Haasmore Darling Dackels

For the Love of Dachsies

Corn Wolves? Wheat Tigers?  By Tina Valant-Siebelts            February 2007

Every day, we enjoy a wide array of food choices and styles, from fast food to elegant multi-course feasts. But, our pets have to eat what we serve, when we serve it. As a pet mom who cooks (and bakes) for her pets, I thought  I was very knowledgeable about their nutrition. I could spend hours researching new treat recipes, online.

Evidenced by extra ribcage padding, our vet kindly
suggested Mack and Jackpot needed to drop some
weight. Rudy had a chronic problem with itchy feet—
which kept me up nights with his gnawing and licking.
We assumed it was a grass allergy. I know a lot of dogs
with skin and ear problems. I wondered if it could all be
food-related. I had to discover how my pets’ food was
affecting their health. Was I feeding them “fast food” or
solid nutrition which could improve health and vitality,
and possibly increase their life spans?

Gently look in your dog or cat’s mouth. The four long pointy teeth are “canines” and indicate a carnivore, a meat-eater. Review your pet’s food label. The first five ingredients are fundamental.  Ground yellow corn was the first ingredient, in the food I had. Did you ever see a dog, wolf, coyote, or fox chomping down on an ear of corn?  Do zoo care-givers offer wheat or soybeans to the tigers, lions, or cougars? After all, our domestic pets are tiny replicas of their wild cousins. 

So, then why do pet food manufacturers use corn and wheat? A little research yielded that shortly after World War II, there was a grain surplus. Unfit for human consumption—it was directed to the pet food industry. Cheap, readily available, with a long shelf life; add a colorful label, clever advertising, and grocery store convenience---for a now multi-billion dollar industry.

The second ingredient was chicken by-products (what remains after choice cuts). By-products can include unappealing items (heads, feet, tendons, intestines)….. No wonder they can be difficult to digest.  I learned an optimum food would first list “meal”, (ie chicken meal) a human grade, concentrated source of protein with the majority of water extracted.  Along with a meat meal, what else should your dog’s food contain?  Vegetables, an animal based fat source, beet fiber, antioxidants, bacterial cultures and proteinated minerals.

What to avoid in your pet’s food
By-products
Grains (soy, corn, wheat, corn gluten or wheat gluten)
Chemical preservatives (BHA, BHT, ethoxoquin)
Refined sugar, artificial sweeteners
Artificial colors

I found the right foods, complete nutritional systems; and my pets are thriving. Rudy no longer keeps me awake. His feet are fine—it was an allergy to corn. Mack and Jackpot achieved their target weights. Our cat, Chance’s coat is more gorgeous than ever. The little bumps she had vanished after about a month of being on the holistic food and supplement. And, I can't tell you the last time I saw a hairball, on my sofa!!!

Yes, holistic foods usually cost more, but since they are more digestible, you feed less. Bonus: less to “pick up”! Factor in, less trips to the vet (we miss him) for allergy relief. By taking an active interest in my pets’ nutrition, I believe I have increased and enhanced their lives. Our pets deserve to be healthy and happy, as long as we are entrusted with them. 

*used with permission by Tina*

What Should Not Be In Your Pet Food

Corn, Wheat, Soy - used to increase the percentage of protein in the guaranteed analysis. They are highly indigestible for your precious family members. They cause stress to the kidneys. Also may very likely cause allergies in your pets. AKA- ground yellow corn, corn gluten meal, whole grain corn, ground whole wheat, whole grain sorghum, wheat flour and many more!
By-Products - indigestible protein sources. AKA- intestines, chicken heads, duck bills, fish heads, hides, chicken and turkey feet, feathers and bone. They do not have to contain meat and can included diseased and contaminated slaughterhouse meat and hair.
Meat and Bone Meal - can legally include dead pets and animals

And lets not forget the chemicals used for preservatives!!! BHA, BHT and Ethoxyquin. BHA and BHT have been known to cause liver and kidney dysfunction and are known carcinogens.Ethoxyguin has been used as a rubber stabilizer. Companies use these because it extends the shelf life to up to 2 years.
Also these have no place in your pet food: artificial colors and flavors, beef tallow animal fat (lard), animal digest, and the list goes on!


Would you feed all this to your pets????


http://www.healthypetnet.com/haasmoredarlingdackels

Create a free website at Webs.com