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Dog Food... Whats Best? So, I watched animal planet this weekend and learned about how dogs need foods that are high in fiber/protein for a balanced diet. After watching I realized that I have not been paying close attention to that when buying Meka's food. For dinner she gets half dry (Iams small bites) and half wet (Iams chicken/liver)... and during the day a bowl of the small bites. Never the less, I noticed that the fiber/protein levels dont seem too high. Which foods are best for Yorkies? Whats foods have high fiber/protein? How do you feed your pups? What's your feeding schedule? :aimeeyork |
I recently switched to Canidae All Life stages kibble. It's high in protein (24%) and advertises four human quality meats and 4% fiber, which is better than the bread I buy for myself. That's all Eddie gets. No wet food at all. |
I would also like to know what is best...I use Eukanuba puppy small breed and would like to switch to something more natural...I'll be checking in too :p |
Miley won't touch her Eukanuba (Yorkshire Terrier Formula) but loves to eat my other dogs "Dog Chow", the pieces are huge and we catch her in the bowl alot, I need to find a good dog food that is small enough and dry. I am going to assume that the DOG CHOW is not giving her the right amount of nutrients. |
I have the same question. What is thhe best diet?:confused: |
This should help you: http://www.dogfoodanalysis.com/dog_f...iews/index.php Also, you can go to the following link and select a dog food and scroll down to the bottom of the page and read the ingredients: http://www.petfooddirect.com Also, most food suppliers will send samples if you request them. Good luck! I've always fed mine three small meals a day and one small snack at night. |
My little guys are all on Hills Science Diet small bites and seem do well. I suppliment them with Iams puppy canned food after our morning pee as a daily treat. Although I can't help thinking there might be something even better out there for them? |
Orijen is a dog food that is 60 percent protien and 40 veggies/suppliements, the way nature intended it to be. There is no grains as dogs don't need them. Layla gets home cooked food but if i were to use a kibble as food i'd be using this. In my opinion it is the best that kibble can get. |
Mine are on Royal Canin yorkshire terrier! I free feed pretty much and they never get wet food or wet 'treats'. I do not brush their teeth and my vet is very happy with thier teeth (she thought I did brush them) so I guess this is a pretty good food nutrionally and for their teeth. However (here at least) its on the VERY pricey side. $25 for a 10lb bag. |
Ellie used to eat Science Diet. I thought she was doing well on it, but after she started getting homecooking she stopped throwing up for no reason. She also had a rough spot on her fur that has gone away. I will not feed Science Diet anymore. I also wouldn't feed Iams or Euk. Iams has been doing cruel animal testing for years. All three of these foods also have ingredients that are not good. Orijen is an awesome food. I also like the looks of Innova (except some of their vitamin premixes come from China). Ellie is on Canidae for grazing right now (along with mostly homecooked). This is also a very good food. |
I have been very happy with Canidae all stages. Both of mine are gobbling it up. |
I use solid gold. It hasn't had any food recalls and its all natural!!!! |
-Canidae- we use Canidae-'all stages'. it is a REALLY good food.. and my lil Avery has done wonderful on it- she really really likes it and has been eating this since we switched her food(from what she WAS eating, before she came to us) and she was about 9 weeks or so at the time we made the switch..i would definately recommend it. ;) |
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The best food per my Vet. I asked my Vet. what type of food I should give my two pooches and she first recommended Science Diet (most Vet.s recommend and have available Science Diet - so I've observed). Then, I told her that the breeder had her on Eukanuba ( for anyone who doesn't know, Eukanuba is Iams' premium brand). At the time, the Vet. told me that it wouldn't hurt to keep her on the Eukanuba formula, since it's what she's use to, since there really isn't much difference between premium brands (mostly owner's preference). She also told me that Iams is very reputable, since they have been around longer than most other dog food brands and have the years/research to back what you're feeding your dog as apposed to a newer brand that one may not know much about. In short - she said the main thing is to keep in mind that they need a lot of protein, since they are carnivorous. I didn't ask her how much exactly, because she told me that the Eukanuba formula I was using was fine. |
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most vets push science diet because the company pays them to do so :( |
See now I am hearing conflicting stories. My vet told me too much (high) protein is extremely bad for the tinier toys. Apparently more difficult to digest and hard on their livers? She recomended I avoid sugars, starches & high protein based foods. Yet it seems most breeders are feeding their Yorkies the higher protein based formulas. I am totally confused :confused: |
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Just check the ingredients on what you are feeding your babies! There should be NO CORN :thumbdown , NO WHEAT OR SOY :thumbdown , AND NO BY-PRODUCTS!! :thumbdown :thumbdown The corn is a cheap filler (Science Diet has it as one of the top ingredient. Vets push this product since they get kick backs on it and also they are in the biz of treating sick dogs so it is a win-win for the vet). corn also can cause severe allergies. Wheat and soy aren't needed by dogs in any shape or form. The by-products are the parts of animals that aren't used for anything else. These can include beaks, feet, and feathers. :thumbdown It can also include the euthanized animals collected from vets offices. Many times, the collars aren't even removed so that all gets into the mix too. Roadkill is also thrown in. YUMMY!!:mad: I have free samples available to anyone that wants to try some super healthy all natural dog food and treats. It is all nautral, human grade and made fresh every week. The food and treats are delivered straight to your door from the manufacturing plant instead of sitting on a store shelf forever. Just PM me if you would like a sample to try. You have nothing to lose and your furbabies have everything to gain for getting them off of the junky food and onto a super healthy food. The kibbles are really small too so they are perfect for the yorkies. If you furbaby is a little porky yorkie, i also have weight-loss kibbles :D This food is an all life stages food, which means it is good for puppies, adults and seniors so there is no need to be switching them around because of age. i have a comparison chart too. |
I just found another thorough Web site for dog foods. It slams Science Diet right off the top, but I was surprised that it noted that all corn is not bad. http://www.dogfoodproject.com/ |
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I think a raw diet is the very best way to go. Lacy eats Nature's Variety raw medallions. I alternate rabbit and venison every day. If you don't like the idea of feeding raw meat, homecooking is the next best thing - you do lose some of the nutrients from cooking the food but your dog will still be getting high quality food with none of the crap commercial food has. With either, be sure to research it well and know what you're doing. If you're going to feed kibble or canned commercial dog food, pick a premium food such as Nature's Variety, Innova, Wellness, Canidae, Merrick, California Natural, and there are others as well. Stay away from grocery store brands and Iams, Hills Science Diet, Purina, and Eukanuba. Vets push these brands because these large companies basically pay them to. I'm in vet school right now, and Hills and Purina donate a lot of money to the American Veterinary Medical Association (Especially Hills!). They do a lot of things to contribute to veterinary education but it does cause most vets to push these crappy foods. Being a vet student, I can get 80% off Science Diet and Purina foods if I wanted - see, this gets future vets to use their products (they also gave me a free backpack and free lunch during Orientation). Hills also teaches a lot of the nutrition classes in vet school and gives students a biased opinion that kibble is the way to go and Hills is the best. They also give vets a lot of free products and kickbacks to sell their food. This is why most vets recommend it. The reality is most vets don't know much about nutrition. It's obvious when you look at the ingredients of these foods -corn, byproducts, dyes, etc. I plan to include Holisitic medicine in my practice one day, mostly the nutrition aspect. I think our pets would be so much healthier if they weren't eating a lot of the crap that most commercial dog food has in it. |
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I wish more people would think like you do!!! :D |
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i feed mocha innova small bites (protein content i believe is around 24%). the regular innova triangle shapes seemed to be too big and i found from my pet boutique the small bites formula--it's as small as eukanuba (i used to feed her eukanuba when i was less educated on different foods). she loves it. i sampled her with canidae which she barely touched, so we chose innova. there are days when i mix a little sweet potato or carrot baby food and she gobbles it all up. if you are looking for samples, try checking out any pet boutique that carries these brands. they have a ton of free samples. :) |
So the raw food...exactly how does that work? Is it frozen? I'm getting a new puppy next weekend and I have been seriously considering a raw diet, especially because I read that the enzymes are good for dental health. Can someone suggest how I could transition from a dry kibble diet to raw without causing an upset tummy? How long should I wait, she will be around 14 weeks when she comes home. |
Well, Sadie's on Hill's Prescription W/D...not my choice, but it's the only thing we've found that doesn't upset her IBD. So that's what she's on for now. I kind of wish I could find something else that would work, but am scared to try anything. The W/D is a high fiber/low fat food. She gets the canned as her food and the kibble as her treats (looking at the ingredients of this particular food, the canned is better for her). |
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