Update:

Panting Pooches consistently serves 10+ countries on 6 continents every week! Welcome to every one across the planet!

Monday, June 6, 2016

Do Better

I want to start off with this note written by a snake keeper in Tucson, the message applies to anyone who has any kind of animal...

 


This is a message we all need to take to heart and come back to on a regular basis.  Having worked with animals professionally for the past 10 years, I've met a lot of boneheads who let their ego get in the way of bettering their animals health.  Guess what, I was one of those boneheads for a while! I thought my medium quality kibble was just perfect for Pepe and saw no reason to change my ways.  I'm glad I got over myself and decided to start learning about pet health in new avenues, for the sake of my animals.

 Most of you know I have been making my own dogfood for almost 2 years now.  When I saw 'make' I mean I buy all of my ingredients and formulate each dog's food based on their weight and individual needs.  Each dog has a laminated chart kept in the kitchen so I have a quick reference of who needs what in their food.  BUT this post isn't about their homemade food because I want to ease into this. (Their homemade food consists of them eating raw meat, raw bones, organs, chicken necks... because that's what a canid is supposed to eat!)  Instead, this is about our one day a week where they don't eat homemade raw.  The picture below isn't staged, I decided to snap a pic while making their breakfast this morning.  The clear bag of greeny stuff is Honest Kitchen's Preference Base.  This is not a complete meal but rather needs protein mixed in to be a complete meal.  Off to the left is a contained of dehydrated duck eggs.  These are eggs from our ducks, scrambled, then dehydrated.  Eggs are a perfect protein source and I even feed them raw about 3x a week. To the right of the eggs is a small container of dehydrated venison.  I belong to a raw co-op for southern Arizona, where we use buying power to order large amounts, like sometimes close to 4,000lbs of meat, and then get better prices for everyone.  My venison/elk blend is only $2/lb!! So I dehydrate a few pounds to use as another protein mix-in with this food.  

Now since everything is dehydrated, it needs to be reconstituted with water.  Water is after all, extremely important and yet kibble is cooked and cooked and cooked until it is essentially devoid of nutrients including water.  BUT I don't use regular ol' water in this mix.  I have started making my own kefir water the past few months. Say whhhhhat?  Most of us know about that yummy smooth milk kefir sold in stores but kefir can also be made in water, which saves a LOT of calories and great for anyone with dairy intolerances. Cow's milk isn't good for dogs or cats anyways, goat milk is much easier for them to digest.  Where can you make your own water kefir? You can start with some cultures from Cultures for Health.  This is what I got and I love it! They also have cultures for milk kefir too! The cultures to make your own kefir can be re-used over and over so I tend to have excess since I always have a batch of kefir fermenting on the counter. I like to call my jug of kefir my 'moonshine jug' and blow across the top of it trying to jug out some tunes :) Sidebar: I bought it for about $6 at the local home brewery shop!

So all mixed up, the food looks pretty great doesn't it? Doesn't that look a lot healthier than kibble? It smells pretty amazing too!



My point in all this is that along with everything else in the world, veterinary medicine and nutrition continues to change for the better.  We need to set aside our own mindsets of 'Well Fido has eaten the same bag of kibble for 5 years and he's fine."  Well I'm sure I could survive solely on McDonald's too but that doesn't mean that I should or that it's good for me.

I will eventually make a post showing what my dog's do eat 6 days a week.  The freezer space needed in order to stock up when prices are good, the process of weighing out each dog's food along with their food charts, and nutrition books by veterinarians that can lead you into better understanding of how you're feeding your animals.