Dog food experiment.
Jun. 4th, 2007 10:16 amI managed to get back to sleep after taking
markgritter to the airport this morning. I have not felt so well-rested in days, probably weeks. This is such a good thing. I will now go wear myself out with a workout, mowing the yard, and taking the dog for a long enough walk that she refrains from being bratty on the first day
markgritter is gone. Maybe. We'll see.
We've been doing an experiment lately: we are mostly not feeding Ista dog food any more. Ever since she got so very sick in the fall, we'd been feeding her wet food. Dry dog food smells like dog food, no mistake, but wet dog food really smells like dog food. A lot. And getting out wet dog food twice a day was making our house smell very, very strongly of dog food to my nose. I love the smell of dog. Dog food, not so much. So when we had leftover grilled chicken and wild rice last month, I shredded some carrots into it and fed it to Ista. She loved it, and it smelled like chicken, rice, and carrots. (The "chicken-flavored" dog food smells like...wait for it...dog food.) So I've been browning meat, cooking batches of rice, and portioning it out into little baggies and tupperware in the freezer. When I have something leftover that she can have, I portion that out, too.
So far, she's happy and we're happy. No one is saying that she'll never eat dog food again, but no one is saying we'll never go out for a burger again, either. It's just better for her and us, so far, to mostly give her a mix of whole grains and meat and vegetables that we control, not a factory somewhere. Things like brown rice and ground meat are pretty cheap, and so far it's not taking me immense amounts of time and energy, which was the main thing that made this an experiment and not something we were definitely going to do: the other factors lean this way, but if it was going to mean that I became the dog's short-order cook, no way. But the thing is, she's a very small dog. Browning meat in any quantity makes a lot of meals for her. A big pot of brown rice will go a long way. So I don't have to do it very often in order to have plenty for her to eat.
Also the amount of packaging saved by using tupperware and larger initial packages of food instead of the wet packaged dog food is not inconsiderable.
One of the side effects of keeping this stuff in the freezer and microwaving it for her meals is that Ista sometimes "talks" to the microwave now. She doesn't bark at it, or growl. But if it's heating something she thinks should be her breakfast and she has awakened really hungry for whatever reason, she goes, "arroorroo arrell aroo?" rather conversationally at the microwave. Which amuses me.
I'm going to go out and mow the yard now, since it's finally not raining, and then we'll see what time I have before the concrete people are supposed to come and give me yet another estimate. I hope these people aren't as bad as the last sets of concrete people we've dealt with, but there has to be someone in the greater Twin Cities metro area willing to replace our front step, and apparently I have to be pretty persistent to find them. So persistent is what I will do.
We've been doing an experiment lately: we are mostly not feeding Ista dog food any more. Ever since she got so very sick in the fall, we'd been feeding her wet food. Dry dog food smells like dog food, no mistake, but wet dog food really smells like dog food. A lot. And getting out wet dog food twice a day was making our house smell very, very strongly of dog food to my nose. I love the smell of dog. Dog food, not so much. So when we had leftover grilled chicken and wild rice last month, I shredded some carrots into it and fed it to Ista. She loved it, and it smelled like chicken, rice, and carrots. (The "chicken-flavored" dog food smells like...wait for it...dog food.) So I've been browning meat, cooking batches of rice, and portioning it out into little baggies and tupperware in the freezer. When I have something leftover that she can have, I portion that out, too.
So far, she's happy and we're happy. No one is saying that she'll never eat dog food again, but no one is saying we'll never go out for a burger again, either. It's just better for her and us, so far, to mostly give her a mix of whole grains and meat and vegetables that we control, not a factory somewhere. Things like brown rice and ground meat are pretty cheap, and so far it's not taking me immense amounts of time and energy, which was the main thing that made this an experiment and not something we were definitely going to do: the other factors lean this way, but if it was going to mean that I became the dog's short-order cook, no way. But the thing is, she's a very small dog. Browning meat in any quantity makes a lot of meals for her. A big pot of brown rice will go a long way. So I don't have to do it very often in order to have plenty for her to eat.
Also the amount of packaging saved by using tupperware and larger initial packages of food instead of the wet packaged dog food is not inconsiderable.
One of the side effects of keeping this stuff in the freezer and microwaving it for her meals is that Ista sometimes "talks" to the microwave now. She doesn't bark at it, or growl. But if it's heating something she thinks should be her breakfast and she has awakened really hungry for whatever reason, she goes, "arroorroo arrell aroo?" rather conversationally at the microwave. Which amuses me.
I'm going to go out and mow the yard now, since it's finally not raining, and then we'll see what time I have before the concrete people are supposed to come and give me yet another estimate. I hope these people aren't as bad as the last sets of concrete people we've dealt with, but there has to be someone in the greater Twin Cities metro area willing to replace our front step, and apparently I have to be pretty persistent to find them. So persistent is what I will do.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 03:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 03:25 pm (UTC)One thing you should be aware of in feeding Ista is that dogs need a bunch of calcium to balance out the phosphorous that they get from their meat. If they eat meat without the right amount of calcium, they can get sick (or something). I hope I have that right. So what many people do is feed the dog raw meat with the bone (because cooked bones tend to splinter). You can also do it with egg shells, or grind up the bones and mix them with the meat. Some home feeders make it sound like you have to have a PhD, but dogs are carnivores and they don't have as many vitamin requirements as people do. Their bodies make more of the necessary vitamins, so really all you have to watch out for is that phosphorous/calcium balance. I have also noticed that prepared diets give dogs a distinctive smell. Nala's "doggie breath" disappeared as soon as we took her off commercial dog food. Chewie has a sort of fishy smell, probably because his food contains salmon oils.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 03:46 pm (UTC)Alas, all of our animals (well, other than the little dogs) seem to have stomachs which must hold X cups of food--we couldn't switch the rottie to better dog food because she'd claim to still be starving to death if we only gave her two cups of good food instead of 4 of the cheap stuff. And then she'd steal food like crazy, even though the better dog food was just as nutritious as the cheap stuff, just missing all the filler. So she went back to the cheap food.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:16 pm (UTC)Whenever Mama gets sick and is off her feed, I give her ground beef and brown rice, and she loves it.... Mind she still stands around in the back yard grazing like a cow, so I occassionally wonder if she could use some salad greens mixed in with it, but *shrug*... Whatever floats her boat. I never feed her ground beef and rice for long enough that I need to worry about balancing her diet myself. It's usually just a treat for when she appears to have an upset stomach.
I'm not sure if I ever sent you a link to the poisonous food list (http://mooreshaven.com/pets/dogs/safety/badfoodslist.html) but it's an interesting read. (Who knew that raisins could cause renal failure in dogs?! I always thought they were relatively harmless to everybody... Not only do they tell you WHAT is harmful but also WHY and HOW MUCH is a lethal dose, instead of just providing you with a long list of things you should be paranoid and superstitious about when it comes to your dog.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 04:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 05:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 05:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 05:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 05:57 pm (UTC)I've seen some of these items on other lists and wondered WHY they were on the list. For example, my dog eats apple peels all the time and has no problems with them. Now I know why some lists mention apples and other's don't.
So now I can just Note To Self: Remove pits from fruit before serving to dog. Also... No grapes or raisins with or without pits.
I also like the fact that they tell you HOW MUCH of something is lethal. That way I can NOT PANIC when my brother calls to tell me that my dog ate his Almond Joy off the coffee table.
:-)
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 07:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 07:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 08:03 pm (UTC)The list is worth it just for the hallucinogenic properties of nutmeg, though.
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Date: 2007-06-04 08:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 08:51 pm (UTC)P.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 09:28 pm (UTC)She's since moved on to frozen fresh food, I guess you'd call it, but my mom made food for our pets for quite a while and it worked well.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 09:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 09:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 09:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 10:03 pm (UTC)And dairy products? Raw eggs? Spoiled foods? What did you say your animal was? Certainly not a relative of the scavenger who lives in MY house and eats whatever dead rotten things she can find in the woods! Or the hunter dog to whom a turkey's nest full of raw eggs is a GREAT find! (She rolls in the dead things before she eats them BTW. It's like a scent candle at a party, I guess. )
Spoiled water? ROTFLMBO!!!
Virtually EVERY dog I've had over the last 55 years has had the sense to NOT eat stuff that's bad for it, and their guts can cheerfully digest salmonella (or pass it on through) and all kinds of stuff that would KILL me. (In Re salmonella: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=339295 Gotta love this - it talks about the BARF diet! ;-D) My dogs sniff stuff before they eat it. If they don't like the smell, they don't eat it.
For a good list of stuff that can, and might be likely to, hurt your dog ask your vet. This list is just wacky!
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 10:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 03:02 am (UTC)Still, I think it's a great idea, and I admire you for doing it!
no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 12:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-05 03:35 pm (UTC)Incidentally, I've also been told that dry pet food can be more reliable than wet food, in the UK at least. Apparently because it has a longer shelf life, the manufacturers are able to get a more constant supply of ingredients rather than having to rely on what's cheap that week. How scientific this is I don't know - my cat with the sensitive stomach was marginally happier with ordinary dry food than with the same brand of wet food, but both upset her stomach eventually (as did chicken and rice, annoyingly). She's happily eating a prescription dry food now.