
Dog Food ~ Decoding Fact from Fiction by Laura Presley
The great dog food debate- the good the bad and the ugly. How does
one choose? If you follow your television you may believe that the
companies that advertise on there have foods full of tasty meat and
chock full of great vitamins and minerals, but is it true? Not so
much. In the world of dog food it is buyer beware, yet the average
person picking up a supermarket brand of dog food is unaware of the
hazard. This does not make them bad owners – they are simply
uninformed owners. Who knew you needed to research dog food more
diligently than your own food?
While it is true many dogs
have lived out full life spans on Ol’ Roy or a similar low-quality
kibble for years, it does not mean it is the best choice. It would be
like you going out to eat at your local McDonalds daily. You wouldn’t
eat junk food on a daily basis and neither should your pet either.
Better
quality foods are highly digestible which means there is less waste to
come out! Poor quality pet foods contain fillers, like corn. It
makes your dog feel full but is highly indigestible. Feeding a premium
food means that your dog will eat less, IAMS suggest that you feed a 25
lbs dog 4 cups of kibble. On a holistic brand like Solid Gold, you are
likely to feed 1.5 cups or less! Holistic brands cost more but last
longer than any supermarket brand. Since your pet is healthier by
feeding a premium brand, it also means fewer visits to the vet.
Veterinarians and the Pet Food Industry~
Veterinarians and nutrition is a touchy subject for many. I love my
vet. She is great, when it comes to the overall well being of my dog.
When it comes to nutrition, I respect her, but I do not want her
suggestions. When I go to my doctor, and I have a nutrition based
problem I see a specialist. The same is true in the animal world.
While some vets can specialize in certain areas like nutrition, which
require hours of research and practical work the average vet has 3-5
hours of nutrition studies per semester. A drop in the bucket in
comparison to the countless hours studied on the medical health of
animals. While I will not take the statistics offered from vet schools
without a grain of salt, “a typical veterinary medical student spends
about 4,000 hours in classroom, laboratory, and clinical study”1
That’s a lot of education, and without specializing, very little of it
is on food. So why do so many people exclusively trust their vet’s
opinion? They are professionals and are devoted to the care of our
pets but are sorely lacking when it comes to a pet’s diet.
Without
doing your own research you honestly would not know what is in the food
you feed your precious cat or dog. Also, they get kickbacks in selling
food whether it be IAMS, Science Diet or Hill’s Veterinary Formula
(made by Science Diet). “Charles Danten was a veterinarian in Montreal
for 20 years. Now he's a journalist who writes about the ethics of his
former profession. He told Marketplace that the mark up on premium pet
food accounted for as much as 20 per cent of his income.”2 Unless your
pet has a serious problem that is untreatable in any other form, there
is no reason to use Hill’s. For short term problems there are
benefits, but it has a large price tag for the daily feeding of
mediocre ingredients for the life span of your pet. If you understand
the animal’s problem, you can often find a better food that will also
help your pet. Every vet diet I have looked at contains mediocre to
bad ingredients. Some have reasons for working like the K/O kangaroo
and Oatmeal from Eukanuba’s Vet line (most dogs have never been exposed
to kangaroo and can not be allergic to something they have never been
in contact with) and others like the gastro formulas are just a load of
bad ingredients that do not seem to have any calming properties. There
is little reason for a dog to be on any vet formula for life. With
some care and research you can find better foods that will also do the
same job if not a better one without a prescription. It does not
matter which brand a vet pushes, Hill’s, Medi-cal or Eukanuba’s
veterinary diets. They all have a similar jumble of less than
desirable ingredients.
Where to Find Better Food Choices~
Ingredients,
ingredients, ingredients. While you may not read the label on the box
of chocolate chip cookies you buy for yourself, it is imperative you do
read the ingredients on what you feed your pet. Just because the bag
is pretty and says on it “formulated by a vet” or “now with extra meat”
it does not mean it is actually good. Good food does not come from the
supermarket, or big chains like Walmart, and often not from large pet
store chains. The big chain stores for pets are wising up, and they
realize people are getting better informed. I have found great
holistic brands along side poor quality brands that make me want to
choke; the selection is often not so great. Feed stores are your
friend. Many carry only great foods and have knowledgeable employees
that can help you wade through the ever expanding world of dog food and
its jargon. This does not mean that every employee working in a feed
store is helpful mind you. If you go in armed with knowledge you can
figure out either on your own or with some help what it is you need for
Fluffy or Fido. Also, please keep in mind that not every food works
with every dog. You may not even realize that the food is not
‘perfect’ until you find the one that is. When you do though, and get
less stool, and firmer stool, you will be cheering so loudly the
neighbours may be calling Bellevue for you. So just because the first
better food you tried is not working perfectly it is no reason to get
discouraged and discount all better quality foods because of it. It
simply takes a little time. I should also add that no matter what you
choose to feed, you should read the label from time to time.
Ingredients may change a little or vary the order in which they are
listed. For a sensitive dog, you may see some negative effects when
you did not purposely change food on your pet. Manufacturers do not
have to inform you of a change, although many do when making a
significant one. Just something to think about once in a while.
Allergens: Environmental and Food~
Allergies
in dogs are becoming more and more common these days. On your own
without allergy testing you will not know if it is environmental or if
it is the food. Even if you do allergy test and pinpoint environmental
allergies some of them are near impossible to deal with alone like
grass. Your dog may end up needing allergy shots to control it if it
is that severe. In some cases it is not an allergy it is an
intolerance, but that will not make your pet any less uncomfortable.3
The easiest thing to start with is eliminating the most common sources
of allergies in food. Wheat, corn, soy, chicken, and beef are fairly
common allergy causing foods. There are others, and any dog could be
allergic to preservatives in food or something far less common. If you
start by looking for a food without the main causes of allergies you
may find you cured your problem on your own. A dog can not be allergic
to something they have never been exposed to, so if you choose a food
with a more obscure meat like bison, or a fish along with a grain like
oatmeal you may find that your furry friend eases down on itching and
paw nibbling without major intervention. Keep in mind that food based
allergies can take up to 6 months to disappear from a dog’s system,
even after no longer coming in contact with the allergen or
intolerance. In part it may be a waiting game, along with the
possibility of environmental allergens. You may be able to minimize
some of the problems with a better food though which is a great step in
the right direction.
What is Really in the Dog Food Bag?
What does that dog food label really mean? Your dog is
a carnivore. Ideally you want a food that is high in meat and low in
filler. Foods like Science diet that start with corn indicate you paid
for mainly indigestible filler in a pretty coloured bag. You want a
meat source, and even better if it is ‘meal’ though it is not
required. Meal is meat without water weight, so there is ‘more’ meat
being accounted for. Many good foods have more than once source of
meat though so do not fret. A couple of meat sources at the top of a
label meal or not is an excellent start. You also want to be able to
identify them. Poultry is bad, it could be who knows what, versus
chicken or turkey is just fine. By-products can be a touchy subject
with some people. They are not just the internal organs of the animal
in question. I only know of one dog food off hand that clarifies that
they are using just the internal organs. While an animal in the wild
would eat most everything, by-products in dog food are mighty scary.
In the wild the dog would be able to eat the whole animal- organs and
the meat. In "say a 40 pound bag of dog food of which the 20% animal
protein included consists of only chicken feet, heads, bones and
feathers and maybe some livers and hearts. If at all, because chicken
livers and other organ meats are used separately as pet food
ingredients or also sold for human consumption. Have a look around at
the pet store some time and see how many treats and canned foods made
with
chicken liver."4 So you end up with a bag of dog food that is mainly
the left over garbage that had no where else to go. Your dog is not
getting the usable meat they would in the wild along with the extras
such as organs.
The way things are worded for definitions by AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control Officials) http://www.aafco.org
can be very sneaky. Read the definitions of what ingredients are and
“ask yourself why something is worded in just that specific way. Words
and phrases that are present in the definition of one item, but absent
in another do tell a lot about what could or could not be in a
product.”5 If you do not understand what something is, it is often
something you wish to avoid. Unspecific ingredients such as ‘animal
fat’ are pretty frightening. It could be derived from the 4 D’s of the
slaughter industry- dead, diseased, disabled, or dying prior to
slaughter and could be part of a cow or road kill from how the AAFCO
definition is written. It truly bothers me to know that “companion
animals from clinics, pounds, and shelters can and are being rendered
and used as sources of protein in pet food.”6 Poorer quality grains
that are being ‘reused’ from human industry are also common and low in
nutritional value. Lastly, just because something is a ‘meal’ does not
make it good. There are many that may be in poor quality foods
including meat and bone meal- which is all made from parts that can not
be used for human consumption, corn gluten meal – which has some
protein but not enough to be anywhere near a top ingredient along with
as many as 10 other really poor quality ‘meal’ choices. Just use
common sense. If it sounds mysterious, or it is unspecific, walk
away. This site tells you the AAFCO definitions and a little people
perspective on all the worst ingredients in pet food if you would like
more specific education on what pet food can be. http://www.dogfoodproject.com/index.php?page=badingredients
Better Ingredient Choices~
Now that is a lot of ingredients to condemn, so what
does that leave us with? You want a good source of protein as your
first ingredient and possibly second and or third as well depending-
for example bison, salmon meal, turkey, chicken meal. If you remember
from earlier ‘meal’ is the water removed, so a few sneaky companies may
put a good source of meat followed by a grain. And if it is not a
specific meat meal, it means you have a food with more grain than
meat. How is the average person supposed to know this? They often do
not. And it is how companies get away with more fillers than meat.
A
few foods contain no grains but they are higher in protein than most
dogs need, so next there will be a grain. Good ones include brown
rice, oatmeal, millet, barley.. There are more but that is a start.
White rice is not evil, it is just not as healthy, and is preferable if
it is a little further down the ingredient list. ‘Ground’ or ‘meal’ is
okay too, but avoid things like ‘brewer’s rice’. It is a by-product of
the brewing industry with so little nutrition it is practically
worthless. You do not need 3 forms of rice in one food, it is overkill
on filler. And sweeteners are not helpful either. Menadione is a
vitamin many better companies are removing from their food as it may
cause health problems.
Many senior dog foods and weight loss
foods are often jam packed with fillers. In diet food the dog is
pooping out what it can not digest and is not taking in as many
nutrients or calories. You would be easier on the dog to feed a better
quality food in a smaller amount, and supplementing with low calorie
vegetables to fill the dog up. Senior foods are trying to give a dog
less calories. But by packing it full of fillers what exactly are you
paying for? Your dog to poop more than it should need to? Better
companies do have better senior foods, but you really need to read the
labels to find something that is worth the cost.
Multinational Corporations and the Pet Food They Make~
Many
of the main stream dog food companies that are the most well known also
own human manufacturing companies. Nice way to reuse your by-products
for free. Food is not marketed to your pet; it is with you in mind.
Your dog does not care what the bag looks like. These big businesses
are making a profit from what should really be going to waste. What
big businesses own pet food companies?
Nestlé - Alpo, Come 'N Get It, Mighty Dog, Chef's Blend, Fancy Feast, Friskies, Kit 'N Kaboodle, Deli-Cat, and Nestlé Purina
products such as Dog Chow, Pro Plan, Beneful and Purina One
Colgate-Palmolive - Hill's Science Diet Pet Food
Del Monte - 9-Lives, Kibbles `n Bits, Cycle, Gravy Train,
Nature's Recipe, and Reward
Procter & Gamble - Eukanuba and Iams
Mars - Pedigree, Advance, Cesar, Whiskas and Sheba
Another leading pet food, Nutro, is not a multinational
company.7
Except
for Nutro, all the brands of dog food listed contain waste ingredients
from human production of food. Nice cheap way to recycle and it is
your pet that gets the short end of the stick. Most of these brands
advertise so they are in your home and in your head. It is easy to
believe that they are great from what it says on the front of the bag
along with the pretty pictures of happy dogs.
How to Analyze the Label~
Tired
yet? Let us look at some common foods pushed often at unknowing
consumers and why they are not so great. I am picking a common bag of
food from a few of the big names. Some of their foods fare a little
better some a little worse, but none are actually good. So within the
range of looking at these it shows you an awful assortment of what is
actually made by these companies.
Science Diet (adult Large Breed)-
Corn meal, chicken by-product meal, soybean meal, animal fat (preserved
with mixed tocopherols and citric acid), chicken liver flavor,
vegetable oil, dried egg product, flaxseed, glucosamine hydrochloride,
L-carnitine, chondroitin sulfate, preserved with mixed tocopherols and
citric acid, minerals (salt, calcium carbonate, ferrous sulfate, zinc
oxide, copper sulfate, manganous oxide, calcium iodate, sodium
selenite), rosemary extract, beta-carotene, vitamins (choline chloride,
vitamin A supplement, vitamin D3 supplement, vitamin E supplement,
L-ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate (a source of vitamin C), niacin, thiamine
mononitrate, calcium pantothenate, pyridoxine hydrochloride,
riboflavin, folic acid, biotin, vitamin B12 supplement)
The
first ingredient is corn which is very indigestible and the bulk of
what the food is- filler. Chicken by-product meal means that there is
no actual real source of meat in this food since we talked earlier
about what this actually contains. And soybean meal which is a “poor
quality protein filler used to boost the protein content of low quality
pet foods”8 Lastly of the main ingredients there is an unspecific fat
that could really contain anything. This is a food pushed on
television- often pushed by vets. And it is mainly garbage.
Let us look at another. Purina has high television coverage, commercials of happy bouncing dogs. So what is actually in it?
Purina (Beneful Original)-
Ground yellow corn, chicken by-product meal, corn gluten meal, whole
wheat flour, beef tallow preserved with mixed-tocopherols (source of
Vitamin E), rice flour, beef, soy flour, sugar, sorbitol, tricalcium
phosphate, water, animal digest, salt, phosphoric acid, potassium
chloride, dicalcium phosphate, sorbic acid (a preservative), L-Lysine
monohydrochloride, dried peas, dried carrots, calcium carbonate,
calcium propionate (a preservative), choline chloride, vitamin
supplements (E, A, B-12, D-3), added color (Yellow 5, Red 40, Yellow 6,
Blue 2), dl-Methionine, zinc sulfate, glyceryl monostearate, ferrous
sulfate, niacin, manganese sulfate, calcium pantothenate, riboflavin
supplement, biotin, thiamine mononitrate, garlic oil, copper sulfate,
pyridoxine hydrochloride, folic acid, menadione sodium bisulfite
complex (source of Vitamin K activity), calcium iodate, sodium selenite
Another food that is mainly corn. Coincidence? No, it is cheap
filler. You make more money being cheap. More chicken by-products
rather than real meat, and more corn in an even less protein filled
form. Whole wheat flour is generally so processed most of the
nutrients are gone “flour ingredients are simply the leftover dust from
processing human food ingredients”9 And the last main ingredient beef
tallow which is a flavouring agent for low quality food and very cheap
to obtain.
How about Eukanuba. They are so large they own
the Superdogs franchise. They are a subsidiary of IAMS. Vets push the
food often. They have to be good, right?
Eukanuba Original (Adult Maintenance Formula)-
Chicken, chicken byproduct meal, corn meal, ground whole grain sorghum,
ground whole grain barley, fish meal, chicken fat (preserved with mixed
tocopherols, a source of vitamin E, and citric acid), brewers rice,
natural chicken flavor, dried beet pulp (sugar removed), dried egg
product, brewers dried yeast, potassium chloride, salt, sodium
hexametaphosphate, calcium carbonate, flax meal, choline chloride,
ferrous sulfate, dl-methionine, vitamin E supplement, beta carotene,
zinc oxide, ascorbic acid, manganese sulfate, copper sulfate, manganous
oxide, vitamin A acetate, calcium pantothenate, biotin, rosemary
extract, vitamin B12 supplement, thiamine mononitrate (source of
vitamin B1), niacin, riboflavin supplement (source of vitamin B2),
inositol, pyridoxine hydrochloride (source of vitamin B6), vitamin D3
supplement, potassium iodide, folic acid, cobalt carbonate
They
actually use chicken which is a step up from the foods we have looked
at, but when the water weight is removed it sits behind the corn meal.
Which means this food is mainly chicken by-products like the others.
It contains corn meal as cheap filler like the other foods so far.
Ground whole grain sorghum is a good carbohydrate, but it has very
poor digestibility making it a poor choice as a main ingredient in a
dog food. The barley would be good if the food was not already full of
so many fillers and the fish meal is unspecific which means the quality
is anyone’s guess. And if it is not human grade it has been preserved
with ethoxyquin which does not have to be mentioned on the label- it is
banned from human consumption, but it is alright for your dog? “A dog
is consuming up to 300 times more ethoxyquin than allowed for people.
(depending upon the weight) Also many dog food manufacturers are not
always listing it as an ingredient on the packaging, but sometimes
merely print ‘E’.”10 Lastly chicken fat is fine. But out of that
ingredient list only two of the top ingredients are actually good. And
this is a food people assume is great.
How about a ‘vet diet’
for comparison of how great the ingredients are for the prices one
pays. It should also be mentioned it is far more difficult to locate
the ingredient lists for prescription diets than normal food.
Hill’s Science Diet Canine I/D (gastro formula for sensitive stomachs)-
Ground
Whole Grain Corn, Brewers Rice, Dried Egg Product, Chicken By-Product
Meal, Corn Gluten Meal, Pork Fat (preserved with mixed tocopherols and
citric acid), Soy Fibre, Dicalcium Phosphate, Chicken Liver Flavor,
Iodized Salt, Potassium Citrate, Choline Chloride, Calcium Carbonate,
Potassium Chloride, Soybean Oil, vitamins (Vitamin E Supplement,
Niacin, Thiamine Mononitrate, Vitamin A Supplement, Calcium
Pantothenate, Biotin, Vitamin B12 Supplement, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride,
Riboflavin, Folic Acid, Vitamin D3 Supplement), Taurine, minerals
(Ferrous Sulfate, Zinc Oxide, Copper Sulfate, Manganous Oxide, Calcium
Iodate, Sodium Selenite), Ethoxyquin (a preservative).
How is
corn sensitive on a stomach? It is not. They are using a mediocre
quality rice, and dried egg product is a stool hardener which is really
high on this ingredients list. Chicken by-products are the ‘meat’ and
then more corn, but at least the fat is specific. This is barely a
food in all honesty. Some days my compost bucket contains more
nutritional value than what is listed here. It would be far cheaper
and better food for you canine pal to cook beef and rice for a
sensitive tummy.
Some of the worst of the worst. Ol’ Roy. Cheap food shows in its ingredients.
Ol' Roy (Premium)-
Ground yellow corn, meat and bone meal, ground whole wheat, soybean
meal, wheat middlings, animal fat (preserved with BHA and citric acid),
chicken by-product meal, rice, animal digest, salt, calcium carbonate,
potassium chloride, choline chloride, ferrous sulfate, zinc oxide,
vitamin E supplement, niacin, copper sulafate, manganous oxide, vitamin
A supplement, calcium pantothenate, biotin, vitamin B12 supplement,
pyridoxine hydrochloride, thiamine mononitrate, menadione sodium
bisulfite (complex source of vitamin K), calcium iodate, vitamin D3
supplement, riboflavin supplement, cobalt carbonate, folic acid, sodium
selenite
I have seen worse, but seriously, if one were to look
at the ingredients they should honestly wonder without anyone’s help.
Corn and meat and bone meal as discussed earlier (the 4 Ds of the
slaughterhouse) that could be goats, road kill or technically
euthanized pets. The wheat would be okay if it was not already full of
fillers, the soybean meal is a poor by-product that is more filler and
the middlings are floor sweepings with no nutritional value; super
cheap filler. Last main ingredient is animal fat which has been gone
over more than once and I am sure you now know what it is by now.
That was a lot of learning through bad foods. Let us look at a good one for comparison.
Timberwolf Organics (Wilderness Elk Dry)-
Fresh elk, salmon meal, millet, sweet potatoes, oats, flaxseed, carrot,
watercress, spinach, celery, parsley, fennel seed, wild salmon oil,
atlantic kelp, alfalfa, potassium chloride, amaranth, currants,
cranberries, pears, figs, thyme, anise seed, ground cinnamon bark,
fenugreek, garlic pieces, sunflower seeds, sesame seeds, apples,
chicory root, spirulina, choline chloride, lecithin, probiotics:
(lactobacillus acidophilus, lactobacillus casei, lactobacillus lactis,
bacillus bifidum, streptococcus diacetilactis, bacillus subtillus),
taurine, mixed tocopherols (a source of vitamin E), lysine, zinc
proteinate, iron proteinate, manganese proteinate, thiamine,
methionine, carnitine, niacin, vitamin A supplement, calcium
pantothenate, riboflavin supplement, vitamin B12 supplement, iodine
proteinate, vitamin D3 supplement, biotin, folic acid, pyridoxine (a
source of vitamin B6), cobalt proteinate, papain, yucca schidigera
extract
The differences are noticeable immediately. While the
Elk is not the heaviest ingredient when the water is removed, Salmon is
the number one and is an excellent protein source. Millet is a good
grain highly nutritious, and sweet potatoes are a healthier
carbohydrate than most. The elk is a good meat and rare enough in
foods that it might help with a dog with allergies. Oats are fine, and
flaxseed helps digestion and is an essential fatty acid. It should
also be noted it does not have any stool hardeners. On a good food the
dog should be able to produce great poop on its own. Too much fibre
can also cause loose stool resulting in poorer food having more than
one stool hardener in it.
So where should you go from here?
You can research on the internet or look through some books; there are
some great ones on the subject of what is in dog food. If you have
never been to a feed store look through your yellow pages. At least go
browse, look at some labels up close and personal. You may find some
decent brands in your local Petco, but you need to know your labels to
decipher the good, the bad, and the ugly. Also, there are a few brands
that make holistic great quality food, and a second line of mediocre
food like we have just talked about. They can be sneaky about it, and
I do not like the idea of the cheap food and the good food by one
brand, but just keep an eye out for it. It is not all equal.
Rating Your Current Kibble~
Want to rate your dog’s
current food? This kibble rating system has been sent around some.
The original author is Fredalina and I hear she would like to make some
changes to it, but as it stands now it easily can show good from bad.
Although I would love to see a revised edition reflecting higher scores
for fewer grains if she finds the time.
How to grade your dog's food:
Start with a grade of 100:
1) For every listing of "by-product", subtract 10 points
2) For every non-specific animal source ("meat" or "poultry", meat, meal or fat) reference, subtract 10 points
3) If the food contains BHA, BHT, or ethoxyquin, subtract 10 points
4) For every grain "mill run" or non-specific grain source, subtract 5 points
5)
If the same grain ingredient is used 2 or more times in the first five
ingredients (i.e. "ground brown rice", "brewer's rice", "rice flour"
are all the same grain), subtract 5 points
6) If the protein sources are not meat meal and there are less than 2 meats in the top 3 ingredients, subtract 3 points
7) If it contains any artificial colorants, subtract 3 points
8 ) If it contains ground corn or whole grain corn, subtract 3points
9) If corn is listed in the top 5 ingredients, subtract 2 more points
10) If the food contains any animal fat other than fish oil, subtract 2 points
11) If lamb is the only animal protein source (unless your dog is allergic to other protein sources), subtract 2 points
12) If it contains soy or soybeans, subtract 2 points
13) If it contains wheat (unless you know that your dog isn't allergic to wheat), subtract 2 points
14) If it contains beef (unless you know that your dog isn't allergic to beef), subtract 1 point
15) If it contains salt, subtract 1 point
Extra Credit:
1) If any of the meat sources are organic, add 5 points
2) If the food is endorsed by any major breed group or nutritionist, add 5 points
3) If the food is baked not extruded, add 5 points
4) If the food contains probiotics, add 3 points
5) If the food contains fruit, add 3 points
6) If the food contains vegetables (NOT corn or other grains), add 3 points
7) If the animal sources are hormone-free and antibiotic-free, add 2 points
If the food contains barley, add 2 points
9) If the food contains flax seed oil (not just the seeds), add 2 points
10) If the food contains oats or oatmeal, add 1 point
11) If the food contains sunflower oil, add 1 point
12)
For every different specific animal protein source (other than the
first one; count "chicken" and "chicken meal" as only one protein
source, but "chicken" and "" as 2 different sources), add 1 point
13) If it contains glucosamine and chondroitin, add 1 point
14) If the vegetables have been tested for pesticides and are pesticide-free, add 1 point
94-100+ = A
86-93 = B
78-85 = C
70-77 = D
69 = F
This
is a list of some foods to give you an idea on how they score. I did
not add them up, so if the math is not correct, I was not responsible,
though I appreciate having the list to use.
Eagle Pack Holistic: 119 A +
Wellness Super5Mix Chicken: 117 A+
Solid Gold Bison-123 points A+
Eagle Pack Natural: 94 A
Canidae-119 points A+
Natural Balance Duck and Potato-114 points A+
Eagle Pack Large and Giant Breed Puppy: 94 A
Timberwolf Organics Lamb and Venison-136 points A+
Innova-117 points A+
Eagle Pack Holistic Chicken-114 points A+
Chicken soup-113 points A+
Flint River Ranch: 92 (non-specific fat source) B
Eukanuba Natural Lamb and Rice-87 points B
Nutro Natural choice Lamb and Rice-85 points C
Nutro Chicken, Rice, & Oatmeal: 85 (non-specific fat source) C
Eukanuba Large Breed Adult: 83 C
Iams Large Breed: 83 C
Iams Lamb Meal and Rice-74 points D
Science Diet chicken adult maintainance-45 points F
Bil-Jac select-37 points F
Science Diet Large Breed: 68 F
Pro Plan All Breed: 68 F
Pedigree Complete Nutrition: 42 F
Pedigree Adult Complete-14 points F
Ol Roy-9 points F
Purina Beneful- 17 points F
It is now up to you to make a decision on what to do about you and your
furry friend and their nutrition. There is another world in home
cooked meals, and yet another in raw. But neither subject am I very
versed in, so I hope someone else will step up to either challenge.
Dog food is a confusing world, but I hope you have read enough to at
least get a grip on where to begin.
Citation~
1 http://www.avma.org/careforanimals/animatedjourneys/aboutvets/education.asp
2 http://www.cbc.ca/consumers/market/files/health/petfood/index.html
3 www.tryhealthypaws.com
4 http://www.dogfoodproject.com/index.php?page=ingrd
5 Ibid.
6 http://www.homevet.com/petcare/foodbook.html
7 http://www.5stardog.com/dog-food.asp
8 http://www.dogfoodproject.com/index.php?page=badingredients
9 http://www.naturapet.com/display.php?d=ingredient-facts&pxsl=//ingredient%5B@id='14'%5D
10 http://www.petcaretips.net/ethoxyquin.html
Published at http://www.iheartpaws.com/articles/35/1/Dog-Food--Decoding-Fact-from-Fiction.html
For information about feeding a RAW diet CLICK HERE
What foods ARE good?
I recommend the following brands, you can click the name to go to their website:
Chicken Soup For The Pet Lovers Soul
I no longer recommend Natural Balance due to the number of recalls they have been involved in.
Also, Timberwolf Organics is a company that LIES about their ingredients. Please don't feed it to your dogs.