>You've never mentioned here how >low protein and high carb your dogs diet is<
>Care to enlighten us?
Actually, I have in other posts which you obviously missed. ;)
He is (on the advice of dal owners in the USA, Australia and UK whose dogs have had this problem and lived to tell the tale) having 60% rice or potato, 20% pureed low-purine fruit and veg (some are high purine, so care must be taken in the choice) and 30% low-purine protein-provider; eggs, cheese, white fish etc. This is of course all wet food, and the protein-providing sources aren't 100% protein ;). This advice is based on many years of studying real dogs in a real environment.
I wonder if you've ever had your dogs' urine tested to discover if the diet you choose for them makes their urine acidic, alkaline or neutral? Each is likely to be different, of course, dogs being individuals and not clones. Of course the different pH levels give rise to different types of stone, requiring different treatment. Or perhaps you're sailing along in blissful ignorance?
>just hoping you'll step outside the box,open your mind and see there are other ways,other than your own, to do things
That was what caused the trouble in the first place! :rolleyes: I'm sure you'll be interested to know that, since the advent of the BARF fashion, the proportion of stones assayed that come from dalmatians has risen from 3% of the total to 5% ... :( 95% of the bladder stones (over 50,000 of them) assayed at Minnesota are from breeds
other than dalmatians. It's not as rare as you seem to think.