I thought meaty bones were good for dental care (except they wear down the teeth)
2/13/2006 1:10:59 PM
This is funny(or sad--I can't tell).hillsboromanufactuers interrestedthoes --- you did this about 5 times.somone noonefiggure respectivlychiwawas convienceimmediatlycompletlyinterresting nessicaryavailible naturalyarnt[Edited on February 13, 2006 at 1:48 PM. Reason : .]
2/13/2006 1:47:48 PM
^HAHA, I almost feel like we're in chit chat.
2/13/2006 2:14:15 PM
^^ lolzBut yeah, like (nearly) everyone else has already said, this is a bad idea. Go take ANS 205, 230 and 415 and let me know if you would want to put that much effort into properly formulating a feed for dogs that covers 100% of their required nutrients.
2/13/2006 2:19:58 PM
I don't even know where to begin with all the bull that has been stated in this thread.I commend your mom windhound96 for wanting to try this diet. It takes a lot of research but is worth it in the end. To answer your first question, try your local butcher or carniceria for meat. It will probably be the cheapest at these locations, and you can get livers and heart at harris teater and most all grocery stores. If you have a large dog, I recommend trying a carcass diet where you pretty much give the animal the whole chicken. This will allow them to get the balance of nutrients they need. Organs, bones, muscle, meat are all important elements in a raw diet. Dogs are omnivores so they do require a mix of vegetables in their diet (cats are carnivores and can go 100% meat). To address a few issues that have been stated in this thread. Only cooked bone splinters, the raw bone is pliable to be eaten and if this is a concern you can start with "soft bones" like turkey and chicken necks. This diet is the most natural thing you can put your animal on, the most premium of all. The crap that is in dry foods and even wet foods is absolutely disgusting. Some organ meats are fine (liver, heart), but general by-products used by most pet-food companies are in such a quantity in the food that it is very unhealthy for the animal. Nutro at least does not use by-products in their foods and stays away from corn starches. Animals are very susceptible to corn, if they don't have an allergy now, they will likely have one in 10 years if continued on a diet with steady corn. Vets don't recommend the diet because they don't know anything about it! Just think about it... All of these pet food companies wine and dine vets and give lovely presentations about how their food is the BEST thing on the market. Who is educating vets about raw diets? No one! There's no money there. Its not their fault they don't know. I know of one good vet in Raleigh that does promote the raw diet because she has taken the time to learn about it on her own (Dr. Bowman). My personal vet openly stated she didn't know much about it but as long as I did my research she wouldn't oppose it. They are all pretty good about it.Its important to find a good recipe for your dog that has the proper mix of organs, muscle meat, bone (or calcium supplement), and vegetable (yes dogs unlike cats need veggies, just like humans as we are ominvores too). Dogs have not evolved away from the requirement of raw meat. We have found a convenient way to make our lives easier by making our animals eat kibble. Because of this, bladder problems are heavily persistant as animals derive a great deal of liquid from meat. Cats in particular are heavily susceptible to urinary tract disorders because they naturally don't want to drink water, some adapt to it ok, others suffer the consequences. There is no doubt you will pay more for a raw diet. In the long run you will be saved your moneys worth in vet bills. Animals fed on a proper raw diet (I'm saying proper because it will take a lot of research on your part) will lead healthier lives. Also dental work will not be an issue as the meat will work the animals gums. I actually left my first vet when they told me I should take my cat off of wet food and feed him only dry. That is an OLD paper. And there were no decent facts to back up this argument in the paper published. It seems like a nice solution dosen't it? Perfect for pet food companies to get a hold of. Well the amount of calories and carbs and junk in dry food is leading todays animals to obesity, and heavy health problems. Our pets seem to follow the American way too. My vet called me once when a kitten was on its last leg. Her last chance was to put it on a raw diet. Why wait? This diet isn't for everyone because it takes time and commitment, and the hardest part is money. I heavily encourage the diet but I know it just won't work for many people. Thats fine. But don't diss the diet when you don't know anything about it. Vets use it as a last resort, ever wonder why?Oh and I don't know if anyone in this thread brought up salmonella and other bacterias but dogs and cats can naturally fight these things. They do not require cooked meat like us. Why do you think a dog can bury a bone and come back a week later and eat it, even if its rotting? Their bodies adapt and can handle these types of bacteria. Its natural for cats and dogs to scavenge for meat. This meat can be very foul and they will be fine.Also for any soon to be vets who might have something to say about this.... Please research this before you diss the diet...please... Do you see where the pet food companies are already getting to you? You all get free pet food, it starts so early and it will only continue even stronger once you become a vet, only instead of Iams and Eukanuba, it will be all of them! No one markets the raw diet, its up to you to learn about it yourself. Be open with your clients when they want to approach this task. Simulating a wild diet is the answer to so many ailments and is the best preventive measure that can be taken by the owner. Also, don't feed pork. It is diseased meat and can only be fed cooked. For anyone interested in a pre-prepared raw diet for cats and dogs, pm me. There is a company called NuDimensions based here in NC that makes these diets using human grade meats, 50/50 veggie/meat mixes for dogs and 100% meat/bone mixes for cats and dogs. I'll let you know where you can find this diet locally and any other information you want to know about it. If you are interested in raw diet mailing lists and user groups I can give you contact information.
2/13/2006 10:17:22 PM
2/13/2006 10:23:11 PM
This thread needs to die.
2/13/2006 10:27:47 PM
^^^Dr. Bowman. At Gentle Care Animal Hospital? I'll ask her about that.
2/13/2006 10:28:32 PM
2/13/2006 10:49:13 PM
2/13/2006 10:57:10 PM
2/13/2006 11:08:30 PM
quacko wins!
2/13/2006 11:13:22 PM
2/14/2006 9:41:53 AM
you need to re-read what i posted
2/14/2006 10:12:04 AM
You know this diet isn't for everyone you are right about that. I stated I dont' have a problem for people that choose kibble/wet diets. What I have a problem with is people dissing a diet and bashing a person genuinely interested, when they themselves know nothing about it.This will probably take even more credibility away from me but I don't trust the medical industry. I'm sorry. I've seen them screw up with my family over and over and over again. My grandfather died at their hands, my mother almost died, and they have screwed up with me on countless occasions. My boss was told he would die after they misdiagnosed him. It was his WIFE that did the research herself and found out what he had and that it was curable with chemo. Just because someone dosen't work in a field dosen't mean they are incapable of doing their own research. I've decided the medical field has a wonderful purpose on this world and I won't take that away from them but they are not ALWAYS right. This in turn applies to the veterinary field. They know a lot more than me, but in the area of nutrition I've read everything I can get my hands on. If anyone is not willing to do that full-hearted then they should not do the raw diet. If they had a raw diet certification I would take it but they don't. So I can never have the credentials but I know what I'm talking about in this one area. I also know a lot about feline behavior but that is another issue.Well I was upset last night when I read this thread. Nothing can make me upset right now. I'm happy as a clam (what a wierd expression). I just found out I was accepted into a masters program so am absolutely thrilled.[Edited on February 14, 2006 at 10:39 AM. Reason : .][Edited on February 14, 2006 at 10:41 AM. Reason : .]
2/14/2006 10:38:05 AM
cheap meat?the siler city chicken plant gives away the condemmed chickens(ones that fall off the line, get stuck in the machinery)maybe your Mom should go pick up a USDA condemmed bucket there doesn't get any cheaper than free
2/14/2006 4:20:45 PM
no one at our vet gets free food...am I missing out?
2/14/2006 6:28:19 PM
What they are talking about is vet students getting free food when they are in school, which is really relevant because a few bags of free food is definitely enough to corrupt animal loving vets into pawns of the "dry food industry" who are really out to sicken and weaken your animal with substandard nutrition. I mean really, how could a researcher studying nutrition turn his back on the company that gave him three bags of food 15 years ago, I know I would bias my results and put my career in jeopardy for them!
2/14/2006 7:19:02 PM
2/15/2006 1:18:53 AM
2/15/2006 1:20:03 AM
2/15/2006 1:23:25 AM
2/15/2006 1:26:09 AM
GG!!!! to you msb2ncsu!!!
2/15/2006 1:37:18 AM
thats a hardcore pwnt
2/15/2006 8:27:23 AM
Forgot these links last night: Wide range of topics/myths covered in here and I highlighted a few of 'em:http://www.woodhavenlabs.com/barf-myth.html
2/15/2006 11:01:12 AM
this is like a rub their face in it pwntgg
2/15/2006 11:09:54 AM
So you can quote breeders and I can't???? Its true there is a great deal of salmonella in raw meat. I certainly wouldn't let a dog lick mine or my childs face regardless of whether they are on a raw diet or not (it was never allowed in our household growing up). You must practice proper cleaning when working with this meat. Theres no doubt about it. The reason wild wolves die early is because of a variety of factors that our pets don't have to face, not just one. Most die of starvation combined with harsh weather conditions. All of which will weaken the immune system when fighting the bacteria that is commonplace in their diets. Our dogs should have healthy immune systems so this should not be an issue. People have stated that dogs have evolved beyond this. But how long have they been in domestication, maybe a couple thousand years, maybe a little longer? How long have they been on commercially prepared diets - maybe a hundred years, maybe a little more? That is not long enough for dogs to evolve away from it. (This is to Lutra and others, not to msb2ncsu).I'm going to see if I can find some more reasonable research. Unfortunately I know a lot more about cats than I do dogs and most of my links are thus related to cats. I can't help but think its the same for dogs but I'll have to see. At least we accede that this diet is good for cats.And there are some good dry foods on the market. But I wouldn't put Science Diet, Iams, and Eukanuba on that list (they are medium in quality of the premiums...). What might be considered good is Innova Evo, California Natural, and a few others. The best for the price migth be Nutro but there are certainly better options.[Edited on February 15, 2006 at 12:00 PM. Reason : .][Edited on February 15, 2006 at 12:10 PM. Reason : ..]
2/15/2006 11:43:55 AM
^ actually dogs have been domesticated for 12,000+ years
2/15/2006 12:01:37 PM
^ Fine. It does nothing to or for my argument. Whats more important is the time commercial diets have been around.
2/15/2006 12:11:17 PM
ok, this thread has degraded to the level of this:
2/15/2006 12:15:02 PM
2/15/2006 12:33:27 PM
^Just look at ingrediants and its pretty obvious.Iams:Chicken, Corn Meal, Ground Whole Grain Sorghum, Chicken By-Product Meal, Ground Whole Grain Barley, Fish Meal (source of fish oil), Chicken Fat (preserved with mixed Tocopherols, a source of vitamin E, and Citric Acid), Dried Beet Pulp (sugar removed), Natural Chicken Flavor, Dried Egg Product, Potassium Chloride, Brewers Dried Yeast, Salt, Flax Meal, Sodium Hexametaphosphate, Calcium Carbonate, Vitamins (Vitamin E Supplement, Ascorbic Acid, Vitamin A Acetate, Calcium Pantothenate, Biotin, Thiamine Mononitrate (source of vitamin B1), Vitamin B12 Supplement, Niacin, Riboflavin Supplement (source of vitamin B2), Inositol, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride (source of vitamin B6), Vitamin D3 Supplement, Folic Acid), Choline Chloride, Minerals (Ferrous Sulfate, Zinc Oxide, Manganese Sulfate, Copper Sulfate, Manganous Oxide, Potassium Iodide, Cobalt Carbonate), DL-Methionine, L-Tryptophan, Glucosamine Hydrochloride, Rosemary ExtractInnova EVO:Turkey, Chicken, Turkey Meal, Chicken Meal, Potatoes, Herring Meal, Chicken Fat, Natural Flavors, Egg, Garlic, Apples, Carrots, Tomatoes, Cottage Cheese, Alfalfa Sprouts, Dried Chicory Root, Taurine, Lecithin, Rosemary Extract, Vitamins/Minerals, Viable Naturally Occurring MicroorganismsIts not rocket science. The word premium is applied very loosley to many of the commonplace pet foods in the store. Nutro finds itself sort of in the middle of these two.
2/15/2006 2:34:35 PM
oh i get it, one is better because it has less vitamins
2/15/2006 2:41:42 PM
Vitamins are used when there is a dificiency in the balance of foods used to make the product. Plus the vitamins used are synthetic vs. getting them in a natural form that they come in. If you eat a balanced diet then you don't need to take artificial vitamins. Nature provides its foods in a complete form for our survival. Synthetics have only been around in recent history. Not to mention all the preservative used. Also by-products are not good for the animal as they are the least nutritious of other parts of the animal. Hence why I like Nutro over many others because they do not use by-products in their lines. Also the use of corn is not done with higher premium foods. 8-10% of dogs with a corn allergy is a very high number. Why should pet food companies take the chance that 10% of their customers could be getting sick and sometimes not very noticably.[Edited on February 15, 2006 at 2:48 PM. Reason : .][Edited on February 15, 2006 at 3:01 PM. Reason : .]
2/15/2006 2:46:51 PM
First off, did you even bother reading any of the articles I posted?
2/15/2006 3:25:24 PM
2/15/2006 3:55:11 PM
If you disagree on cats then perhaps you haven't read about Pottenger's cats. A very well known and respected study:http://www.price-pottenger.org/Articles/PottsCats.htmlI can't find anythign equivalent to it for dogs. I just don't think the research has been done, there were only a couple sources in the article you cited that might be of interest in relation to dogs and raw, and it might be interesting to read those directly. Most of the people who advocate raw food dont' even go with preprepared diets. I'm certainly not going to fund clinical trials and everything you are looking for, which is the problem - there is not enough interest. So the research just dosen't seem to be there for dogs. I may not agree but I will relent with what you have said. However, for cats this is another issue. Cats do better on a raw diet. I hope in the future better research will be done on this topic for both dogs and cats.Its an interesting debate.I'm not for the atkins diet. Its unbalanced.[Edited on February 15, 2006 at 4:00 PM. Reason : .]
2/15/2006 3:59:06 PM
it's not a debate. you just got destroyed.
2/15/2006 4:00:46 PM
A least a couple of us are being mature, which I would expect from college students. But maybe my expectations are too high since its TWW.
2/15/2006 4:01:33 PM
2/15/2006 5:02:33 PM
What is garlic such a common ingrediant in kibble for cats when it leads to anemia? Onions are toxic to cats and there close relative garlic is also toxic. That does not stop pet food companies from puting it in their food because for most species its healthy.This article addresses bacteria:http://www.healthy-paws.ca/pdfs/bacteria.pdf
2/15/2006 5:53:12 PM
Oh and not to mention the obesity topic. Cats and dogs are becoming fat and flatulent, just like us eating all the junk food thats available nowadays. My girl Autumn came to our home and became indoors and hence she was getting very heavy for her frame! I switched her to raw and the pounds melted off of her. She was perfect in weight. Recently she found out where I stashed my kibble (yes I do keep some on hand) and decided to let her finish off what I had. Low and behold, weight gain! Its directly related. People with obese and thin cats can put their cats on a raw diet and you'll be surprised out how both will even out to proper weight proportions.[Edited on February 15, 2006 at 6:07 PM. Reason : .][Edited on February 15, 2006 at 6:09 PM. Reason : .]
2/15/2006 5:59:51 PM
I work in the Pharma industry and I can still take a step back and say, you know what they are doing isn't always right. Just because you are a vet student dosen't mean that everything you read is truth, particularly when a lot of it was funded by the pet food industry. Part of being a good vet is seeing things from all angles even if it challenges a popular belief. Otherwise society would never advance. And I'm not trying to say that you are swayed by the pet food industry because it sounds like you are doing a lot of research and such. Just try to keep an open mind when you go out in the feild and you start getting really good offers.
2/15/2006 6:06:41 PM
2/15/2006 6:16:07 PM
2/15/2006 6:51:52 PM
hey dipshit if you don't know why a raw diet is different for cats and dogs then gtfobut on the other hand i know you'll just rationalize your own ignorance to yourself and keep posting your retarded bullshit, so i'm not sure why i even try
2/15/2006 7:13:37 PM
2/15/2006 8:48:13 PM
2/15/2006 11:26:01 PM
2/16/2006 2:14:11 AM
Finacee sent me this link this morning and thought it was relevenat considering we are talking about safe/unsafe diets:http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/02/14/dangerous.dogtreat/index.htmlCOnsidering just how dense the Greenies are I could see where the odd defect from production might be really slow to digest (maybe too much binding agent or whatever). Also have to wonder how many of the 13 deaths were cheap knockoffs of Greenies. Either way there are clearly some problems.
2/16/2006 9:57:45 AM