Dog Food recommendations

   / Dog Food recommendations #21  
One of our dogs has food allergies so we've tried just about every brand. Science diet works best for him.

We did notice that switching all the dogs to a higher quality food, greatly improved there coats and all around health.

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   / Dog Food recommendations #22  
We did notice that switching all the dogs to a higher quality food, greatly improved there coats and all around health.

And lowers stool volume and improves regularity.

Grain free is almost always advised.
 
   / Dog Food recommendations #23  
Our vet recommended Science Diet, it didn't work well at all for our dog, dog had lots of gas and some diarrhea. Taste of the Wild worked well for her and we rotated varieties.
 
   / Dog Food recommendations #24  
One of our dogs has several alergies. Science Diet was not making any difference. Someone told me to try Blue Basics so we did and the dog did much better on it. We get the limited ingredient/grain free formula.

Our 17 year old min pin is on Science Diet but I would have to go look at the type.

Our other dogs get Earthborn, mostly Primitive Natural. One is on Earthborn Weight Control.

We buy mostly from the Petscense store. Buy ten, get one free but I also watch the Tractor Supply ads. Tractor Supply just opened a "super store" near me with enough room for a variety of dog foods while the other stores around me are limited in selections.
 
   / Dog Food recommendations #25  
And lowers stool volume and improves regularity.

Grain free is almost always advised.

One of our dogs had very bad allergies . We tried several of the already mentioned brands, with no improvement. A friend recommended "Zignature" white fish and salmon ,and her allergies disappeared. We only feed about 1/2 as much of it as we did other brands.
 
   / Dog Food recommendations #26  
The wifey has been giving the dog raw meat and veggies for years now. Kinda a PITA since bagged food is easier to keep, store and use. Not sure we are spending anymore feeding the dog this way vs the usual dog food.

Right now the dog's food is being cooked because the dog has a tumor on the leg. :eek: The tumor got really big suddenly and surgery was not a good option. The vet told us to do some stuff that sounded like witch craft and not "modern" medicine which included cooking the food instead of serving raw. The tumor was wrapped and treated with some witch doctor stuff, more was added to the food for a total cost of about $350 vs $1200 or more for surgery. Danged tumor was dramatically reduced in a short period of time. :thumbsup:

The raw food/cooked food diet has made the dog healthier and her poops are much smaller. All of that big dog poop is just expensive fillers from the dog food.... The dog gets what ever meat is on sale, round pork, turkey, beef and sometimes fish if canned salmon is on sale. Dog eats better than I do... :rolleyes:

Later,
Dan

I am a fan of feeding raw. I'm surprised the vet recommended cooking the food (probably because he doesn't support raw feeding). You loose more nutrients by cooking, so if your dog needs good nutrients because of the tumor, I would be sticking to raw.
 
   / Dog Food recommendations #27  
Can't recommend any particular brand, just this .... remember that dogs are omnivorous, like us, NOT carnivorous, like a cat - dogs need vegetables as well as meat. Do NOT feed them a steady diet of cat food or only feed them meat.

Meat is important for them to eat and can/should be listed first on the ingredient list - but, don't let anyone convince you that any/all dog foods that contain vegetables and cereals are bad.

I respectfully disagree. Dogs do not need vegetables. They are descendants of wolves. Wolves are carnivores. Wolves and dogs don't go around eating vegetables out of the ground or graze like cattle. Now, when a wolf gets vegetables its in the stomach of its kill. Vegetables won't hurt the dog but its not a matter of survival to eat them.
 
   / Dog Food recommendations #28  
Per Wikipedia:
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Despite their descent from wolves and classification as Carnivora, dogs are variously described in scholarly and other writings as carnivores[95][96] or omnivores.[2][97][98][99] Unlike obligate carnivores, such as the cat family with its shorter small intestine, dogs can adapt to a wide-ranging diet, and are not dependent on meat-specific protein nor a very high level of protein in order to fulfill their basic dietary requirements. Dogs will healthily digest a variety of foods, including vegetables and grains, and can consume a large proportion of these in their diet.[2] Comparing dogs and wolves, dogs have adaptations in genes involved in starch digestion that contribute to an increased ability to thrive on a starch-rich diet.[8]
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   / Dog Food recommendations #29  
Tom - That writing is not gospel. I stated vegetables won't hurt the dog but they are not needed. The article basically says the same, that they can eat it. A lot of dogs do perfectly fine on cheap dog food full of starches, grains and fillers. Some cannot handle those ingredients. Every dog is different. I have personally experienced dogs that cannot handle corn, grains, fillers in their dog food.
 
   / Dog Food recommendations #30  
Both dogs been on Blue Buffalo for a long time,vet put my older dog on it cause of liver problems. The cat also will run into house to get to eat the dogs food,she likes it better than even her canned food,must be some good tasting stuff. Man the stuff is high thou...
 

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