Find your perfect puppy at Champdogs
The UK's leading pedigree dog breeder website for over 25 years
>You also get how to understand the ingredients after reading his reviews.
> A lot of top branded foods use mainly rice then charge premium prices. You can buy a big bag of rice in tesco cook it then add this to a cereal free kibble to get a similar diet for half the price.
> He is doing quite well on it but it only has one star and appently contains sawdust and something that could cause cancer. Not that happy to find that out.
>apparently the ingredient Powdered cellulose which is quite high up the list of ingredients is just another name for sawdust!
Sawdust? I think not!
Do we know what it actually is as that link just says bulking agent. :-) I am always facinated by some of these filler products. Certainly not sawdust as such but looks to be of as much use.. Bevb, please read what I have said about the site and stop worrying No food sold in the UK contains anything that could harm your dog.
> Was it not JG that had to have some serious vet treatment carried out on one of her dogs because of some food? I am sure she said it was the diet.
>
> Cellulose is not digestible by humans and is often referred to as 'dietary fiber' or 'roughage', acting as a hydrophilic bulking agent for faeces."
>
And where would we be without roughage? :-)
> Do we want to know I wonder :-)
>Was it not JG that had to have some serious vet treatment carried out on one of her dogs because of some food? I am sure she said it was the diet.
12
H20
O10
)n) Functional use = Anticaking agent, dispersing agent, texturizing agent"> BTW Lori, wood is fibrous plant material, and your description sounds exactly like sawdust doesn't it :-) If it was wheat it would be called wheat I would have thought.
>
>Yes, given the chance, they both eat wood - maybe there's something to that sawdust.
Powered by mwForum 2.29.6 © 1999-2015 Markus Wichitill