Saturday, December 10, 2011

Homemade Dog Food: A recipe of Canine Allergies

Does your dog have skin and allergy issues? It might not be an environmental factor that is affecting him or her. The vast majority of dog owners feed their pets commercially processed dog food. The industrial dog food industry has seen broad increase in the last 30 years. It has truly come to be an industry with a driving purpose and focus of manufacture a profit. Health and well-being is not their mission focus. It is unmistakably easier and more profitable for industrial dog food associates to spend a lot of money and resources on creative marketing and branding than it is on quality. Images of chicken and beef surrounded by fresh vegetables with happy and vibrant dogs being attended to by doting owners is what consumers have been conditioned to see, and believe is the palpate they will have by feeding a single brand.

Unfortunately for our dogs and us, those images and ideals are far from reality. A industrial based diet is the poorest dietary selection available to you and your pet. Dog food associates love to show us images that conjure up optimal Health and well-being, but that's not an accurate portrayal of what is unmistakably happening. If they used images of what unmistakably goes into the manufacture a bag of dog food, that would scare most of us from ever purchasing and feeding a single nugget to our dogs ever again.

Homemade

The meats used in industrial grade dog foods come from the poorest sources available, sources so low in quality that they should be destroyed and not used in any type of food. But even that poor source of protein is used only in a small dose. You see the meat is unmistakably only used as part of a shell game played by the dog food companies. They need to be able to say that there is meat in their stock and that it is high in protein. What they are not telling you is that the real protein source for their kibble is plant-based. The true source of protein is provided straight through soy, soybean meal, soy flour, corn gluten meal, wheat gluten and brewers rice and not unmistakably the images of fresh meats and veggies on the exterior of the bag

Protein is protein, right? Wrong, and when it comes to our canines it certainly is not. Most of the protein comes from soy and soy products as well as grains. Dogs cannot discharge grains and soy is horrible for their immune systems and kidney function. Dog food associates over load their products with preservatives, dyes, and salt. Dyes and preservatives make dogs over eat, important to weight gain. The grains and gluten make kibble high in carbohydrates, which lead to weight gain as well. The grains, gluten, soy and preservatives are a exquisite cocktail for itchy skin and allergic conditions.

It is very coarse to hear stories of population getting their dogs off of kibble and feeding salutary homemade dog food only to see improbable results. No more constant itching, hot spots, weight lose, more energy, great breath, less waste and a host of other benefits.

As humans we once ate raw food, and at that time it was best considerable for our physiology. Our obsolete appendixes are evidence of our ancient eating habits. Dogs are no different; they once ate raw food in the wild. Then they became domesticated animals and evolved very much the way we did. Their bodies are very much accustomed to eating the way we eat. The view of feeding dogs "dog food" in relation to the time they have been living with man is a very new one, and only been a convention for a very small fraction of their existence.

Dogs are no more meant to eat "dog food" than we are meant to eat Tv dinners and fast food our entire lives. We know that as humans eating a salutary balanced diet is optimal to our well-being and that if we indulge on foods that are unhealthy for us there will be consequences. It's the same scenario with our dogs, feeding them kibble versus a natural diet of homemade ready meals with ingredients that are optimal to their well-being has its consequences.

The days of dog owners getting their guidance on what's best for their pets from giant pet food conglomerates is becoming less and less. Many dog owners are learning about proper cusine and care for their canines, and it begins with the most basic and underlying practice, what you feed him or her.

Homemade Dog Food: A recipe of Canine Allergies

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