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Author Topic: What brand are you feeding your dog?  (Read 13760 times)

Offline chef bama

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #30 on: February 24, 2011, 10:06:19 PM »
EVO and Orijen for last 7-8 years, other "natural" foods before that (lamb & rice etc).

My little aussie died a week ago. She quit eating a couple months ago, but I started hand-feeding her rare steak and she bounced back up and lived with joy for another 2 months. She never ate kibble after she started the meat. She was only 10. Had a big growth in her belly that was probably cancer.

During that time I started feeding our older aussie (11 1/2) the same rare meat. He has got more bounce, his hair is smoother and he has less general old-dog-stink and less squirts. We started him on the grain-free years ago because of hot spots & skin problems.

I figure that with 7 bone roasts at $2.50-$3/lb at freddys, it compares with buying evo or orijen at $2/lb., richer food, no vegetable or yeast fillers and comes with a free bone. this has got me thinking about getting a bigger butchering board/table and getting 15 lb cryovac bags or 60 lb boxes of meat wholesale.
or even a 1/4 cow. Roughly the same price per calorie, better food, just takes a little more prep time than scooping a bag of kibble. 

Wish I knew then what I know now, and had fed them like that their whole lives. Would have saved on vet bills for sure, and she might still be with us.

Got a new aussie puppy a couple days ago. I just couldn't stand it not having a dog riding shotgun. Been feeding her rare meat and raw bones since day one, with a little bit of Evo for snacks. Hoping she winds up healthier and better developed for it.



Offline Hornseeker

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #31 on: February 25, 2011, 01:29:43 PM »
Man, I have been lucky. My lab and my shorthair/springer cross have thrived on multiple foods through the years... always nice solid stools and the dogs have been incredibly healthy. 12-20$ a bag food... Lots of kirkland fed, but many other brands from Old Roy and others....

Does kirkland have a puppy food?? I am gonna need it in a week....
Chuck Norris puts the "Laughter" in "Manslaughter"

Offline JKEEN33

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #32 on: February 25, 2011, 01:56:39 PM »
I actually changed dog food after reading this earlier. I went to Taste of the Wild. From what I have read it's supposed to be pretty good for the dog. My dog loves it but man is he farting a lot now! Bad enough to make the eyes water and the nose hairs curl. Sure hope he gets used to it soon.

Offline MAGhunter

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #33 on: February 25, 2011, 02:05:20 PM »
Ha, mine eats Purina Cat chow most of the time......damn dog wont stop getting into the cat dish.
Torei McGregor

Offline halflife65

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #34 on: February 25, 2011, 02:25:54 PM »
Purina One.  Seems to work fine and the dogs like it.

Offline dscubame

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #35 on: February 25, 2011, 02:30:00 PM »
Dog eats what I eat and all the scraps.  Its the Alaskan way.
It's a TIKKA thing..., you may not understand.

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Offline Curly

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #36 on: February 25, 2011, 02:34:45 PM »
Here is some dog feeding suggestions by a vet who recommends supplementing commercial dog food diets with meat and vegetables.  LINK

Quote
a.  All dogs should be fed, by volume of the total amount fed each meal, 25-50% meat

b.  The meat can include:       i.      Beef   ii.      Chicken    iii.      Turkey   iv.      Fish

c.  The easiest way to start this program is to use ground meats. Take the portion to be fed, mix with water, and cook on the stovetop or in the microwave until the meat is cooked medium (pink) to medium-well. Some animals will thrive on raw meats, but do not start this practice in the beginning.

  i.      Take this meat portion, including the water, and add it to the rest of the ingredients

II.    Commercial Dog Food Portion

a.  Although there are many good home-cooking recipes, we feel that most owners have little time or inclination to routinely feed an entirely home-cooked diet for their dog. Good intentions fall by the wayside, and the diet plan is not followed as it should be. Instead, by feeding some meat, some commercial diet, and the rest as outlined below, the dog receives an excellent, well-balanced diet. Costs are kept at a minimum, and the time required to prepare the diet is so moderate that even the busiest person will be able to follow this feeding protocol.

b.  There are many commercial diets that are good diets. However, none stand out as clearly superior to any other (they are NOT home cooking, after all). There are, however, a large number that are not worth feeding because they are either of too poor a quality or they are not cost effective (remember the average commercial diets that masquerade as premium diets). There are too many of these to mention, but a good clue that the diet falls in this category is if it claims to be "just as good as such and such, but costs less", or the "premium diet costs less than about a dollar a pound".

c.  We use and recommend the Flint River Ranch diets, and will gladly provide you with information on how to order them.

d.  The commercial diet, whether dry food or canned, should be of as high a quality as you can afford, and should make up no more than 25-40% of the diet.
Your Animal's Specific Recommendations: Only available following a phone consult

III.        The Variety Component

a.     Since grains and other carbohydrates are not necessary, we recommend they be fed sparingly. Their biggest benefit is that they are inexpensive. Using the plan we are outlining, they are even less necessary, because the commercial diets contain grains. One of our favorite grains to use is white rice. Many dogs have digestive problems, which improve when rice is fed.

b.     Vegetables should be routinely added. We recommend:   i.      Carrots    ii.      Broccoli     iii.      Peas       iv.      Leafy greens

c.      Sweet potatoes, pumpkin, yams, and squashes are all excellent additions to the diet. Sweet potato is especially good, inexpensive, easy to prepare, and readily accepted. Sweet potato should be cooked, and can then be used a portion at a time over a few days. They can be mashed and mixed so well into the diet that all animals will accept them. Carrots often need to be cooked lightly or shredded/chopped finely, or they may not be accepted or completely digested.

d.     Dairy products can be included sparingly. Our favorites are:    i.      Yogurt        ii.      Cottage Cheese

e.     Eggs are great to feed, and can be fed cooked or raw. We recommend no more than a couple of eggs a week, if fed raw. Cooked eggs can be fed a little more frequently.

f.       Leftovers can be fed as well, as long as they are good food and not excessively fatty or sweet.

g.     The variety component should be just that: fed for variety, one thing one day, and another thing another day. Don't get caught up in a routine where you are feeding the same things all the time. Variety is just as necessary for your dog as it is for yourself.

h.     A couple final thoughts:       i.      Corn is not a vegetable. It is a grain, and it is in plentiful supply in almost all commercial diets. so there is no reason to feed corn.
ii.      Legumes (beans, peanuts) are good sources of proteins and fiber, but do not have particularly large amounts of vitamins and tend to provide excessive carbohydrates, which leads to obesity
May I always be the kind of person my dog thinks I am.

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Offline andersonjk4

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #37 on: February 25, 2011, 03:53:55 PM »
I feed my German Shorthair and Vizsla Diamond Beef or Lamb.  I swithced to Diamond from Nutro about 4 months ago and have not seen any ill effects.  I started with the Diamond Chicken but quickly changed, because my dogs were extra gassy and had soft stools with the chicken.  Switched to Beef and Lamb and everything is good now.  I aslo supplement their commercial food with raw meat and some veggies.  All of the trimmings from butchering deer, elk, beef, etc. that I used to throw away I now give it to my dogs.  And I save the liver and heart out of all the animals and birds that I butcher and feed them those too.  And all raw, they love it.  Also, all those broccoli/cauliflower stems, and lettuce stalks that you normally throw away chop them up and add it too your raw meat and they love that too.       

Offline Rgrady35

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #38 on: February 25, 2011, 04:09:45 PM »
Ol Roy last 7 years.
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Offline Hornseeker

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #39 on: February 28, 2011, 11:52:36 AM »
Good Lord, I dont feed myself or my family as well as that vet recommends feeding the dog!!!!  :yike:
Chuck Norris puts the "Laughter" in "Manslaughter"

Offline quadrafire

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #40 on: February 28, 2011, 11:59:13 AM »
I'm a science diet guy. My lab mix gets adult maintenence.

Offline Rick

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #41 on: February 28, 2011, 04:38:17 PM »
I'm feeding Nutro puppy food right now. I'll probably switch to Costco's Kirkland brand when I switch to adult food. Its made by Diamond and supposed to be good stuff.

While the plan was Costco,I ran out of food a week or so ago and didn't get around to Costco to buy the Kirkland brand. I hit the pet store and came out with a bag of Pro Plan large breed puppy.

It looks to be a great choice for my puppy. I've upped her daily amount of food (being thats shes grown so much) and even with more food she is pooping far less than when she was on the Nutro. She was going 5-6 times per day. Now she goes 2-3 times per day and the turds are about half the size.

To my untrained eye,she is getting more nutrients out of the PPLBP.

Offline Happy Gilmore

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #42 on: March 02, 2011, 12:49:51 PM »
most top level competitive lab guys feed Purina Pro Plan. Websites that promote meat-only foods are just promoting themselves and their expensive foods.

Most all websites which "rate" dog foods are down-rating every other food but the type they produce.

I think Coscto is the best buy personally. I'd say in second place is Nutra. Third probably Purina PP.

I've fed other all meat diets/foods(dated a gal who works for a high-end pet food chain) and saw no improvement in energy, coat, poops etc from feeding a $65 30lb bag to the plain old Costco food. I think the dogs like the flavor of the expensive stuff better but, I'd rather buy a big tub of peanutbutter from costco and dip dog-cookies in it for them everyday than spend that kind of money on a small bag of dog food.

I also feed my dogs raw carrots and save fat and meat from dinners to mix with their foods. If I have meat go bad/get old I'll cook it and mix it with brown rice and freeze it. Mix it with kibble etc.
"Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checked by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the grey twilight that knows not victory nor defeat."
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Offline 3dvapor

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #43 on: March 05, 2011, 10:32:21 AM »
taste of the wild,  bison and venison.  50.00 a bag 35lbs ouch

Offline jetjockey

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Re: What brand are you feeding your dog?
« Reply #44 on: March 08, 2011, 05:57:32 PM »
We feed our Brittany Purina PP Performance when we have her home.  However, when shes with her field trial trainer she gets fed Joy Performance.  Last summer he fed a lot of PP Performance at summer camp in SD, however he couldn't get a full hour out of the dogs and couldn't keep weight on them when the weather was hot.  He switched to Joy Performance and it seemed to make a huge difference.  When we got our pup home 2 summers ago she had been fed PP Performance and she seemed really skinny.  This year we got her back and she was built like a brick chit house and she went from 30-32lbs and was all muscle.  If Joy Performance wasn't so hard to find shed still be on it when shes home, but PP is a lot easier to buy. Here's two before an after pictures.  You can see the difference.
« Last Edit: March 08, 2011, 06:38:46 PM by jetjockey »

 


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