By Ktee
Date 05.06.07 21:52 UTC
Edited 07.06.07 22:03 UTC
The dry food with the best ingredients imo would have to be orijen,which i have been feeding for the past few weeks,and timberwolf organics,both available from zooplus,although they have been having major probs in getting TO in lately :(
Here are the ingredients to orijen ALS(all life stage),it is Grain/cereal Free,and the has appropriate calcium levels for large breed dogs,they also do a large breed puppy version.
Fresh chicken meat, chicken meal (low ash), turkey meal, steamed russet potato, fresh-caught Northern Whitefish, chicken fat, fresh whole eggs, salmon meal, salmon and anchovy oils, tapioca, chicken broth, sunflower oil, flaxseed, Atlantic kelp, steamed carrots, spinach, peas and tomatoes, sun-cured alfalfa, apple fiber, psyllium seed, rosemary extract, yeast extract (MOS), glucosamine HCl, cranberries, black currants, chondroitin sulfate, Chicory, burdock and marshmallow root (FOS), rosehips, stinging nettle, marigold flowers, L-carnitine, fennel seed, chamomile flowers, milk thistle, chickweed, summer savory, Iron proteinate, zinc proteinate, manganese proteinate, copper proteinate, Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus casei, Bifidobacterium (B. bifidus), Saccharomyces (S. boulardii), mixed tocopherols (source of vitamin E), choline chloride, vitamin A, vitamin D3, niacin, riboflavin, thiamine mononitrate, vitamin B12, folic acid, biotin, pyridoxine (source of vitamin B6).
ORIJEN Dog Food does not contain artificial preservatives.
Hills large breed
with Chicken (minimum Chicken 25 %; minimum Chicken and Turkey combined 33 %): Ground maize, chicken and turkey meal, soybean meal, animal fat, maize gluten meal, digest, vegetable oil, dried whole egg, flaxseed, salt, L-carnitine supplement, potassium chloride, vitamins and trace elements. Naturally preserved with mixed tocopherols, citric acid and rosemary extract.
Both are similar in price,and yet one is leaps and bounds ahead of the other.....
You know, its always puzzled me why we make our dogs eat food they don't like by adding things they do like to it, which is usually some type of fresh food...tuna, chicken etc. to it. Complete may well contain all thats needed (according to the makers) but many will suit one dog, but not another hense all the allergies etc to certain brands. Put a dish of meat and biccies down, and I would like to bet the majority of dogs would wolf it down. Put down meat and biccies and a bowl of complete and I bet I know which they would chose.........Do people chose complete for convienence, or because they don't feel confident in feeding raw food? When you look at the ingrediants in unknown completes, they don't seem to differ from many of the more expensive named varieties. Raw food and biccies (not the ones with all the additives) works out cheaper to feed, and gives bowls that hardly need more than a wipe out, healthy dogs, and no additives and preservatives, colours or anything that is not needed in a dogs diet...same as for us, we don't need all this either.

Or maybe because feeding raw made my dog underweight and he had a bad coat condition whilst on raw? (Not unheard of)
Or maybe because the owner can't afford to feed raw in money, time or space wise :) Lets face it all of us are on a budget, just different amounts! Also not everyone has time to prepare raw between working, walking dogs, picking up kids from school, feeding family, going dog training aswell as general ouse duties and socilising with friends! Then where do you store all your raw food? In a freezer? Where does the freezer go? Food freezer's full with meals for the family etc....
There are many reasons people won't feed raw. Mine all love dinner time, clean bowels all round plus checking everyone elses is clean aswell, only need a quick wipe! ;)
I must admit our youngest was on raw meats and meal as a puppy as she wouldn't eat complete foods, for her it worked but there's no way we could have done that for 5 dogs, as soon as she started eating compleat again she was back onto it. admitidly our first choice didn't agree with her and she's now on Arden Grange and has a lovely skin and coat, good poo's, very lively, healthly looking with bright eyes etc so whats wrong with hwat we are feeding her?

Thanks JG. I'm glad that it's clearly only one person who shoots people down for what they feed, everyone else seems to go with "what suits your dog" :D
I got a copy of V. Stillwells fat dog slim the other day (was free with our dogs renewal) and I found it extreamly intresting because she explained each way of feeding (dry, wet, raw etc) and put each into equal "arguments" of why they are good for the dog
For as long as a dog eats something and looks good on it I will continue feeding it on that.
Ktee, I don't think everyone does have the time or the time to learn to feed raw, and again not everyone has the space, your ok if you can get the food daily however I have seen many customers buying their dogs food and have helped plenty of them choose the most suitable food (dry). I will normally mention raw feeding to customers as another option (especially those dogs who don't like or don't suit a number of dry foods) but when you mention it requires research on the different meats and what each contain, plus feeding vegetables etc they don't want to know, and why should they when they can have a perfectly healthy pet of a bag of dry food? Now I don't know how many, if any at all, that I have mentioned it to have tried feeding raw after research or not but to me raw is just another way of feeding, it's not the best way of feeding :)
We are on a very tight budget, and i have found fresh to be cheaper. The storage is not a problem, the local stockist I have to pass every day anyway, so make use of their freezer. However, the pennies are being saved, and hopefully soon I will be able to buy a dog food freezer. I'm not bothered about handling raw food, but can understand why someone else may not like that, same goes for doggy bowls. Mixing it with meal dosent take that much extra time. I like to know what I'm paying for, and after reading what has been said here about food, then looking at all the info on the web regarding food, and talking to people i know who have fed large kennels on fresh food, and knowing how good their dogs were, and the fact hunt kennels dogs are fed raw and they are so fit and healthy, i just decided that what was best for mine is what they are on now, and I'm happy. They love their bones too, its wonderful seeing them get stuck into them, their teeth seem better too. feeding is such a personal thing, and I go with JG in that if your dog is well, then stick with what you know suits them. The only proof that your dogs are doing well is their condition, but if someone who was having a problem were to ask me, then I would certainly say give raw a go.