eating a few strands of them every so often is enough to keep her healthy and her blood clean,” says Votta.

In her book Veterinary Herbal Medicine, Dr. Wynn describes cleavers as a mildly astringent and mildly diuretic herb that is a tonic for the lymph system. It has been used for dry skin eruptions, as a remedy for ulcers and tumors, and for the treatment of psoriasis. In All You Ever Wanted to Know about Herbs for Pets, Mary Wulff-Tilford and Gregory Tilford describe cleavers as an herb that enhances the body’s waste management by improving lymphatic circulation, thus “washing” body tissues.

Because cleavers is an invasive weed with a wide range, it’s probably growing in your neighborhood. Consult a plant identification guide or search for cleavers online; several herbal websites offer descriptions and photos. In addition to having a distinctive appearance, cleavers feels sticky to the touch and clings to whatever it contacts. Avoid herbs that grow near highways, busy parking lots, or fields treated with pesticides or agricultural chemicals.

To try Bonnie’s remedy, finely chop or mince fresh cleavers and add it to your dog’s food, starting with small amounts and increasing to about 1 tablespoon minced herb per 25 to 30 pounds of body weight per day in divided doses. For convenience, store fresh cleavers in the freezer by pureeing the herb in a small amount of water, placing it in ice cube trays, and as soon as it’s frozen, transfer to a tightly sealed plastic bag. Remove a cube at a time as needed.

Dried wildcrafted cleavers can be ordered from Jean’s Greens and other herbal supply companies. To brew cleavers tea, pour 1 cup boiling water over 2 tablespoons fresh or 2 teaspoons dried cleavers, cover, and let stand until cool. Add the tea to food at the rate of 1 teaspoon tea per 10 pounds of body weight. Refrigerated tea can be kept for up to 5 days.

The Jean’s Greens tea blend Pollution Solution, which combines cleavers with elderflower, rosemary, dandelion leaf, peppermint, cinnamon, echinacea leaf, and red clover, provides gentle detoxification support and can be brewed and used in the same manner.

Whole Dog Journal contributor CJ Puotinen lives with her husband, Joel, and Labrador Retriever, Chloe, in New York.

Angry Over The Recent Dog Food Recall

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Although I have received Whole Dog Journal for at least three years, I was thinking of letting my subscription lapse until I heard the terrible news of the dog food recall. If it wasn’t for your newsletter I would still be feeding a terrible canned dog food (that I thought was high quality) to my two dogs. Needless to say my renewal is in the mail. I realize that this can happen to any dog food but I hope that the companies who care enough to use the best ingredients are also vigilant about safety. Please keep educating us on what to look for in dog food.
Mary Wright
Latrobe, PA

Thanks, Mary, for your continued support of Whole Dog Journal. Long-time readers know how much we, too, have learned about the industry over the 10 years Whole Dog Journal has been in print. Our goal is to continue to dig for new and ever-more-helpful information about the best canine diets.


We received many letters similar to the one below, but inquiring about different pet food companies.

I have a question regarding the food made by Timberwolf Organics. I currently feed this food (the bison/salmon variety) to my two dogs, and in light of recent events with the toxic dog food scare, I wanted to find out who manufactured it. I realize it is not involved in the recall; I just wanted to know.

Timberwolf Organics’ website says that due to proprietary/legal reasons they do not give out the name of their manufacturer.

Do you know who manufactures this food, and do you think it odd that they will not say who makes their products?

I don’t know who manufactures that food (although I may have known at one time), and no, it’s not odd that they won’t say where their products are made. I should say that it’s not odd, but it’s not right, either (in my humble opinion).


We’ve long stated our preference for foods from companies that are willing to disclose detailed information about their products. A few years ago, that was a short list to choose from. Today, disclosure about manufacturing and even ingredient sourcing is becoming common enough to provide you with plenty of top-quality alternatives.

I have been contacting companies to see if they have products made by Menu Foods. There are a lot of us who don’t want anything to do with this company, whether our foods were made at the plant that made the contaminated foods or another plant owned by Menu.

It would be nice to have a list of where the dog foods are actually made. Can you help compile a list?

I think this information should be listed on the label.

That’s funny; I was just thinking how helpful it would be if the manufacturer was listed on food labels alongside the (legally required) information for the company that sells the food.

I just made a snap decision. Given that we have long recommended that owners choose foods from companies that disclose their site (or sites) of manufacture, I’m going to start including the site (or sites) of manufacture for all the products on Whole Dog Journal’s “top foods” lists. If a company won’t disclose this information, its products won’t appear on our lists.

Here’s the thing: as I stated in “Should You Boycott (Fill In the Blank)?” on page 6 of this issue, I don’t think it’s all that useful to boycott a pet food company, a contract manufacturer, or (especially) all the products made by a contract manufacturer following a single adverse event. Stuff happens, and even though the scale of this event was huge, and the injuries caused are horrific, it’s unlikely that it will ever be repeated. Of course, if Menu ever did have another deadly problem with its ingredients, I’d join the protesters.

After the recent recall of some foods manufactured by Menu Foods, I have been very surprised to learn that some of the holistic brands on your “top wet foods” list are made by Menu, even if they are not part of the recall.

Why do these companies outsource the manufacturing of their foods to Menu Foods? How are we supposed to trust these brands if they have their foods manufactured in the same plants as low-quality foods? What about contamination?

How can we verify that all ingredients are originated in the U.S., not in China or elsewhere?

Do you intend to do an investigation on the origin of ingredients in foods? It would be a good idea to list all the brands that are manufactured in the U.S., with only American ingredients.
Judith Cassidy
Howell, Michigan

Thanks for your great questions.

First: Did I know that many of Whole Dog Journal’s “top wet foods” were made by Menu? Yes.

Why do companies with good products use Menu, which also produces some really low-quality foods? Because Menu is the largest contract manufacturer of wet pet foods in the U.S. No other co-packer has anything close to its capacity. And there are very few other options for the pet food companies that are large enough to need a high-capacity plant, but too small to be able to afford to buy or build a canning plant from scratch. Also, prior to this event, Menu had a very good reputation for the quality and reliability of its work.

What about contamination? Some companies source their own ingredients (or some of their ingredients). Most take advantage of Menu’s massive buying power to procure supplies of other ingredients at a lower cost. The companies should be well aware of the quality of the ingredients sourced by Menu, however; specifications for each ingredient are generally spelled out in their contract with the co-packer. If a company wants (and pays for) only the best-quality ingredients in its foods, Menu can supply them. If the pet food company wants to provide Menu with ingredients it has sourced independently, Menu can deal with that, too. Pet food executives trust Menu to keep these ingredients straight largely thanks to Menu’s long-term reputation for doing so.

As far as disclosing information about the source of the ingredients used in the products it makes for other companies – Menu is contractually prohibited from doing so. Pet food companies and co-packers routinely sign nondisclosure agreements, in order to protect the pet food companies’ “trade secrets.” If the source of the ingredients in your dog’s food is important to you, ask the company whose name is on the label for information. If you are not satisfied with their answers, move on.

Finally, I will write an article about the global market for pet food ingredients in an upcoming issue. Thanks for an excellent suggestion!

I know the pet food contamination story has been beaten to death, yet new facts keep coming to light, and I still have questions, such as:

Dog Food Recall Effects

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Why would a (Canadian) company located in the middle of the American wheat belt (Kansas) buy wheat products that have to be shipped half way around the world? It is not like we don’t have enough wheat of our own; why are we buying wheat from China? And how many dogs and cats in China have been killed by that product? Come to think of it, how many people in China die from contaminated food? We will never know.

I have always made an effort to buy pet food made in the USA; it isn’t difficult. However, it is difficult to buy treats that are made in the U.S. Nine out of ten treat products are made in Asia or South America. I avoid them on the theory that the lax manufacturing oversight in the U.S. is better than no oversight at all.

It appears that I am going to have to rethink my criteria for food, and buy food with all its ingredients grown and processed in the USA. I hereby challenge all companies claiming to make a top tier food to meet that challenge and say on the bag that the ingredients are 100 percent North American-sourced and -processed. I would be glad to vote with my pet food dollars.
Mike Burks
via e-mail

We’ve learned that wheat gluten from China costs about 10 cents less per pound than U.S.-grown and -processed wheat gluten, which costs around 60 cents per pound. Multiply that by the 792 metric tons of wheat gluten imported in the same lot as the contaminated product bought by Menu, and you begin to understand the size of the problem. I don’t know how much of this wheat gluten Menu bought, but I do know that it’s very difficult for companies to take a “pass” on savings of that magnitude.

Of course, we’ve also now seen what the hidden price of a bargain ingredient may be.

Using U.S.-grown and -processed sources of ingredients that are abundant here makes sense.

I just read Mary Straus’ first article on feeding home-prepared diets to dogs. Although she is preaching to the “converted” with regard to me, I am still delighted to know that we will be getting the benefit of her excellent research and expertise. I have great respect for Mary, having read many of her articles in various media, and I’m eagerly looking forward to the rest of the series.

I am getting a new GSD puppy in three weeks and having never fed a pup a home-prepared diet (although my last dog was fed a raw diet for eight years). I’m relieved that I will have Mary to advise me on the best way to proceed.

Whole Dog Journal is the best thing to ever happen to those of us who care about the health and mental well-being of our dogs. (I’ve also purchased Pat Miller’s book on positive dog training. Her training articles are excellent.)
Carol Marsh
Kanata, Ontario

Why can’t Whole Dog Journal list all of its “top foods” on its website for all dog owners to benefit from? I contacted your customer service department and was told I would have to pay for a subscription or a back issue if I wanted that information. I’m looking for safe foods. Clearly you care more about profits than saving the lives of dogs. I will never subscribe and support a company that puts its profits before anyone else. Besides, I found the information on a website for free.

Wow.
First, because we do not sell advertising, we must charge for our content. If we gave it away, we wouldn’t be able to pay our contributors, printer, etc., and we wouldn’t be able to continue to research and analyze the pet food industry (and other canine-health-related industries).


Yes, our publisher is a for-profit company, and we expect to be paid for expert analysis. We don’t think that makes us puppy killers. You must value what we have to say, or you wouldn’t be driven to search for a free way to access it! We would think your peace of mind would be worth the price of a subscription.

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Wake-Up Call

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First, let me express my deep sympathy for everyone whose pets were recently exposed to toxins in foods containing a contaminated ingredient. I’m sure that every animal lover can empathize with your pain and concern for your canine and feline companions.

If there can be an upside to this disaster, it’s that the event is already shaking the pet food industry to its core. America woke up, started looking at its pet food labels, and had a few questions. Every pet food company in this country has been buried in calls, letters, and e-mails from pet owners who wanted to know how the disaster had happened – and what the makers of their dogs’ foods were doing to prevent it from happening again. That’s a good thing.

Nancy Kerns

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Another positive result is that the industry seems to be taking this event very seriously and very personally (as well they should). I guarantee you that every pet food company executive alive has spent many hours of the past month in meetings about improving their company’s ingredient sourcing and testing, manufacturing practices, customer relations, product liability, and more.

I’ll have an amazing opportunity to eavesdrop on the conversation of some of these executives as they gather in mid-April at Petfood Forum, an annual industry event sponsored by Petfood Industry magazine and its publisher, Watt Publishing. The editor of Petfood Industry, Tim Phillips, DVM, invited me to speak at the conference about “scrutinizing super-premium pet foods.” After 10 years of criticizing the pet food industry, I feel a little bit like a hen invited to a foxhouse, if there is such a thing. I’m terribly excited.

Like the pet food companies, we’ve also received lots of calls and letters about the recent recall. I’ve printed a sampling of the letters (and my responses) on pages 22-23. I hope that this exchange, and my article on page 3 (about what you can do to help protect your pets from future disasters), will help answer some of your questions.

Of perhaps even more use to owners who may have lost faith in the pet food industry is the second installment of our series on home-prepared diets, which appears on page 8.

In the first article, published in the April issue, author Mary Straus presented an overview on home-prepared diets – everything you ought to understand about making your dog’s food before actually feeding the stuff to your dog. This month, she gets down to the nitty-gritty regarding diets that include raw meaty bones. Next month, she’ll discussed cooked diets, for those owners not yet ready to “go raw.” And in the July issue, her topic is “the reality of home feeding.” Straus will describe how different people go about building their dogs’ diets in different ways, and offer tips on finding economical sources of nutritious ingredients and ways to limit preparation time.

Like a lot of you, I’m not quite ready to cook more for the dog than I do for my husband. But another disaster might change all that.

Pet Food Disaster

Déjà all over again . . .

In October of 2004 we published an article (“When Foods Go Bad”) that discussed how owners could protect their pets from serious harm from contaminated or toxin-adulterated food. It outlined the lessons learned from the three previous commercial pet food disasters: the 1995 event involving vomitoxin in Nature’s Recipe dry foods; the 1998 aflatoxin event involving dry dog foods made by Doane Products; and the still-unidentified problem that sickened and killed dogs who ate certain lots of Go! Natural dry food in 2003.

Since then, there have been two more well-publicized pet food recalls: the afla-toxin poisonings caused by some dry foods made by Diamond Pet Food in late 2005, and the very recent event involving canned and at least one dry pet food made with (in the leading theory) contaminated wheat gluten.

These events – the most recent one in particular – have given us all quite a bit to think about, from the local (how did my pet store respond to news of the recall?) to the global (how does the global economy affect us?); from the specific (what foods are safe to buy for my dog right now?) to the general (what types of food pose the greatest risk to their consumers?).

Pet Food Recall

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Lessons learned
Past recalls have taught us the following:

• You should always store dry pet food in the bag it came in. This helps keep the food fresh, but more importantly, keeps the date/code information with the food. If a problem arises, this information will be critical to a proper response and/or investigation. If you feed canned food, rinse each can and keep it for at least a week or two.

• Don’t feed your dog any food that looks or smells bad or abnormal. If a dry food is covered with green, hairy structures, it’s moldy and should not be fed! Contact the food company or your local retailer and ask for a replacement. Usually, you will be asked to bring the food to the store from which it was purchased for a replacement. It helps if you retained the receipt, proving it was purchased from that store.

• Owners should always be alert to the response of their dogs to their food. Vomiting or diarrhea are the most obvious signs of a problem with the food, but any changes in your dog’s elimination and consumption patterns changes are notable. If we’ve said it once, we’ve said it a thousand times: write down and date any odd response or change in a notebook or on your calendar. Your memory is not as good as a written record.

• With all but perennially fussy dogs, it’s significant when a dog declines or is reluctant to eat a food. This is important every time you open a new bag or can, but is also significant if the dog becomes increasingly reluctant the deeper you reach into the bag of food. In past cases where foods sickened animals, the individuals who ate the most of the bad food fared the worst . . .

• . . . so, stop feeding the food if your dog won’t eat it, or if he becomes very reluctant to eat it, and contact its maker. Give the company the date/code information, ask specifically if the company has received any other reports about that food recently, and ask what the company will do for you.

• The same goes, of course, if your dog becomes ill after eating a food. Stop feeding the food. Contact your veterinarian to discuss your dog’s symptoms, and make sure the vet makes a note of your discussion in your dog’s file. Get any sick dog to the veterinarian ASAP!

• Following a bad reaction to one food, do provide your dog with another food, from a different company, while you monitor his response. If possible, feed him a product you can confirm is made (not just sold) by a different manufacturer.

By the way, we don’t recommend feeding a combination of commercial foods at the same time. In case of a reaction, you may be confused as to which food caused the problem, and will have to suspect both products. (See “Switch, But Don’t Mix,” June 2004 for more information.)

• Contact the maker of the suspect food to discuss, date/code information in hand. Be prepared to give the company your veterinarian’s contact information, also.

When you contact the manufacturer, persist until you are satisfied that the company representative will record your complaint (including your dog’s symptoms and the date/code information from the food).

If you feel brushed off, ask to speak to the company’s veterinarian, nutritionist, or customer service supervisor – anyone who can discuss the issue with you further. A over-casual or defensive response from the company, in our opinion, is grounds for a “divorce.” We would avoid that company’s products in the future. There are too many good foods on the market today to pledge your undying loyalty to a company that can’t wholeheartedly support its products.

• Ask your veterinarian to report the suspected product injury to his or her state veterinarian and the FDA. Please note that this might take some real effort! See “Problems With Reporting System,” left.

You get what you pay for

During the Menu Foods/wet foods/wheat gluten incident, we quickly lost patience when hearing owners who said, “We thought we were paying for the best foods available for our pets, and now this!” If an ingredient is needed to make other ingredients resemble meat, when meat could (and should) be used instead, you’re not dealing with a top-quality food.

One of our most dearly held principles of dog food selection is that whole food ingredients are more desirable than food “fragments.” This means wheat, yes; wheat gluten, wheat mill run, wheat bran, no! Chicken meal, yes; chicken by-product meal, no! This is for two main reasons.

First, unprocessed foods enjoy less exposure to potentially harmful agents in the course of processing, storage, and transport. Second, fresh and minimally processed foods are more nutritious than ingredients that are several operations (and perhaps many months and many miles) from harvest. Processing reduces the vitamin content of many foods, and can destroy any unique nutrient properties they may contain, such as antioxidants, flavonoids, and enzymes.

In some cases, the fractions used in low-cost pet food are truly “fillers,” and comprised of the part of a raw food that human food manufacturers have little use for; peanut hulls and cereal fines come to mind here. In other cases, pet food formulators utilize certain fractions to provide just the right amount of a needed nutrient or attribute. Tomato pomace and beet pulp are examples of truly functional fragments.

We’re also sticklers for the use of whole meats from named species of animals (i.e., chicken rather than poultry; beef rather than “meat”) and meals made from whole meats from named species (chicken meal rather than poultry meal). All animal proteins (even by-products, which tend to be of lower quality than muscle meats) have more to offer dogs (and especially cats) than plant-derived proteins, especially wheat gluten and corn gluten (a case can be made for a certain amount of rice gluten).

We can’t think of any pet food recall in the past 10 years that was due to a problem with the meat (or meat by-products, to be fair) in the food. If one arises, however, we’ll bet the farm that the animal proteins in question will be low-cost by-products, rather than high-priced muscle meats.

In our opinion, the presence of an inexpensive fraction or by-product high on the list of a pet food’s ingredients should warn you that the maker of the food has cut a corner. If the food contains several fractions or inexpensive ingredients, its maker is definitely utilizing “least-cost formulation,” as in, “What’s the cheapest way to make a food and still meet these nutrient levels?” The more fractions and other inexpensive ingredients a food contains, and the lower a product’s price, the less confidence you should have in its quality.

Of course, pet foods that meet all of our selection criteria tend to be far more expensive than grocery store brands. You can’t buy filet mignon at a hamburger price, and you can’t expect top-quality ingredients to go into a product that retails for pennies per pound.  

Hallmarks of quality
Buying products that contain whole food ingredients (and do not contain by-products) is one way consumers can tilt the odds in their favor. Another way is to choose products sold by companies that readily share information about their products with consumers.

This has been a long time coming, but it’s a trend that is picking up steam (at least among the companies that aspire to the “premium foods” segment of the market). When WDJ began publishing in 1998, not a single pet food company would tell us where their products were made. Today, many disclose that information and much more. Some disclose the origin of their ingredients, or offer certification that confirms the quality (and traceability) of their ingredients.

Still others are eager to discuss the quality controls they exert on their manufacturing process, including in-person supervision of co-packers, independent audits, and certification from outside inspectors such as the American Institute of Baking.

We understand all the various justifications that pet food companies have for not disclosing information about their ingredients or manufacture. But the advantages of nondisclosure are all theirs.

Too much disclosure is a risk in a competitive market, but truthful information about ingredient quality and good manufacturing practices helps pet owners discern and appreciate the differences between products – and win their long-term loyalty.

Ye of lost faith
Given the scope and severity of the latest pet food recall, we don’t blame dog owners who are considering feeding their canine companions a home-prepared diet, due to anxiety over the safety of commercial food. We support the impulse, though we do feel there are better reasons to feed a home-prepared diet (for example, we strongly feel that a well-formulated diet of fresh and varied ingredients is healthier for dogs). Don’t just jump into the practice with a recipe off the Internet, however; these diets require a little homework.

Last month, we began a series of articles on how to formulate and prepare a complete and balanced diet for dogs using fresh, species-appropriate ingredients. The series will discuss cooked and raw diets, those that contain bone and those that do not, and those that contain grains as well as grain-free diets. The second installment starts on page 8, and the series will continue through the July issue.

Nancy Kerns is Editor of WDJ.

Create a Nutritious Raw Dog Food Diet

Countless dog owners have witnessed the benefits of feeding their dogs a nutritious home-prepared raw dog food diet, such as cleaner teeth, brighter eyes, thicker and glossier coats, more lean muscle and less body fat, and better energy level – hyper dogsoften become calmer, while couch potatoes may become more energetic.

In last month’s article, “Have Dinner In,” we discussed those benefits at length and introduced the fact that there are many different styles of homemade dog food diets. In this article, we’ll explain how to create a raw dog food diet that includes bones -perhaps the most commonly used “evolutionary” diet for dogs. In a later installment, we’ll discuss cooked diets.

When I first began to consider feeding my dogs a homemade diet, one of my biggest concerns was the fact that I am not comfortable in the kitchen. I don’t really cook for myself, so the thought of preparing meals for my dogs was overwhelming. Once I started, though, I was happy to discover that it was not as much trouble as I had feared – in fact, it was quite rewarding. Dogs are usually so appreciative of everything we offer that it makes meal time a real joy. I feed a great deal of variety, yet my dog Piglet tells me that each and every meal I put in front of her is her absolute favorite, and she devours it, practically licking the finish off the bowl (I call it “checking for molecules”). How can you resist something that makes your dog so happy?

Raw meaty bones
Most of us who feed a raw diet to our dogs include whole raw meaty bones (RMBs), animal parts that are at least half meat but also include bone that is fully (or mostly) consumed. This is in contrast to recreational bones, such as knuckle and marrow bones, which usually have little meat and where the bone itself is not eaten.

Raw Dog Food Diet

Photo by and courtesy of Ginny Wilken.

RMBs that are commonly fed include chicken necks, backs, and leg quarters; turkey necks; lamb breast and necks; pork breast (riblets) and necks; and canned fish with bones, such as jack mackerel, pink salmon, and sardines (preferably packed in water rather than oil). Raw fish can also be fed, though some may harbor parasites (freshwater fish are more likely to have problems than saltwater fish). Never feed raw salmon or trout from the Pacific Northwest (California to Alaska), as this can cause a fatal disease called salmon poisoning in dogs. Cooking makes salmon safe to eat; canned fish is cooked, so there’s no concern about salmon poisoning from canned salmon.

It’s not always easy to find RMBs. Ask your local meat manager or butcher; they can often order them for you, though you may have to buy a case at a time. (Most of us who feed our dogs a raw diet have purchased a separate freezer to help store the food!) Ethnic markets often have a wider selection than grocery stores do. There are a number of raw food co-ops and groups who share information and buy in quantity directly from vendors, both to lower the cost and to gain access to a wider variety of foods. If there is no group in your area, consider starting one.

You can keep costs down by buying in bulk, looking for sales, and buying meat that is close to its expiration date and marked down. It helps to develop a relationship with your suppliers, who may be willing to save bargain-priced meats for you.

RMBs should make up 30 to 50 percent (one third to one half) of the total diet, or possibly a little more if the parts you feed have a great deal more meat than bone (e.g., whole chickens or rabbits). The natural diet of the wolf in the wild contains 15 percent bone or less, based on the amount of edible bone in the large prey animals they feed upon. While a reasonable amount of raw bone won’t harm an adult dog, more than 15 percent is not needed and reduces the amount of other valuable foods that can be fed.

Too much bone can also cause constipation, and the excess calcium can block the absorption of certain minerals. The stools of raw fed dogs are naturally smaller and harder than those fed commercial foods, and often turn white and crumble to dust after a few days. If the stools come out white and crumbly, or if your dog has to strain to eliminate feces, you should reduce the amount of bone in his diet.

Most dogs do fine with raw meaty bones, but a few may have problems, including choking and (rarely) broken teeth on the hardest bones. In my experience, turkey parts are associated with the most problems, though many dogs eat them regularly with no trouble.

If you are concerned about feeding whole RMBs, you can buy them in ground form or grind them yourself. You can buy a grinder for $100 to $150 that can handle most chicken parts and possibly a few other kinds of bones. More expensive grinders may be able to handle bones that are somewhat harder, but they all have a similar chute size, which makes it difficult to fit in larger parts. Note that none of the makers of these grinders claim their products have the ability to grind bones.

Another option that I use for my older dogs, whose teeth are too worn to be able to chew bones properly, is to cut up the parts into bite-sized pieces using Joyce Chen kitchen scissors. These scissors handle chicken parts and lamb breast easily (except for the hardest end of the ribs).

For harder bones, such as turkey, pork, and lamb bones, you can use a hatchet or a cleaver that you hit with a mallet (which is safer than swinging the cleaver). While ground and cut up RMBs will not provide the same chewing pleasure or dental benefits, many people who feed ground RMBs report that their dogs’ teeth stay cleaner than when they fed packaged foods.

You can also feed larger, harder bones with a lot of meat on them; just take the bone away when your dog is done removing the meat. I have done this with beef rib and neck bones; people with large dogs use bigger bones. There is still some danger of broken teeth, but less than if you allow the dog to continue to chew on the bone after he’s eaten the meat (bones dry out and become harder over time).

Remember that if you feed a diet that includes 30 to 50 percent RMBs, there is no need to add calcium supplements.

Organ meat
Organs are an important part of a raw diet. Liver and kidneyin particular are nutrient-dense and provide a great deal of nutritional value. These foods should make up 5 to 10 percent of the total diet. Note that they may cause loose stools if too much is fed at one time. It’s better to feed smaller amounts daily or every other day than to feed larger amounts once or twice a week.

Heartis nutritionally more like muscle meat than organ meat, but it is rich in taurine and other nutrients. If possible, make heart another 5 to 10 percent of the diet. More can be fed; just remember that too much can lead to loose stools in some dogs.

Other organs, such as spleen, eyeballs, sweetbreads (pancreas and thymus glands), brain, etc. are nutritious and can be added to the diet in small amounts.

Muscle meat, eggs, and moreThe rest of the diet will be made up of muscle meat and eggs, along with dairy products and other healthy foods.

Muscle meatconsists of all meat that is not considered organ meat. Feed muscle meat from a variety of sources, such as beef, lamb, pork, chicken, and turkey. Muscle meat can be fed ground or in chunks. If you have difficulty feeding much variety in your raw meaty bones, you can make up for it in this category. For example, if your raw meaty bones are mostly poultry, then you can feed beef, lamb, and pork muscle meat. Never feed more than half the total diet from a single protein source, such as chicken.

Eggsare an excellent source of nutrition. They can be fed raw or cooked; cooking actually makes the whites more digestible. You can feed as many eggs as you want, as long as you still feed lots of variety.

Dairy products, such as yogurt, kefir, and cottage cheese, are well tolerated by most dogs and offer good nutritional value. Yogurt and kefir have the added advantage of providing beneficial bacteria (probiotics). Dairy fat is a source of medium-chain triglycerides, a form of fat that is easier to digest for dogs with pancreatic disorders and other forms of fat intolerance.

Green tripe, which is the stomach lining from cows and other animals, is an excellent food for dogs, but be warned that it smells awful – at least to us; dogs love it. Nutritionally, it is similar to muscle meat. Green tripe can be purchased only from sources that sell food for dogs; it cannot be sold for human consumption. The tripe that you find in your grocery store has been bleached and treated and does not provide the same nutritional value as green tripe.

It is also fine to feed healthy leftovers (food you would eat yourself, not the scraps you would throw away) to your dog as long as they are not too great a percentage of the diet – 10 to 20 percent of the diet should be okay.

Vegetables, fruits, and grains
Feeding vegetables, fruits, and grains is optional, as dogs do not require carbohydrates in their diet. Even though these foods would make up a tiny percentage of the natural diet, they provide some nutritional value, especially trace minerals and phytonutrients from leafy green vegetables.

If you feed veggies, they need to be either cooked or pureed in a food processor, juicer, or blender. Whole, raw veggies are not harmful, but their cell walls are not broken down during digestion so they provide little nutritional value to dogs. Most veggies have few calories, so they should be added on top of the amount of food you feed, rather than calculating them as a percentage of the diet.

Good veggies to feed include broccoli, cauliflower, brussels sprouts, cabbage, all kinds of leafy greens, celery, cucumber, bell peppers, zucchini and other summer squashes, carrots, and more. You can mix up a large batch and then freeze them in ice cube trays or muffin tins for easy meal-sized portions.

Steaming is the best method to cook fresh or frozen veggies. You can add the water used to steam veggies to the meal, as it will contain the minerals that were leached out during cooking. Small amounts of leftover meat juices, drippings, sauces, and gravy will make this into a savory soup.

Some dogs enjoy vegetables, but others refuse to eat them no matter how they’re prepared. If your dog won’t eat vegetables, or you prefer not to feed them, you may want to add a blend of kelp and alfalfa, or a green food supplement (more on this below).

Fruitssuch as apples, bananas, papayas, mangoes, berries, and melon can be added to the diet in small amounts. Don’t feed grapes or raisins, which can cause kidney damage in some dogs.

Grains, legumes, and starchy veggies, such as potatoes, sweet potatoes, and winter squashes, are a source of inexpensive calories but don’t provide as much nutritional value to dogs as foods from animal sources do. These starchy foods need to be cooked in order to be properly digested by dogs.

Many health problems can be caused or exacerbated by grains and other starchy carbohydrates. If your dog is overweight or suffers from allergies, arthritis, seizures, IBD, or other digestive disorders, you may want to try feeding a diet without these foods to see if your dog improves. If you decide to feed them, it’s best if they make up no more than 20 percent of the diet.

Potatoes (not sweet potatoes), tomatoes, peppers (all kinds), and eggplant may aggravate arthritis pain, but are otherwise fine to feed. Grains and starchy veggies may also aggravate arthritis and other forms of inflammation.

Fresh food supplements
Healthy dogs that are fed a wide variety of appropriate foods should have no need of supplements, but there are several fresh food supplements that may provide additional benefits when added in small amounts:

• Fish body oil, such as salmon oil, provides beneficial omega-3 fatty acids that help to reduce inflammation and regulate the immune system. However, you must add vitamin E to the dog’s diet whenever you supplement with oils; otherwise fish oils can induce a relative deficiency of vitamin E.

• Sea blend, green blend, or kelp/alfalfa mixture supplies trace minerals. These are especially good to add if you don’t feed green veggies.

• Organic (unpasteurized) apple cider vinegar provides some trace minerals.

• Raw honey has antibacterial properties and offers a variety of nutritional benefits.

• Fresh crushed garlic has anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties, as well as other benefits, and may help to repel fleas. Give no more than 1 small clove (one small portion of the bulb) per 20 pounds of body weight daily, as high doses can cause anemia.

• Ginger is good for digestion and may help with inflammation.

• Nutritional yeast is an excellent source of B vitamins, along with trace minerals.

• Dark molasses can also be used in small amounts as a source of trace minerals.

More information on supplements will be provided in the upcoming article on cooked diets.

Prey model
There is a style of raw feeding called “prey model,” that advocates feeding a diet based on whole prey and excludes anything else, such as dairy, vegetables, fruit, or supplements. This is based on a desire to mimic the diet of the wolf in the wild. The true prey model involves feeding large chunks of meat along with small amounts of bone, organs, and eggs. It is certainly possible to feed a good diet using this model, but there are some factors that should be taken into consideration.

Raw Dog Food Ingredients

Feeding parts is not the same as feeding whole prey. When wolves in the wild eat a deer, they consume almost everything except the stomach contents and some of the hardest bones from the skull and legs. That includes not only the muscle meat, bones, liver, and heart, but the eyes, tongue, brain, blood, intestines, kidneys, lungs, and various other organs. If you are not feeding actual whole prey, you may be missing parts of the diet that include important nutrients.

In addition, whole, large, grass-fed prey such as deer, moose, and bison have different nutrient profiles than animals that are farm-raised, and smaller animals such as chickens. The nutrient content of animals raised in various ways (wild animals, grain-fed animals, animals raised on grass from depleted soils) also varies widely. Even if you feed whole rabbits or chickens, the nutrition will not match that of the large ruminants that our dogs evolved to eat.

While some people swear by prey model diets, I believe there is no benefit to be gained by leaving healthy foods such as dairy and vegetables out of the diet. The more restrictions you place on a diet and the less variety you feed, the higher the likelihood that something may be missing. I believe that adding foods and supplements not found in the natural diet of the wolf can help our dogs live the longest, healthiest lives possible.

Commercial raw diets
There are two types of commercial raw, frozen diets currently available. The first type is a complete diet, formulated to meet the nutrient levels suggested by the Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO). Examples include Prairie from Nature’s Variety, Home Made 4 Life, and Steve’s Real Food for Dogs.

These foods can be used just as you would commercial dry or canned foods, with no need to add anything else (though just as with other commercial diets, it’s best to rotate between different brands and protein sources, and it’s fine to add some fresh food as well). Complete commercial raw diets are generally quite expensive; they’re usually not an option for those who have large dogs or limited funds.

The second type of commercial raw, frozen diets provide a variety of different parts that can be combined, along with other foods, to create a complete diet. These parts may include meat, bone, organs, and vegetables, but generally nothing else. Examples of companies that offer these types of diets include Bravo!, Oma’s Pride, and an increasing number of small, independent local companies. These are great foods to include in the diet you feed your dogs, but you cannot feed them alone, without adding anything else.

When you compare the ingredients of the complete diets to those of the incomplete blends, you will notice that the complete diets add a number of foods in addition to meat, bone, and organs, including such things as eggs, kefir, tripe, kelp, alfalfa (sprouts or dried), garlic, raw honey, organic apple cider vinegar, ginger, oils (fish, flaxseed, olive, coconut, cod liver), seeds (sprouted or ground), nuts, and a wide variety of fruits and vegetables. They also sometimes add specific vitamin and mineral supplements, such as vitamin E, manganese, zinc, iron, and copper, or a natural source of minerals, such as montmorillonite clay. Note that complete diets usually include more muscle and organ meat and less bone than the meat/bone/organ/veggie blends.

If you want to use incomplete blends as the basis for the diet you feed, most often you’ll want to add a bit more organ meat (particularly liver), some additional muscle meat that does not include bone, and a variety of other healthy foods, including eggs, dairy, canned fish with bones, green tripe, healthy leftovers, and some fresh food supplements. Fish oil and vitamin E would also be good additions to the diet. The fewer foods you add, the more important supplements will be.

For example, the Bravo! blends are approximately 10 percent organ meats (equal parts heart, liver, and either kidney or gizzards), 15 percent vegetables, and the rest ground meat and bones. These blends should be used as one half to two thirds of the total diet, with a mixture of the other foods listed above making up the rest of the diet. You can get some of these other foods, including muscle meat and organ meat, from Bravo! or at your grocery store.

Puppies
For the most part, puppies can be fed the same diet as adult dogs, though young puppies will benefit from the addition of goat’s milk to the diet. It is even more crucial that you get the proportions correct and feed a wide variety of foods when feeding puppies. It is also imperative that you feed an appropriate amount of bone, neither too much nor too little, especially to large- and giant-breed puppies under the age of six months, when they have less ability to regulate their uptake of calcium, and both calcium deficiencies and excesses can lead to serious orthopedic problems.

Puppies and Raw Food Diets

Raw meaty bones should comprise around 30 to 50 percent of the diet. Be careful if you supplement with cod liver oil or another form of vitamin D. Vitamin D increases the absorption of calcium, so if you feed high amounts of bone and vitamin D, you increase the likelihood that too much calcium will be absorbed. Never add calcium to a diet that includes appropriate amounts of bone.

Remember that high-protein diets will not cause excessive growth or lead to orthopedic problems in puppies. These problems are caused by overfeeding and by improper calcium amounts (either too much or too little). In order to avoid orthopedic problems, keep your puppy lean and slow-growing by limiting the total amount fed.

Remember the rules
As a reminder, there are three basic rules to feeding a homemade diet: variety, balance over time, and calcium.

All homemade diets need to contain a variety of different foods, including different types of meat and raw meaty bones, different parts (especially organs), and different foods, such as eggs and dairy. A lot of people depend on chicken since it’s cheap, but if your dog gets nothing but chicken, even if you feed organs along with muscle meat and bone, he will not get all the nourishment that he needs. As a general rule, you should never feed one kind of food as more than half the diet, and preferably less.

When you feed a variety of different foods, every meal does not need to be “complete and balanced.” You should ensure that all of your dog’s nutritional needs are met over a period of a week or two, but that can be done by feeding different foods at different meals, and on different days; you don’t have to combine all the different foods into a single meal. It’s also fine to feed just beef, for example, for a couple of weeks, and then switch to another meat source for the next two weeks.

A raw diet that includes 30 to 50 percent raw meaty bones will supply the proper amount of calcium; there is no need to add more.

Amounts to feed
As a general rule of thumb, dogs will eat around 2 to 3 percent of their body weight in fresh food daily, but remember that each dog is an individual, and the amounts they eat can vary considerably. There will be more details on calculating amounts to feed in the article on cooked diets.

Making the switch
The first time we feed raw meaty bones to our dogs is always frightening. We’ve been told so many times to never feed bones to dogs that it’s hard to believe they won’t drop dead when we do. It’s important to remember that the warnings are about cooked bones, not raw, and that eating bones is natural for dogs.

Most raw feeders can empathize with my friend, Mindy Fenton, who says, “The first time I fed one of my dogs a raw chicken wing, I followed her around for three days, terrified that I was going to kill her, and waiting for that darned wing to come out whole because I was sure it would. Of course, she was perfectly fine, but it took some time before I became relaxed about feeding raw meaty bones.”

The choice of what to start with can vary according to your comfort level, and how likely you think your dogs are to gulp their food. Many people advocate feeding pieces that are too large to be swallowed, requiring the dog to chew on them first. This doesn’t always work, since large pieces become small pieces as the dog eats them, and he may still try to swallow pieces too large to go down easily.

I am most comfortable with feeding chicken necks and backs to my dogs; the bones are soft and easily chewed, and the pieces are small enough to be swallowed even if the dog does not chew them well (small dogs may have problems with chicken necks). Others feed chicken wings or leg quarters. If your dog is not protective of his food, you can try holding onto one end while she chews on the other, to help her learn to chew rather than gulp, but watch your fingers, and don’t try this if it makes your dog anxious.

Many people worry that their dogs may be too old to switch to a raw diet, but in my experience, older dogs do as well as younger ones with the change. My oldest dog was 13 years old when I switched him overnight to a raw diet, and he had no problems.

Most dogs do just fine when switched “cold turkey” from commercial food to a homemade diet, but a few will experience digestive upset. The longer a dog has been fed the same food with no variation, the more likely he is to have a problem if his diet is changed too quickly. Dogs that are prone to digestive upset may also benefit from a slower, more careful approach.

To make the change gradually, start by adding small amounts of fresh food to the current diet, then gradually increase. If problems develop, return to the prior diet and make the change more carefully once your dog’s digestive system is back to normal. That may include feeding the new food separately from the old (at least a few hours in between meals), or feeding only one new food at a time, to see if your dog reacts to any of the new ingredients.

The one exception to mixing foods is when you feed raw meaty bones. I find that the consumption of kibble interferes with the digestion of bones; digestive problems are more likely if you mix the two together. If you are feeding whole raw meaty bones, feed them separately from kibble, at least a few hours apart.

It’s fine to start with limited variety until you see how your dog does, but don’t feed just one food for long periods of time. Sometimes people will start with just chicken parts, for example, but this may lead to constipation if there is too much bone in the diet. While you may want to feed just chicken at the beginning, be sure to feed plenty of meat as well as bone, and don’t feed such a limited diet for more than a week or two.

If your dog has any problems with the new diet, back up and start again, making the change more slowly this time. Do not blame problems on “detox.” If your dog develops diarrhea or other forms of digestive upset, it is because his diet was changed too quickly, or because he is reacting to one or more of the ingredients in the new diet.

In that case, again, go back to what you were feeding before (or what you know your dog can tolerate without a problem), then add new foods one at a time in order to identify which one(s) are causing problems. Also, while most dogs improve when fed raw foods, a few cannot tolerate it for some reason and may need a cooked diet instead. There will be information on cooked diets in next month’s article.

The rewards
Preparing your dog’s meals yourself is not as easy as simply opening a can or pouring kibble out of a bag. However, once you’ve done the initial work of devising the diet and finding sources for the products you will feed, it isn’t terribly time-consuming. The actual preparation is fairly simple; the hardest part is buying products in bulk and then splitting them up into meal-sized portions for feeding. But the rewards can make it all worthwhile.

Most people who switch their dogs to a raw diet notice improvements even in dogs who seemed to be perfectly healthy before. Feeding a homemade diet may cost a little more, but many people report a decline in vet bills. Best of all is watching the enjoyment our dogs get from their meals, and taking pride in knowing we are doing the best we can for our dogs.

Mary Straus does research on canine health and nutrition as an avocation, and is owner of the DogAware.com website.

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Back to Normal

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Mokie, the dog formerly known as mine, had a health crisis last month. Mokie now lives with my sister and her husband. Pam called me to say that, the night before, Mokie had gone out with her two Jack Russell Terriers for a pre-bedtime pee, and when they came in, Mokie made a beeline for his crate. Usually he sleeps in the bed with Pam and Dean and the two JRTs. Something was wrong. When Pam tried to investigate, Mokie retreated deeper into his crate, and wouldn’t come out even to eat. Given his usual appetite for anything resembling dog food, that was the clincher.

Pam and Dean examined Mokie, but couldn’t find anything obvious: no broken bones, bite marks, or swelling. But he was suffering intermittent jolts of pain, as evidenced by the occasional shrieks he let out as he moved or when they touched him.

We suspected the problem was Mokie’s back. Pam had mentioned that every so often when she picked him up, Mokie would let out a screech. It was so momentary that we failed to investigate further. There was also his past history as a victim of not one, but two raccoon attacks. The most recent occurred last September, when he got ambushed at night in the backyard (and was saved by Pam’s JRTs). The raccoon shook him like a rag doll, and though he seemed fine after a week or so of body aches, that was probably the start of Mokie’s physical trouble.

Pain Relief for Dogs

288

If this was the case, I didn’t want to take him to a conventional vet. I know from personal experience that the conventional medical response to back pain is x-rays – which typically reveal nothing – followed by pain medication and rest. Sometimes this relaxes the spasmed muscles enough that the spine can eventually realign. Often, however, it accomplishes nothing, and the animal simply starts moving guardedly in an attempt to prevent his misaligned spine from hurting.

We’re lucky; in California we have many complementary practitioners who work on animals. A very talented chiropractor with extensive training and experience with animals (and who works with several local vets) is located no more than five miles from Pam and Dean’s house, and she was able to fit Mokie into her schedule almost immediately.

Chihuahuas are notorious for biting their doctors, and Mokie was in so much pain, he was not planning on being the exception. I had to put a muzzle on him so I could hold him in place for the chiropractor. She tsk-tsked quietly as she gently palpated his spine and made numerous small adjustments. Within a minute, Mokie’s body went from feeling tense, like coiled steel in my hands, to relaxed (if shaky). His eyes softened and lost their too-wide-open look. After a few more adjustments, he took a deep breath and licked his nose. Ah!

We’ve followed up with more chiropractic, arnica, gentle massage, and a full veterinary exam. He’s back to his cheery, athletic self. But we aren’t likely to ignore earlysigns of trouble again.

Home-Prepared Dog Food

For many years, I fed my dogs the finest kibble diets I could find and thought I was doing the best I could for them. Then, in 1997, a seminar at Wolf Park in Indiana changed my life, and my dogs’ lives. Watching wolves tear into a whole deer carcass, I was struck by how far we have come from the natural diet that our dogs evolved to eat, and it started me thinking that maybe there was a better way.

After a year of research, I began feeding my dogs a homemade raw diet in December 1998. At the time, I had two dogs who suffered from environmental allergies, and one dog (Piglet) on Rimadyl for arthritis. To my surprise, within three months one of my dogs became completely allergy-free, and Piglet no longer needed Rimadyl for arthritis pain. The third dog improved, but continued to have some problems with allergies.

Not every dog with health problems gets better when switched to a homemade diet, but throughout the years, I’ve heard many first-hand accounts of dogs with serious conditions who improved or even completely recovered following such a diet change. People whose dogs suffered from seizures, IBD and other digestive disorders, allergies (both food and environmental), skin problems, chronic ear infections, arthritis, and more have seen their dogs’ symptoms reduced or eliminated after they began feeding a homemade diet.

At first, it seems counterintuitive that a diet change would affect disorders like environmental allergies, seizures, or arthritis, but there are several factors involved. Poor-quality and overprocessed ingredients, artificial colors and preservatives, hormones, antibiotics, and other chemicals can contribute to overall ill-health and create or increase allergic sensitivity.

Dog Food

Carbohydrates that are often 50 percent or more of dry dog foods are harder to digest than animal proteins and can lead to inflammation in the body.

In contrast, homemade canine diets, particularly those that have few or no grains or starchy carbs, are higher in protein (which supports both the skin and the immune system) and are easier to digest (which can improve the health of the digestive tract and keep the body’s immune system from becoming overreactive).

Grains and other carbohydrates may cause problems due to allergic reactions, gluten intolerance, difficulty digesting carbs, or other factors. If your dog is overweight or suffers from any of the ailments listed above, you may want to try feeding a homemade diet without grains or starchy carbs to see if your dog improves.

Healthy dogs also benefit from a homemade diet. Fresh foods supply nutrients in their natural form, whole and complete. Processing causes foods to lose much of their nutritional value, which must then be added back in synthetic form (that long list of chemicals at the end of dog food ingredient lists). Processed foods can also contain potentially harmful substances, such as oxidized fats and acrylamide, a carcinogen formed when high-carbohydrate foods are cooked at high temperatures. When you prepare your dog’s food yourself, you control all of the ingredients, making it easy to avoid any foods your dog may react to, and to adjust the diet as needed based on weight, activity level, health conditions, and any other specific needs your dog may have.

There are many different types of homemade diets, including raw and cooked diets, with or without grains; diets that contain whole, raw, meaty bones or ground raw bone; diets without bone that use a different form of calcium supplement; and diets that add fresh raw or cooked foods to a commercial pre-mix.

While feeding a homemade diet sounds like a good idea, it’s not easy to figure out what that entails, or how to ensure that you provide all the nutrition that your dog needs. Despite what some will try to tell you, there is no one “right” way to feed your dogs. Each dog is an individual, and what works for one may not work for another. The best way to feed your dog may also depend on how much time and effort you are able to devote to putting together a proper diet. While fresh foods are healthier than processed foods, a good commercial diet is better than a poorly designed homemade diet. If you don’t feel comfortable preparing a diet yourself, you can still improve the diet you feed by adding fresh foods.

You can consider this article and those that follow in the coming months as a “short course” on preparing your dog’s food yourself, but we also suggest that anyone who wants to feed their dogs a homemade diet read at least one book (preferably more) on the subject before beginning, in order to have a better understanding of your dog’s nutritional needs and how they are met by the foods we provide.

Don’t rely on recipes
One thing we will not do is provide specific recipes for you to follow. It is exceedingly difficult to ensure that your dog gets all the nutrients he needs if you feed the same food all the time. Even following a diet that has been evaluated using a spreadsheet and compared to the AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control Officials) or NRC (National Research Council) standards does not ensure the diet will be nutritionally complete, for several reasons.

Just as with our own diets, what’s considered “good,” “optimal,” or even “essential” is continually changing. The nutrtional levels established by AAFCO are based on older guidelines published by the NRC in 1985, and as yet, have not been updated following the release of newer NRC standards in 2006.

A good example of how these standards can change is the discovery in 1987 that cats were dying of heart failure due to a lack of adequate taurine in cat food. Previously, the NRC did not recognize taurine as an essential nutrient for cats, and no one knew how much cats required. Now, newer research shows that taurine may also be conditionally essential in the dog’s diet, though there are as yet no standards requiring it. Ongoing research reveals more all the time, but this is an endless task. There is simply no way to know for certain exactly what nutrients, in what combinations, our dogs need for optimal health.

In 1985, the NRC warned in its introduction to Nutrient Requirements of Dogs that “caution is advised in the use of these requirements without demonstration of nutrient availability, because in some cases requirements have been established on the basis of studies in which nutrients were supplied by highly purified ingredients where digestibility and availability were not compromised by the interaction of dietary constituents and effects of processing. Practical diets formulated from commonly used ingredients are not free of such interactions and effects, and therefore may provide less available nutrients than the amounts measured by chemical analysis.

“For this reason, such diets formulated to the chemically assayed nutrient levels expressed in Table 2 [Required Minimum Concentrations of Available Nutrients in Dog Food Formulated for Growth] may prove inadequate in meeting the nutritional needs of dogs”(our emphasis).

They add, “Finally, although data are unavailable for the dog, it should be recognized that inclusion of large amounts of fiber in the diet may adversely affect nutrient availability.” In the Overview section at the beginning of the 2006 edition, the authors admit, “An extensive amount of new research conducted since the previous National Research Council publications on dogs and cats was available for the NRC report, yet several gaps still exist in our knowledge of requirements for specific nutrients.

In addition to not knowing for certain what dogs require, we also cannot know exactly what nutrients are contained in the foods we feed. A spreadsheet analysis of a diet, even if done by a veterinary nutritionist, does not guarantee that the diet actually supplies exactly those levels of nutrients. The figures in the USDA Nutrient Database that are used to determine nutritional value are averages. The source and handling of foods can have a considerable impact on their nutritional value, based on such factors as whether livestock are fed grains or grass, whether the plants fed to them were grown in soil that was depleted of minerals, how fresh the food is, and whether or not it was frozen.

Many recipes, including those recommended by veterinarians and nutritionists, make no effort to be nutritionally complete and simply tell you to add a “complete and balanced vitamin/mineral supplement,” with no further guidance. Since supplements vary widely, there is no way of knowing whether this would even come close to meeting your dog’s needs.

We simply cannot know enough about nutrition to say with certainty that any single recipe is sufficient to meet all nutritional requirements. Feeding your dog the same recipe every day is equivalent to feeding your child a diet of nothing but Total cereal. If it doesn’t make sense for a child, why would it make sense for our dogs?

Variety is the key
Just as with our own diets, the best way to ensure that our dogs receive all the nutrients they need is to feed a wide variety of fresh, healthy foods in appropriate proportions.

Dr. Mike Richards says on his VetInfo.com website, “I think the major problem with owner-prepared diets is an attempt to satisfy the needs of pets by making one recipe and not varying it. I strongly suspect that if pets were fed a variety of foods that approximates the food triangle suggested for humans, an adequate diet would be obtained. On the other hand, trying to formulate a single recipe that meets the needs of pets long term is very, very difficult to do.”

Variety is important no matter what type of diet you feed. Even if you use commercial foods, it is best to find at least two or three different brands, using different protein sources, and rotate between them, anywhere from daily to every few months.

Also, even “complete and balanced” diets may contain quite different levels of nutrients. If you always feed the same food, any nutritional deficiencies or excesses present in that food will affect your dog over time. The same is true if you feed different varieties made by the same company, since they tend to use the same vitamin/mineral formulations in all of their foods.

Your dog is also more likely to develop food allergies if fed the same food all the time. It takes time for an allergy to develop, typically months to years. Dogs that are fed the same food for extended periods of time will often develop allergies to one or more of the ingredients in that food. Variety is particularly important for puppies, since puppyhood is when the immune system learns which foods are normal and not a cause for reaction.

The only restriction to consider in terms of feeding lots of variety is to reserve at least some of the exotic proteins in case a novel protein is needed to test for or treat food allergies. There’s no need to feed venison, duck, rabbit, ostrich, buffalo, kangaroo, and beaver to your dog. Save some of them in case they are needed in the future.

Three basic rules
Feeding a homemade diet is not as complicated as it might seem. There are only three rules:

1. Variety
2. Balance over time
3. Calcium

Variety means feeding lots of different foods, such as beef, lamb, chicken, turkey, pork, fish, eggs, and dairy. Vegetables, fruits, and grains can also be added in limited quantities. Variety also means feeding different parts, such as muscle meat, heart, liver, and other organs. Different types of meat and different cuts of meat all have different nutrient profiles, so you provide a wider nutritional range by varying what you feed. It’s fine to use a few staples but you should not feed just one or two foods to the exclusion of everything else.

Balance over time: When you feed a homemade diet, it is not necessary that every meal be “complete and balanced,” as the commercial dog foods are. Just as with our own diets, it’s only important that the diet be balanced over time, with nutritional needs being met over a period of days to weeks. It is only when you feed the same food every day that you need to be concerned about that food alone supplying everything that your dog needs.

It is imperative that all homemade diets provide the right amount of calcium. The bones included in most raw diets will supply all the calcium needed. If you feed a diet that does not include edible bones, you will need to add specific amounts of calcium supplements. Our upcoming article on cooked and raw diets that do not include bone will provide detailed information as to how much calcium you need to add to your dog’s home-prepared diet.

Raw feeding myths
Many questions arise when we consider the idea of feeding raw meat, eggs, and bones to our dogs. What about the bacteria in raw meat and eggs? Isn’t it dangerous to feed whole bones? Is too much protein harmful? We’ll address these issues briefly below; if you like, you can refer to entire articles we have devoted to each topic in the past.

  • Bacteria

Dogs’ systems were designed to handle bacteria. It’s generally thought that their stomachs contain a stronger concentration of stomach acid than ours, making their digestive systems more efficient at killing most bacteria. Also, in relation to our digestive system, their digestive tracts are shorter and simpler, which helps move food through quickly, without giving bacteria a chance to proliferate.

Consider the fact that, in the wild, wolves eat carrion, and bury food to eat days or weeks later, with no harmful effect. Our own dogs even eat stool without becoming ill. While it is possible for dogs to be affected by bacteria found in raw food and elsewhere, it is unusual.

Healthy Dog

Many of the bacteria we worry about, such as salmonella and E. coli, are commonly found in the intestines of healthy dogs. Dogs who are stressed, ill, or immune-compromised may be more susceptible to problems from bacteria. While many dogs on chemotherapy and with other serious health problems have no problems with raw meat, you may want to cook their food instead. You can also soak raw meat in food-grade hydrogen peroxide, though this will not work for ground meat, which is also likely to have a higher bacterial load. Keep in mind that commercial foods are also often contaminated with bacteria.

Raw pork, which can be a source of trichinosis and Aujeszky’s Disease (pseudorabies), often causes particular anxiety. Both of these diseases, however, have been just about completely eradicated from USDA-inspected products in this country, though they may still be a concern elsewhere, or if you obtain meat from a local farm that has not been inspected. Freezing for three weeks should make the meat safe. Note that trichinosis is also found in carnivorous wild game, including bear and wild boar, and in that case, freezing will not kill it.

Freezing will also kill certain other parasites, such as tapeworms and toxoplasma, but it does not kill bacteria. See “What Evil Lurks Within?” WDJ August 2000, for information about bacteria and raw diets.

  • Biotin deficiency

Another question that often comes up in discussions about home-prepared canine diets has to do with the avidin in raw egg whites causing a biotin deficiency, but there is no need to worry. Egg yolks contain biotin, which balances out the avidin in the egg whites when you feed whole eggs. Cooking, however, deactivates avidin and may make egg whites more digestible, so it’s also fine to feed eggs that are soft- or hard-boiled, or lightly scrambled.

  • Bones

What about bones? Haven’t we heard from the time we were children that you should never give chicken bones to dogs? That’s true, if you’re talking about cooked bones. Cooking makes bones hard, dry, and splintery. There is no question that cooked bones are dangerous for dogs.

Raw bones are much softer and more flexible, and are easily digested by most dogs. Those of us who feed our dogs a raw diet commonly feed what are called “raw meaty bones” (RMBs), parts that include edible bone along with at least half meat, and that are fully (or mostly) consumed. In addition to the nutritional value they provide, RMBs are also a source of chewing pleasure and help to keep teeth clean and gums healthy. Examples include chicken necks, backs, and leg quarters; turkey necks; lamb breast and necks; and pork breast (riblets) and necks.

Most dogs do fine with raw meaty bones, but a few may have problems, especially if they try to swallow large chunks. While it is unusual, dogs have been known to choke, especially when fed pieces that are round and meaty. Turkey necks are the parts that most frequently cause choking in large dogs, while chicken necks can cause the same problem in small dogs.

You should always supervise your dogs while they are eating, and it’s a good idea to know how to do the Heimlich maneuver on dogs, just in case. Small dogs are also more susceptible to esophageal damage from bones. There are risks and benefits to feeding whole bones and the decision whether or not to feed them is a personal one. Keep in mind that choking or esophageal damage can also be caused by greenies, tennis balls, rawhides, sticks, and even kibble.

If you’re concerned about dangers from whole bones, you can grind the bones or cut them into bite-sized pieces. You can also cook bones to softness in a pressure cooker (the only kind of cooked bones that are safe to feed). You can still give your dogs recreational bones, ones that your dog cannot consume, for chewing pleasure and dental health.

People also worry about dogs breaking teeth on bones. This is more of a concern with recreational bones, particularly those that the dog can fit between his molars and crunch down on, such as marrow bones. These weight-bearing bones are much harder than the RMBs that are consumed. Knuckle bones are less likely to cause tooth damage because dogs can’t fit them into their mouths and bite down on them.

Most of the RMBs that are recommended for dogs are soft, at least to a dog’s jaws. Beef bones, in contrast, are quite hard. I know of dogs, including my own, who have broken teeth on beef ribs and neck bones. Many people give these to their dogs as recreational bones but large dogs may consume them. Teeth do become more brittle with age, so you may need to exercise more caution as your dogs age. For more information about feeding bone in the diet, see “Bones of Contention,” September 2000. For information about recreational chew bones, see “Dem Bones,” August 2003.

  • Excessive protein

Lastly, there is no danger in feeding a high-protein diet to puppies or senior dogs (see “Diet and the Older Dog,” December 2006). Studies have proved that high protein does not cause orthopedic problems in puppies, nor kidney disease in older dogs.

Protein is highly beneficial; it supports the immune system and the central nervous system, contributes to healthy skin and coat and to wound healing, and helps to maintain lean body mass while lowering the percentage of body fat. Dogs fed a high-protein diet are often calmer and less hyper than dogs fed on high-carb diets. Higher protein is one of the major benefits of feeding a homemade diet to dogs, though you can also increase the protein level by adding fresh, high-protein foods to a commercial diet.

Adding fresh food to a commercial diet
If you are not ready to make the switch to a homemade diet, you can still improve your dog’s diet by adding fresh foods to his dry or canned food. Despite the warnings from pet food manufacturers, you will not unbalance the diet by adding a moderate percentage of fresh foods – you should be able to replace about 25 percent of the diet with fresh foods without concern. When you start to feed more than that, it becomes more important to feed variety and proper proportions. If you want to feed 50 percent or more as fresh food, then you should add organs along with other foods, and you should consider adding calcium if you are not feeding bones. The more fresh food you feed, the greater the importance of variety and proportions, as well as calcium, becomes. More information will be provided in future articles.

Good foods to add to a commercial diet include eggs and meat (raw or cooked), canned fish with bones (jack mackerel, salmon, sardines), yogurt or kefir, cottage cheese, and healthy leftovers. Raw meaty bones can also be fed, though it’s best if they’re not combined with kibble in the same meal. You can add veggies and fruit in small amounts, but remember that commercial foods are already high in carbohydrates, so there is little benefit in adding more. I would not recommend adding grains to a commercial diet at all.

Puppies and seniors will benefit from the addition of high-quality fresh foods as much or more than younger adult dogs will. A high-protein diet is good for almost all dogs and will not cause harm.

Norma Crawley of Ardmore, Oklahoma, reports, “Since I began incorporating raw with kibble, our three dogs do everything short of tucking their napkins in and clicking their silverware together at dinnertime. They dine as if they are at “21.” They seem happier, healthier, and they are my constant shadows from late afternoon through the evening. It’s made such a positive difference in three canine lives, and mine too. I’ve always fed a high quality kibble through the years, but who knew this raw business could be so much fun, and so good for them?”

Mary Straus does research on canine health and nutrition topics as an avocation. She is the owner of the DogAware.com website. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her dog Piglet, a 15-year-old Chinese Shar-Pei.

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