Cell Graffiti of Vegetable Purees
One of the main components of BARF, in addition to bones, is vegetable purees. They must be used in equal amounts to meat to ensure adequate vitamin intake.
One of the main components of BARF, in addition to bones, is vegetable purees. They must be used in equal amounts to meat to ensure adequate vitamin intake.
Vitamin E is the most commonly used antioxidant, essentially the body’s own preservative. It is not a vitamin whose benefits should be visibly noticeable in a dog, but rather it is intended to extend the lifespan.
In raw feeding, a common question, especially for those experiencing heartburn, is whether meat can be cooked or even heated. There is a fear that something might be lost or that something might become at least useless, even dangerous. The short answer is that heating or cooking meat doesn’t matter at all.
Feeding meat to a dog changes its body composition compared to, say, dry food. It’s a reasonable fact, though not 100 percent. Whether it matters, again, depends on the dog and what it does.
We bought XXL-sized chops from a well-known but smaller meat company from our area in Finland, close to Helsinki metropolitan area. They were about an inch thick. I’m definitely not a gourmet chef, but I can make reasonably edible food. Sometimes even good. Those chops’ relatives failed miserably.
During the BARF (Biologically Appropriate Raw Food) era, it was taught that dogs should be given meaty bones, and that would provide everything they need. The definition of meaty bones was that they should be half meat and half bone. This claim was not accurate by any measure, and such meaty bones were not even available anywhere, although chicken drumsticks came close.
Calcium is the most common mineral in the body and an extremely important electrolyte for muscle and nerve function, while also being the main building block of the skeleton. Calcium intake is often considered the biggest problem among minerals in nutrition, although it is perhaps the easiest.
Different types of dry food are bought for the dog time and time again. Either the food doesn’t suit the dog at all, the number and size of poop bags aren’t enough during a walk, or acquaintances and strangers in the Facebook world condemn the food as low-quality. At some point, people start asking for a recommendation for a good brand of dry food.
Living food is a relatively marginal way to eat among humans. In part, it belongs to the raw food category on the humane side, partly not. As always with eating habits that are strongly associated with alternative treatments, the internal scene has more intense disputes over definitions than an outsider would genuinely perceive differences. For dogs, living food is the same as BARF, and the differences in emphasis come from the gurus’ desire to do business with the topic. It does not relate to dogs.
Barf is not a feedig style for dogs. It is the biggest mistake of doog feeding history.
When the topic is dog barf, it is necessary to introduce the current economic creator of barf, Ian Billinghurst. This quickly sheds light on the background and basic claims of certain barf assertions.
Human can be active all day long. Dogs can’t. Let dogs rest.
Mosquito and tick repellents are big business. But adding a repellanin dogs clothing, like scarves is close to wasting money for dog owners.
When doing anything with dogs, everyone tends to focus on certain details. That famous detail. Sometimes details are important, especially if they have a foundational significance, but often the focus is lost on the most important thing: the goal. It doesn’t matter whether we’re talking about breeding or nutrition; the detail is not the goal, the focus. The detail is just one building block, but there’s still a need to build something bigger.
For vitamins water of fat soluable doesn’t refer to storage. It tells pathways.
Slimming an obesity dog is basically easy. Feed less, move more. But in practise it may be a bit harder task.
Growing pups need planned and calculated food suitable for dogs. Otherwise there may come bad problems.
In online communities – previously forums, now Facebook and similar platforms, wikis, and other social media platforms – there is a known percentage group. I know that 1% also means something negative in the criminal world, but in the digital environment, there is its own percentage gang – and in a completely different tone.
A dog is a carnivore that, as a relative of the wolf, should eat grazing animals. Yet dogs also graze, and couch grass is desirable. In early spring, our horses were deeply offended when the terrier nibbled on the first sprouted green grass right under their noses.
Poochie Revival always uses the metric system (more accurately, the SI system) for measurements. Never imperial units. There are two reasons for this: The Revival has European roots and, apart…
Those who practiced Barf feeding once discovered that bones are food for dogs. An Australian who turned to alternatives, and briefly worked as a veterinarian, Ian Billinghurst, developed it into a business for himself and managed to create the modern dog-keeping culture’s worst and most widespread feeding mistake. As a result, we now have a market for minced meats with bones.
The most common reason given for not feeding a dog a raw diet (meat-based feeding would be a better name) is the convenience of dry foods. No need to calculate, no need to think, and it’s enough to just pour food into a bowl.
Until around the 2000s, research on vitamin D in dogs focused entirely on the development of puppies' bones. Recommendations for vitamin D in dogs are practically entirely based on the…
One of the most common questions with healthy dogs is why a dog doesn’t gain weight on a certain food even when given in large amounts. This often comes up…
Once upon a time, a peculiar concept known as holism appeared in dry foods. Holistic is a beautiful idea. It means a whole where the combined effect of the parts is greater than their sum. In other words, 1+1=3. This system is also called synergy, which is the same thing said differently: a cumulative combined effect. In dog foods, it means that the ingredients together do much more than they would separately.
In feeding dogs, organs play an important role alongside meat. This doesn’t even depend on the feeding method, as organs are visible in both dry foods and meat-based raw feeding, at least in advertisements. Still, it’s not always clear what the term “organ” actually means.
Most often, dry dog foods are criticized for having so many carbohydrates. If the carbohydrates come from grains, the situation is even worse. This is a mix of several different things, spiced with confusion, misunderstandings, and beliefs. Let’s make it clear right away: carbohydrates are not dangerous or even harmful to dogs. But they are often unnecessary.
I was once asked (several times, but recently) when I move the little puppies away from four feedings a day. Usually at the stage when the mother is weaned –…
Vitamin E is the most commonly used antioxidant, essentially acting as the body's own preservative. It is not a vitamin whose benefits should be visibly apparent in a dog, but…
50/50 feeding is a method where dry food and meat are mixed. The ratios can be half of each or something entirely different. The name doesn’t mean that the foods must absolutely be half and half, but it’s just a descriptive name that means one thing: most often, dry food and meat are mixed together.
We have a litter of Russell puppies. I wonder if they're already close to 7 weeks old - I'm incredibly bad at remembering the age of dogs. I'm not exactly…
The dog eats snow and ice for two reasons: either due to thirst or because it's fun. When a dog is outside, cold weather, or generally cool air, dries out…
At the heart of the Poochie Revival logo is a stylized image of the ATP molecule—adenosine triphosphate—the fundamental unit of energy in all living organisms. ATP fuels every biological function,…
The most common question that new owners, who are captivated by their puppies, ask the breeder is: How can you give up the puppies? The answer, at least from more experienced breeders, if they are honest, is easily. In fact, most look forward to the handover day like the rising sun.
Vitamin B12 is obtained only from a meat-based diet. A dog may not necessarily need it every day, but vitamin B12 is practically always obtained.
In a dog’s 50/50 diet, meat and dry food are mixed. The idea is to get proteins and fats from the meat, and use the dry food as a source of trace elements and vitamins.
The use of dry food is the most common way to feed dogs in Finland and around the world. Raw feeding is the most prominent on social media, but in terms of quantity, it is probably the rarest method in terms of market share, despite its loud presence. Of course, there is no researched statistical data on the subject, at least publicly. Overshadowed by raw feeding is the more common feeding method, the 50/50 style.
Cobalamin is the most complex vitamin and the only one that dogs can obtain solely from meat products. Every plant-based form of vitamin B12 is an antagonist of cobalamin, meaning it acts as an inhibitor or counteragent. These are also known as pseudo-vitamin B12.
Vitamin Bs are a loosely related group of vitamins with similar functions. Chemically, they have nothing in common except being water-soluble. They all participate in the body’s enzyme functions as coenzymes, essential precursors for enzymes. B vitamins are especially involved in energy production because, without B vitamins, the metabolism of fats, carbohydrates, and proteins suffers, particularly in energy metabolism. B vitamins are also involved in the functioning of the nervous system.
Bioavailability is a term that one encounters reasonably often. It is primarily a poor translation of the meaning of being available, and the term bioactivity is often used instead – which, on the other hand, is a slightly different matter.
Vitamins are organic compounds that must be obtained from food and are not used for any specific purpose. Therefore, fats or proteins are not considered vitamins. Vitamins have been misidentified in the past and have since lost their “vitamin status.” This is why there are gaps in the numbering of B vitamins. Some compounds have also been intentionally misnamed as vitamins.
Vitamin A, or retinol, is a collective term for naturally occurring retinoids and those carotenoids that have retinol activity, such as beta-carotene. Retinol, the pure form of vitamin A, is only found in animal products, especially liver and eggs. In vegetables, vitamin A only appears in its precursors, usually as beta-carotene. Breast milk contains a lot of vitamin A and is the most important source for a puppy. This should be considered for bottle-fed puppies.
This informational piece was provided by the alternative world, written by Danish chemist and dog trainer Mogens Eliasen. Or I don’t know about the informational piece, it’s more like going in the direction of a comedy sketch.
In the past, the concept of balance in food was introduced for feeding dogs. Balance is something that humans seem to have an innate need for. Chaos is bad and must be balanced. The feeling of chaos is also inherently related to ignorance.
Calcium is the most common mineral in the body and a very important electrolyte for muscle and nerve function, while also being the main building block of the skeleton. In puppy nutrition, it is perhaps the most studied component, as researchers have sought to understand its role in bone development and growth disorders.
There are a few eternal memes in dog feeding. Chicken bones kill, the dog is an omnivore, or the calcium to phosphorus ratio is the most important thing. None of those are true. The belief in the high phosphorus content of meat is also not true.
Phosphorus (P) is the second most common mineral in the body, but it can be confidently called the most common mineral in nutrition. Phosphorus is everywhere, and it is impossible to find food that does not contain phosphorus.
The basic rule of weight loss is to eat less than you expend. For gaining weight, you eat more than you expend. Every adult knows this, even if their own beach body remains at the level of a walrus. When you start to increase the weight of a thin or lean dog, one general rule applies: fatten the dog with fat.
The two most common questions in the dog world are which dry food to buy and how to transition to raw feeding so that the dog gets everything it needs. The first is the easiest to answer, because there is no answer. No one can know what to buy, because “worthwhile” depends on an overwhelming number of factors and, most importantly – whether brand X suits the dog – no one knows in advance. Starting raw feeding is a slightly broader topic, but it is reasonably easy too. The prerequisite, of course, is that you master the basics of multiplication.
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