Van Rensselaer Haus German Shepherds

Kennel Diet

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Over the Years....

Over the years we've had dogs, we have used many different types of food. In the 60's, there was the Ken L Biscuit, kibbled dog food, to which we added rice, chicken necks, cottage cheese and eggs. We also supplemented this with vitamins/minerals. Commercially, dog food became more diverse and grocery and feed stores began carrying so many different varieties and types. We tried many and while showing our dogs, found that there was one in particular that had the advantage of putting on the weight on our dogs while they were on the road, stressed out from the travel and showing, and did a good job on them when they were at home...Bil Jac. It was frozen and one would thaw it out when ready to use. It was a meat based diet...not meat and bone meal like most the others available. As the dog foods became more readily available to the public, commercial manufacturers began implementing food coloring to represent colors of food found in our own diets and shaped the kibble to represent shapes of our own food...pork chops, hamburger meat, bacon, bones, etc. The largest aisle found in the grocery store devoted to one single product line became the pet food aisle. Since the public purchased the products, they kept increasing the varieties available. That was when our pets went from their ordinary lifespan of 13-18 years of age and began dying around 10 years of age. Health problems set in and the vet's began seeing tooth decay/disease by the age of one year old in our pets. Cardiac, kidney, digestive, skin, and other disorders began to be common problems and of course, cancer. Why not? The ingredients in the dog's foods were carcinogens, meat and bone meal (ever wonder what this meant?) and dyes we ourselves were warned not to consume. Then they added preservatives to enable the foods to remain on the store shelves for longer periods of time. The preservatives were poison in and of themselves known to cause cancer and a myriad of disease.
 
Over the past year, we learned that our pets were being given dog/cat foods containing toxic ingredients...but did anyone mention that the recalled pet foods listed on most sources were only the ones who voluntarily re-called their products and that the law did not require all the makers to recall theirs? They should have. But at least, it got everyone to thinking about what they were feeding their pets. Good.
 
I had taken a course in small animal nutrition and learned so much several years back and had luckily already changed the way I was feeding my dogs. I had begun purchasing fresh fruits and veggies and using natural, organic sources for the meats. I cooked up my own meals and served them full of human quality ingredients but only those that were dog friendly. My dogs bloomed once more. No more tooth rot, body odor, skin, digestive or other disorders. My dogs got fed bones, raw, in natural form...not cooked as these cause the bones to become brittle and can cause harm. My sources were B.A.R.F.  and sites that offered info on raw feeding. Now there are a number of companies promoting their natural diets and selling them to the conscientious consumers. Of course, the bad news is that the price is much higher...you can't buy real meat for less than $.50 cents a pound nor can you get organic fruits, veggies, and meats.
 
I reccomend that all the people who do business with my kennel read more about the proper nutrition for their pets and stop feeding scraps unfit for human consumption, loaded with artificial ingredients such as food colors, preservatives, sugars and salts. You'll appreciate the decrease in vet bills since your pet won't succomb to the results of the other diets and your pet will thrive...and they'll love you for it. I have been cooking for years now, making dog treats and offer the same for sale to anyone interested in acquiring some wholesome, organic treats for their pets. I also dehydrate meats, veggies and fruits, adding cereal grains...all organic...and use this in my packaging of daily meals for my pets. It takes a few minutes to boil water and steep the ingredients, add the oils and vitamin/minerals. Then I feed the meals when they cool. The dogs love it.
 
There are quite a few sites I will list below to give you an idea as where you may begin your search for healthier lifestyle living for your pets. Cooked, prepared meals deplete some of the good stuff the animals need but the proper preparation maintains some of the important ingredients needed. Raw food is the best way, but if you can't bring yourself to this, then try to check out and find what is the best. Good luck. And if you want me to send you some of my info, email me. I'd be happy to.

Visit Animal Wellness Magazine - is all about people who are using their resources to help animals, articles on natural healing and nutrition, advice from leading animal experts & holistic veterinarians, coping with pet loss, alerts to endangered species, and highlighting the best quality natural products and nutrition available for your animals in each issue. It's everything our four-legged family members have been waiting for!
Link to: http://www.animalwellnessmagazine.com

I highly recommend the following authors/books for reading if you want to start your pet on the road to good health.
 
Dr. Pitcarin's book, Complete Guide to Natural Health for Dogs and Cats
 
Dr. Billinghurst's book, Give Your Dog a Bone
 
Kymythy Shultz's book The Ultimate Diet-Natural Nutrition for Dogs and Cats (this one is a really easily digested read, full of facts and she travels the country teaching her information.)

Natural Nutrition Notes

 

 

Chemical contamination of our foods is an increasing problem & is becoming a major factor in chronic disease particularly in animals. The process starts with the herbicides, insecticides, and fungicides used to grow crops. Today, we are using pesticides at a rate 13,000 times greater than we did in 1962. Antibiotics, growth stimulants, hormones, tranquilizers, and other drugs are also fed to livestock consuming grains, The EPA has been allowing the recycling of industry waste-material loaded with heavy metals-into commercial fertilizers. In the soil, plants take them up into their tissues where they remain for the life of the plant. When an animal consumes this plant, metals enter the animal’s body and collect there. The more plant that is eaten, the more heavy metal collects in the tissues. If that animal is eaten by another on the food chain, the additional accumulation is more concentrated and is passed on. The problem for carnivores is that the buck stops with them.  Note: Average chemical pollution of breast milk in American women  that consume meat, compared to that of  American women who are complete vegetarians is 35 times higher.

 

In sampling of canned pet food, it was revealed that lead contamination levels ranging from 0.9 to 7.0 parts per million (ppm) in cat food and 1.0 to 5.6 ppm in dog food. Daily intake of only six ounces of such food would exceed the dose of lead considered potentially toxic for children. Most of the contamination comes from the bone meal, otherwise an excellent source of calcium and other minerals, the American cattle contain high levels of lead, owing to our prolonged usage of leaded gasoline over several decades. Safe bone meal today originates from South America, Ethiopia & other countries with fewer automobiles. Signs of lead poisoning come on gradually and can exhibit as a type of anemia while some animals exhibit other signs of the contamination and can be hyperactive, have seizures, become hysterical, go blind, have stomach cramps and diarrhea, constipation or develop thickened and itchy skin and not all these symptoms occur…sometimes there may be just one. Who would believe one animal can present with clinical signs of anemia and another with seizures? Who would have guessed both could be victims of the same thing?

 

The major problem of chemical contamination to our food sources is compounded by the fact that in 1989, some 70,000 different chemical were in use by our society with nearly 3,000 new chemicals being introduced annually since. As of 1990, only about 3 percent of all these chemicals have been tested for their ability to cause cancer. The interaction between different chemicals in the same body tissue  can result in different outcomes. They can ‘ignore’ one another having no interaction, one can act on the other causing it to become a completely different chemical possibly more toxic or they can work on one another causing each to have increased effects. While scientific communities can tell us that one particular chemical may not be harmful at certain levels, they have no idea how it will interact with other contaminants in the same body.

 

 As of late, raw meat diets have come forward as the ideal way to feed our pets, but for the inactive pet, this diet can be very rich in addition to being high in chemical contamination with the exception being if the meat is from an organic source. While animals being fed on this diet have improved health, much of that is related to the fact that the depleted ingredients found in the commercially prepared diets are far inferior. However there is still chemical contamination to be found in that meat only diet. Another example of chemicals in the food animal is DES, a female hormone used to fatten cattle, which is carried into the meat and thus into your dog, gradually having effects over time. This estrogen will not only fatten the cattle fed with it, but your animal in time and estrogen has been proven to cause cancer development. Bone meal for human consumption and sold in natural food stores cannot come from US cattle cue to the lead deposits found in their bone however, animal food manufacturers can and do use bone meal taken from our US cattle.

 

Using a combination of meat, vegetables and grains, human grade sources wherever possible, presents the alternative to this all meat protein diet. The combination of meat with the grains and veggies provides a higher protein level comparable with (most of the time exceeding) the protein levels found in commercial food.

 

As to meats in the diets, we must be reminded of the ‘mad cow disease’ that has hit the news time and again. It might be interesting to learn that a study done in 1992 of 444 dogs in England of dogs showing symptoms suggestive of this disease were found to have the disease themselves as ‘scrapie’-associated fibrils (the name for the mad cow disease found in sheep) were identified in the brains of these dogs. Strangely enough, the animals normally thought to exist on grass and plants, are actually being fed tissue from their own kind as an additional feed source in order to reduce costs & find a way to use rendered animal parts. In the New York Times in 2004, an article pointed out that our calves are fed blood instead of milk and cattle feed containing composted wastes from chicken coops including feathers, spilled feed and even feces have been fed for years as a common practice in this country. As quoted in the article rendered animal products go 43% to poultry, 23% to pet food, 13% to swine, 10% to cattle and 11% to other uses such as food for farmed fish. In Europe, 25% of the cattle are tested for ‘mad cow disease’, Japan tests 100% and the US only tests 5 or 6 per million head of cattle.

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