Free: Contests & Raffles.
Natures Domain from Costco. Best food for the price. For all life stages. Grain free. $31/bag.
I would feed it a good puppy food designed for large breeds for the first 9 months to a year. They can grow to fast on other puppy foods and all life stages causing hip and joint problems. Wellness and Blue Buffalo among several others make a good large breed puppy food.
Quote from: GrousePointer on September 28, 2012, 11:23:35 AMQuote from: cboom on September 26, 2012, 11:59:20 AMI would feed it a good puppy food designed for large breeds for the first 9 months to a year. They can grow to fast on other puppy foods and all life stages causing hip and joint problems. Wellness and Blue Buffalo among several others make a good large breed puppy food.Labs come in a lot of sizes. Not all of them need large breed foods.Of course, I'm a firm believer that no lab should really weigh much more than 60-65 lbs. Especially if they're going into the uplands.Sent from my Lumia 710 using Board ExpressI don't know about that. Mine wieghs in at around 95 solid pounds and is a hell of a grouser. I do agree the American version is a lot sleaker dog and could out run mine in a second, but I love the traditional stocky bear head on my boy.
Quote from: cboom on September 26, 2012, 11:59:20 AMI would feed it a good puppy food designed for large breeds for the first 9 months to a year. They can grow to fast on other puppy foods and all life stages causing hip and joint problems. Wellness and Blue Buffalo among several others make a good large breed puppy food.Labs come in a lot of sizes. Not all of them need large breed foods.Of course, I'm a firm believer that no lab should really weigh much more than 60-65 lbs. Especially if they're going into the uplands.Sent from my Lumia 710 using Board Express
I'm not a fan of heart, but the dog loves them. I just brought home the heart from a buddy's elk. I boil them then cut up into snack size pieces for the dogs and freeze in week size packs. I do the same with any trimmings off of my animals I get. I try to avoid giving them anything that has been seasoned. I've read that the seasoning is where dogs start to have issues. Supposedly not supposed to have any onion or garlic type seasoning and I love both. Not sure how true that is, but I figure why risk it. I love having the dog around and want to give him the best I can.
You want your dog to eat well, give them plenty of "people" food. There's no way to know what kind of garbage is put in commercial dog foods, so I prefer to feed as little dog food as possible. I give my dog all of the leftovers from our dinner (meat and fat mostly).
Ran across this.http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/dog-food-reviews/brand/