gayrghts wrote:I'm dabbling with organ meat....
Did chicken livers a week ago, that didn't go over well, not sure if it was the chicken liver, or the garlic or the carrot.....
I bought a bunch of ground beef heart so i'll be working on feeding them that as well.....
but, no, i don't obsess about what i feed them, ie try to get the right % of organ meat, vs fish, vs suppliments.
SisMorphine wrote:Heather: Whole prey model is actually throwing an entire animal at your dog: though not all include the fur and/or skin, it does include all of the innards and such.
I feed RMBS for breakfast (usually chicken quarters though I will throw in pork hocks or ribs on occassion) and a "mush" for dinner. I prefer my mush to be homemade, but working 7 days a week does not allow me that luxury, so I instead feed Bravo with a few supplements.
SisMorphine wrote:Heather: Whole prey model is actually throwing an entire animal at your dog: though not all include the fur and/or skin, it does include all of the innards and such.
I feed RMBS for breakfast (usually chicken quarters though I will throw in pork hocks or ribs on occassion) and a "mush" for dinner. I prefer my mush to be homemade, but working 7 days a week does not allow me that luxury, so I instead feed Bravo with a few supplements.
cheekymunkee wrote:Dogs dont necissarly NEED red meat, just protein. I know many dogs who have lived their entire lives on poultry & have done just fine.
amazincc wrote:I'm interested in an explanation... why is RED meat so vital?
...Even in areas where poultries are a readily available food source you just do not see wolves eating poultry on any kind of regular basis. I even read about a breed of African wolf who had some kind of fowl (can't remember what) readily available and instead ate a diet that consisted of 90% RATS!
...But to me seeing what wild wolves, who do have a choice of what they eat, are choosing to eat as a species tells me that there is something about red meat that they need/want/crave, and therefore I think it's an important aspect of the diet.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users