Feed Pets Raw Food

Monday, July 9, 2007

[rawfeeding] Digest Number 11784

There are 25 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:

1a. Re: Feeding Squirrel
From: woofwoofgrrl

2a. Re: labwork
From: Casey Post

3a. Re: Feeding Giant breed puppy
From: costrowski75
3b. Re: Feeding Giant breed puppy
From: Sandee Lee

4a. Re: Getting ready to take the plunge!
From: Lyse Garant
4b. Getting ready to take the plunge!
From: costrowski75

5a. Re: frozen burning more calories
From: Eileen Dover

6a. Re: Huma Risks
From: costrowski75
6b. Re: Huma Risks
From: Theresa

7a. Re: Squid?
From: Bearhair
7b. Re: Squid?
From: temy1102
7c. Re: Squid?
From: costrowski75
7d. Re: Squid?
From: Lyse Garant
7e. Re: Squid?
From: costrowski75

8a. Re: picky eater
From: wenigj
8b. Re: picky eater
From: Linda

9a. I wonder if I am doing the right thing........
From: Linda Edgington
9b. Re: I wonder if I am doing the right thing........
From: Giselle

10a. Re: Non Poopers
From: mob1043

11.1. Re: Fish
From: mob1043
11.2. Re: Fish
From: costrowski75
11.3. Re: Fish
From: Lyse Garant
11.4. Re: Fish
From: costrowski75

12a. Re: Needing help on my second night of raw
From: Bearhair

13a. Re: (Giselle) Needing help on my second night of raw
From: Eve


Messages
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1a. Re: Feeding Squirrel
Posted by: "woofwoofgrrl" cmc4lists1@gastrounit.com woofwoofgrrl
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:04 pm ((PDT))

Bill,

Catching up on email so someone else may have already asked...have you
had any trouble with your dogs picking up parasites or other diseases
from eating the fresh killed squirrels? One of my Whippets is quite a
squirrel catcher and I've wondered if I should just let him enjoy his
kill or not?

His most recent kill he would have had to leave behind no matter what
tho! We were visiting my college Alma Mater when he ran off, disappeared
for longer than I was comfortable with and then reappeared with a
squirrel in his mouth! LOL! OOPS! He caught me a souvinier of my visit!
:) I think I would have preferred a new sweatshirt! I wouldn't let him
take it in the car - although I'm sure it would have made the long drive
home much more enjoyable from his perspective!

Christine

carnesbill wrote:
> --- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "akita6691" <kyharris@...> wrote:
>> What's the word on squirrel? Thanks.
>
> My dogs AND cats eat squirrels at every opportunity. Of course they
> have to catch them first but they do pretty regularly. The cats seem
> to be better than the dogs at catching them but they usually only eat
> half a squirrel and a dog will eat the other half.

Messages in this topic (6)
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2a. Re: labwork
Posted by: "Casey Post" mikken@neo.rr.com mikkeny
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:07 pm ((PDT))


> *** Carrie has been overwhelmed with personal matters lately, but
> I'll drop in quickly to say that your vet needs to put down the
> crack pipe.

And *this* is why I love Carrie...

Casey

Messages in this topic (18)
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3a. Re: Feeding Giant breed puppy
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:16 pm ((PDT))

"nathaliebiron" <nathaliebiron@...> wrote:
>
> Hi everyone!!! Can you give me some advices. I'll have my mastiff
> puppy next year and I want to be ready !!
*****
Excuse me...NEXT YEAR?
Like five and a half months from now next year?
Feeding a species appropriate raw diet is not nearly so hard as to
require five plus months of preparation. You will drive yourself to
distraction, fussing so furiously this far away from the big day.

I recommend you use this lead time to become completely familiar
with the list archives:

http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/join

You should also investigate
http://rawfed.com
http://rawfeddogs.net
http://rawlearning.com
http://www.rawmeatybones.com

And because raising a pup right is about more than just a good diet,
you should join one or both of the following and read their files
and recommended links as well:

jstsayno2vaccs@yahoogroups.com
Subscribe: jstsayno2vaccs-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Unsubscribe: jstsayno2vaccs-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

TruthAboutVaccines@yahoogroups.com
Subscribe: TruthAboutVaccines-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Unsubscribe: TruthAboutVaccines-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

Chris O

Messages in this topic (3)
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3b. Re: Feeding Giant breed puppy
Posted by: "Sandee Lee" rlee@plix.com mariasmom2001
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:28 pm ((PDT))

>From: "nathaliebiron" <nathaliebiron@yahoo.ca>


>Hi everyone!!! Can you give me some advices. I'll have my mastiff
>puppy next year and I want to be ready !! Is somebody who have a giant
>breed, how did you start, what did you give your puppy (ex.: chicken
>neck, chicken leg... etc)

Same way you would feed any other puppy...lots and lots of meat, a little
edible bone and a bit of organs! Easy!!!

A couple of recent weaning/puppy feeding messages.....
http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/135757
http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/135847

Do a search in the archives where you will find lots to occupy you for the
next few months!! :))

Sandee & the Dane Gang


Messages in this topic (3)
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4a. Re: Getting ready to take the plunge!
Posted by: "Lyse Garant" lyse_garant@yahoo.com lyse_garant
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:18 pm ((PDT))

My common sense answer to this PLEASE FEEL FREE to feed a partial raw diet...OK all of you experts and fanatics, who of you will deny that a partial raw diet is worse than a 0% raw diet????

costrowski75 <Chriso75@AOL.COM> wrote: Lori Poirier <chaparraltrail@...> wrote:

> Isn't there something to be gained from some raw meat, for those
of us who are not going to be feeding a full raw diet? I am asking
because I don't want to give partial raw, if it would be harmful, and
I doubt my current lifestyle would allow full raw feeding.
****
I suspect it makes the human feel a lot less guilty about feeding
kibble. Too bad it does little to mitigate the damage that any
carbohydrate-based pseudofood does.
Chris O


Lyse


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Messages in this topic (11)
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4b. Getting ready to take the plunge!
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:47 pm ((PDT))

Lyse Garant <lyse_garant@...> wrote:
>
> My common sense answer to this PLEASE FEEL FREE to feed a partial
raw diet...OK all of you experts and fanatics, who of you will deny
that a partial raw diet is worse than a 0% raw diet????
*****
I see nothing sensible about continuing to feed kibble when easy,
available, affordable and healthy alternatives have been provided.

If you think feeding a species appropriate diet is the realm of
fanaticism, then you have not been paying much attention to the
broad range of personalities and lifestyles that support raw feeding
on this list. I would suggest using the term fanatic diminishes the
often life-saving results of raw food.

The rawfeeding list was not created to discuss the relative merits
of kibble, or to provide halfway measures. One would hope the
subscribers are here because they feed raw, because they want to
learn more about feeding raw, because they want to provide better
nutrition for their domestic carnivores. If a person has subscribed
to the list to learn how to add raw food to an existing kibble diet,
then perhaps a wrong choice has been made.

This is a great place to learn about feeding raw. If that is not
one's goal, then there are other lists available.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (11)
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5a. Re: frozen burning more calories
Posted by: "Eileen Dover" millsmontreal@gmail.com wonderpei
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:18 pm ((PDT))

Depends I think. In the Winter I try to never serve frozen meat
because I fear it could help make a dog hypothermic, so I always feed
room temp meat in the Winter months.... although the Inuit feed frozen
fish to their dogs all the time. If you live in a temperate climate,
I can't see it harming a dog really.
Cheers
MM


>
> i've been searching the archives with no definitive answer for my
> question:
> feeding frozen meat takes more calories to process because it must
> first be warmed by the body, is this extra use of calories significant?
>
> thanks in advance,
> scherzo
>


Messages in this topic (2)
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6a. Re: Huma Risks
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 8:25 pm ((PDT))

Eve <loulou_bean@...> wrote:

> So here's my question--I am so used to giving my dog
> kisses on the mouth--I don't know if anyone thinks it
> gross, but I just love him to bits.
*****
I doubt this is as uncommon as you think. We're all pretty nuts
about our dogs.


> I don't know if this is a stupid question, but, now
> that he's on the raw diet, should I not do that any
> longer? Can I get sick?
*****
Why would his mouth be any dirtier now than before? Kibble is no
paragon of virtue! I've no doubt that teeth and gums kept clean and
healthy by appropriate food provide fewer pockets of bacterial
overgrowth than does a mouth of leftover kibble slop. Talk about
euw gross.

If you are worried about getting sick (and it would a worry, not a
threat) simply wipe your dog's mouth when he's done eating. And if
his ears worry you, wipe them as well.

Chris O

Messages in this topic (4)
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6b. Re: Huma Risks
Posted by: "Theresa" bluerose4109@yahoo.com bluerose4109
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:02 pm ((PDT))

I have not yet begun feeding raw, but I am interested in learning more, so I joined the group.

I can not offer you any words of wisdom from experience as a raw feeder, but as a dog kisser I do have some thoughts.

I work in the medical field and there is actually an antibiotoic found naturally in a dogs saliva. Not so in the human mouth. So if you are concerned about catching something from your dog:dont. Althought it is possible, it is very highly improbable. It is much more likely that you will catch something from kissing a human than a dog. So, my advice is Pucker up to the dogs without worry, but after kissing a human, brush your teeth and rinse your mouth.

Theresa


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Messages in this topic (4)
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7a. Re: Squid?
Posted by: "Bearhair" bearhair@spamcop.net bearhair61
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:02 pm ((PDT))

tammy wrote:

>> i imagine ink is okay for dogs to eat, since it's served in fancy
>> restaurants for people to eat.

Maggie wrote:

>So are onions and chocolate but I wouldn't feed either to my dogs...

And now, an example of a helpful response:

According to Oceans Alive, their "data indicate that contaminant levels in
[Longfin Squid and Northern Shortfin Squid] do not warrant a consumption
advisory. Therefore adults and children can safely eat this fish at least
once a week."

However, "There is insufficient data on contaminant levels in [Market Squid].
In this case, EPA and FDA recommend that people not eat the same kind of fish
more than once a week, to protect against excessive intake of mercury. "

They have pictures so you can identify the squid on hand.

>http://www.oceansalive.org/eat.cfm?subnav=fishpage&group=Squid

Hormel Foods (of all places!) teaches us that Squid Ink is "[a] deep black
substance extracted from the ink sack of an ocean squid, a sea dweller that
is also known as Calamari. The Cuddlefish, which also has ink sacks, is
another species living in the ocean that is similar and related to the Squid.
Both species use the ink as a means to escape predators, emitting this dark
cloudy substance as danger approaches in hopes of intimidating the oncoming
danger. The ink from Squid or Cuddlefish is used as a food coloring and
flavoring, providing a very dark black color and a salty tasting flavor to
foods such as pasta or rice. It is also served as a condiment, first being
dried in an oven, crumbled into tiny particles, seasoned with salt and then
used on a variety of foods. Squid ink can be extracted from fresh squid or it
is packaged and available in some Italian food stores. To color pasta or
rice, add the ink to the water as the food cooks."
>http://www.hormel.com/kitchen/glossary.asp?id=37823

Since squid can be eaten raw (ala sushi), I think that feeding a squidling to
your dog would be quite a fun thing to catch on video! Especially if your dog
likes to toss their food onto their head!

This concludes the squidgy class of the evening.

Lora
Evanston, IL


Messages in this topic (15)
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7b. Re: Squid?
Posted by: "temy1102" tammy.a.jp@gmail.com temy1102
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:04 pm ((PDT))

that's true, but then again onions and chocolate are not part of a
prey-model diet. if squid = prey, then ink = delicious. but on that
note, is there any part of a prey animal that should not be eaten? i
mean, for humans when eating poisonous snakes, the head and guts
should be avoided. do dogs naturally avoid them too due to their
acute senses? curious.

tammy & grover

Messages in this topic (15)
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7c. Re: Squid?
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:33 pm ((PDT))

"temy1102" <tammy.a.jp@...> wrote:
>
> that's true, but then again onions and chocolate are not part of a
> prey-model diet. if squid = prey, then ink = delicious. but on
that
> note, is there any part of a prey animal that should not be eaten?
*****
I am sorry to be a partypooper, but arguing about what parts of a
squid are valuable to a dog is like arguing about the quantity of
angels dancing on the head of that proverbial pin.

The likelihood that a wolf would find itself in the position to catch
a squid (the notion is preposterous) is slim to none. If a wolf was
somehow on a beach onto which a squid had washed up dead, the
question might be not would the wolf eat the squid but rather would
the wolf roll on the dead squid.

If one is feeding whole prey, I guess the first thing is to determine
if what you got there is prey. If it's not, end of discussion. If
it is, feed it. Let the dog decide. And report back in with
results. Inquiring minds want to know.

Chris O

Messages in this topic (15)
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7d. Re: Squid?
Posted by: "Lyse Garant" lyse_garant@yahoo.com lyse_garant
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:42 pm ((PDT))

***MODERATOR'S NOTE: PLEASE REMEMBER TO TRIM YOUR MESSAGES.***


OK, dogs are not shark.

costrowski75 <Chriso75@AOL.COM> wrote: "temy1102" <tammy.a.jp@...> wrote:
>
> that's true, but then again onions and chocolate are not part of a
> prey-model diet. if squid = prey, then ink = delicious. but on
that
> note, is there any part of a prey animal that should not be eaten?
*****
I am sorry to be a partypooper, but arguing about what parts of a
squid are valuable to a dog is like arguing about the quantity of
angels dancing on the head of that proverbial pin.

The likelihood that a wolf would find itself in the position to catch
a squid (the notion is preposterous) is slim to none. If a wolf was
somehow on a beach onto which a squid had washed up dead, the
question might be not would the wolf eat the squid but rather would
the wolf roll on the dead squid.

If one is feeding whole prey, I guess the first thing is to determine
if what you got there is prey. If it's not, end of discussion. If
it is, feed it. Let the dog decide. And report back in with
results. Inquiring minds want to know.

Chris O


Lyse


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Messages in this topic (15)
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7e. Re: Squid?
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:50 pm ((PDT))

Lyse Garant <lyse_garant@...> wrote:
> OK, dogs are not shark.
>
*****
By golly, I think that says it all.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (15)
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8a. Re: picky eater
Posted by: "wenigj" wenigj@aol.com wenigj
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:02 pm ((PDT))

"I once gave my Rott. mix a raw
> beef bone and she had major accidents in the house for a week, so I'm
> nervous!"
> Becky

My 10 month old pup did fine with everything, but I moved really
slowly...chicken for about 2 weeks, then pork, then beef, etc because
my older girl was a little more sensitive to the changes. All in all
we had some upset (one day I think, with my older girl only) the first
week and I was almost ready to quit, then with advice from this group
and small adjustments, it all worked out pretty quickly. My pup is
still a more cautious eater, and slower to finish even tho they both
are fed about the same amounts.
If your pups have problems, post on the list. There are some very
experienced and knowledgeable people on this list who try to answer
questions and help each person find a remedy that is usually pretty
straightforward. I was nervous to start this, but now it going well
and pretty easy to do. You can start simple and as you learn more
about your rawfeeding and the needs of your dogs you can make the
changes that make sense for you...all while having this wonderful
resource to guide you thru the process.

Jill W

Messages in this topic (20)
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8b. Re: picky eater
Posted by: "Linda" aumicapa@peoplepc.com micap12000
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:11 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Sandee Lee" <rlee@...> wrote:
>Hi Becky,

First 2 days with my GSD I sprinkled with garlic and seared. Worked
great.
Linda and the kids
> Hi Becky,
>
> Warm it, slice into the meat, sprinkle with Parmesan!
>
> Sandee & the Dane Gang
>
> From: "Becky Brooks (Marsh)" <kidcreations1@...>
>
>
> We are new to rawfeeding and have just given our 4 dogs their first
> chicken leg quarters today. One ate it right away, one ate it after
> about 1 hour of picking at it, burying it, and digging it up again,
> and two of the dogs (each 10 months old) just licked theirs and didn't
> know what to do. How do we encourage those two to eat? Any advice is
> appreciated!
>


Messages in this topic (20)
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9a. I wonder if I am doing the right thing........
Posted by: "Linda Edgington" lindagail849@yahoo.com lindagail849
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:03 pm ((PDT))

Since I have started raw feeding about 8 days ago, everything seemed to be doing ok, but my dog Gizzy is picking on my cat really bad. I am worried about her. So far I have been feeding chicken and pork, and I can't find any organs, anywhere in this town. So is she ok, just feeding what I am feeding her? And whats up with my dog?

Linda


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Messages in this topic (2)
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9b. Re: I wonder if I am doing the right thing........
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:30 pm ((PDT))

Hi, Linda!
Is Sass still trying to steal his food? ; )

Raw food is perceived by dogs (rightly so) as of higher value than
kibble. So, he may be protecting his cherished food from the feline
predator. Maybe he never viewed her as a rival before.

I'd feed them separately, each in a crate or confined somehow, so that
neither has to feel in competition with the other for the good stuff.

In most supermarkets, you can get little tubs of chicken liver and
packs of mixed heart and gizzards. While not the epitome of organ
variety, they *are all organs and can satisfy the requirements. Ask
the meat 'man' in the back what days they are usually available. If
you buy whole chickens, usually the heart, gizzard and liver are
packed inside the cavity.
TC
Giselle

> Since I have started raw feeding about 8 days ago, everything seemed
to be doing ok, but my dog Gizzy is picking on my cat really bad. I am
worried about her. So far I have been feeding chicken and pork, and I
can't find any organs, anywhere in this town. So is she ok, just
feeding what I am feeding her? And whats up with my dog?
>
> Linda


Messages in this topic (2)
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10a. Re: Non Poopers
Posted by: "mob1043" ynotbeastar@marykay.com mob1043
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:04 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, Bearhair <bearhair@...> wrote:
>
> You wrote:
>
> >My 2 bullmastiff pups aren't pooping. I have seen some chalky and
I know that means to
> >much bone, but nothing like I am used to with kibble of course.
What can I give them to
> >loosen them up a bit? My one BM takes her time eating and her
sister gobbles it up
> >practically whole.
> >
> >Michele
>
> How long have you been on raw? What are you feeding them?
>
> Do you walk them and have the opportunity to SEE them have a bowel
movement
> or do they have the run of the yard and you look around every day
or two?
>
> Poop from raw-fed dogs are smaller, denser, and turn white and
disintegrate
> in about a day in the sun. Unless the only way they can poop is
with you
> present . . . they're doing it and you're seeing the benefits of
feeding food
> that is almost wholly digestible!
>
> Chalky poop is only a valid diagnostic tool for bone percentage
when it is
> observed immediately upon it seeing the light of day - a few hours
later and
> a normal poop will have already started turning white and chalky.
>
> Lora
> Evanston, IL
>
thank you for your response. My dogs have a yard that they go potty
in and I have noticed some white chalky, but nothing like what I was
used to.

I know it is not unusual they go less, they certainly don't seem
uncomfortable at all. It just seemed so odd that I needed to ask.

Thank you again,
Michele


Messages in this topic (4)
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11.1. Re: Fish
Posted by: "mob1043" ynotbeastar@marykay.com mob1043
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:04 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "costrowski75" <Chriso75@...> wrote:
>
> "mob1043" <ynotbeastar@> wrote:
> >
> > The fish thing did not go well by either dogs or cats any
suggestions
> on how I can slip it
> > in...just a little added with meat meal perhaps?
> *****
> Fish is not necessarily welcomed; don't take it personally. Neither
> species needs fish so if you're offering a good amount of protein
> variety you should not despair if your pets refuse fish.
>
> Yes, adding a little fish to a meal you know to be successful might
> help.
> Chris O
>
Thank you for all of your suggestions. what I meant by it didn't go
well meant simply they ignored it...I mean like the white elephant in
the room ignored it-lol.

I will try as you say a little bit in their reg. meal or giving
without snacks for the next meal. It was my understanding it was an
important addition to their diet. If it is not, then I won't worry
about it. I do have to say my cats turned their nose at it as well.

Michele

Messages in this topic (138)
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11.2. Re: Fish
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:23 pm ((PDT))

"mob1043" <ynotbeastar@...> wrote:
It was my understanding it was an
> important addition to their diet. If it is not, then I won't worry
> about it. I do have to say my cats turned their nose at it as well.
*****
Look at it this way: if you have access to and are feeding if not
regularly at least sometimes, or at least are thinking seriously
about feeding chicken, beef, pork, lamb, goat, rabbit, turkey, and/or
duck, quail, emu, bison, ostrich, venison and any of the other
protein options not mentioned, fish is just one more of many choices
and your pets are NOT hurting for the lack if it if you choose to
pass it by.

If however you are feeding chicken and beyond that protein variety is
pretty darn hard to find, then yes, you should consider finding at
least one species of fish your dog and cats will eat.

My guess is your options are somewhere comfortably in the middle.

If you can get high quality fish into your animals, by all means feed
it. But don't lose sleep over it.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (138)
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11.3. Re: Fish
Posted by: "Lyse Garant" lyse_garant@yahoo.com lyse_garant
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:37 pm ((PDT))

all good all good, but what in your message addresses the cooked aspect of the canned items, and what happens to kids who repent???

costrowski75 <Chriso75@AOL.COM> wrote: "mob1043" <ynotbeastar@...> wrote:
It was my understanding it was an
> important addition to their diet. If it is not, then I won't worry
> about it. I do have to say my cats turned their nose at it as well.
*****
Look at it this way: if you have access to and are feeding if not
regularly at least sometimes, or at least are thinking seriously
about feeding chicken, beef, pork, lamb, goat, rabbit, turkey, and/or
duck, quail, emu, bison, ostrich, venison and any of the other
protein options not mentioned, fish is just one more of many choices
and your pets are NOT hurting for the lack if it if you choose to
pass it by.

If however you are feeding chicken and beyond that protein variety is
pretty darn hard to find, then yes, you should consider finding at
least one species of fish your dog and cats will eat.

My guess is your options are somewhere comfortably in the middle.

If you can get high quality fish into your animals, by all means feed
it. But don't lose sleep over it.
Chris O


Lyse


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Messages in this topic (138)
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11.4. Re: Fish
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:49 pm ((PDT))

Lyse Garant <lyse_garant@...> wrote:
>
> all good all good, but what in your message addresses the cooked
aspect of the canned items,
*****
I don't know that canned items need to be discussed. If they're fish
and the dog likes them, feed them. If they're canned and the dog does
not, don't. Whether we should feed canned fish regularly, or
sometimes or not at all is a different discussion, don't you think?


and what happens to kids who repent???
*****
Well heck! Whatever they're repenting, they should have a second
chance.

What might they be repenting?
Chris O

Messages in this topic (138)
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12a. Re: Needing help on my second night of raw
Posted by: "Bearhair" bearhair@spamcop.net bearhair61
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:04 pm ((PDT))

Eve wrote:

>So following last night's event where I started my 17
>lb pekingese on a slab of steak (realizing it was too
>small as he scarfed it down whole),

Then that would be a medallion, not a slab.

Okay, you've missed some basics, so we'll have to catch you up fast. here's
the recommended high points:

1. Amount: 2 - 4 % of your dog's ideal adult body weight, depending on his
activity and metabolism, per day. Watch for body changes (ribs, waist, etc.)
over the next few weeks to determine what the right amount is for him. For
those mathematically challenged, 2% of 17 pounds is about 5.5 ounces and 4%
is 11 ounces.

2. Throw away all kibble and canned dog food.

3. Purchase a whole chicken or leg quarters from the grocery store, ensuring
that they are NOT enhanced with a salt solution or broth (retained water is
okay). Cut up the whole chicken into quarters. (Note: chicken is chosen only
for availability and price - it has no special properties).

4. If the chicken quarter is approximately the appropriate weight for a meal,
hand it to the dog, then step back and occupy yourself with something else
instead of staring at the dog - it will lessen the likelihood that he'll try
to swallow the entire thing in one gulp, thinking that you're about to take
it away.

5. If the chicken quarter is not enough for one meal, feed more. If the
chicken quarter is too much for one meal, either cut it up further, feed it
as is until the dog is full (this works if your dog self-regulates its
intake), or feed it until the dog eats an appropriate portion and then trade
the dog for the remaining meat using his favorite treat. If you can.

6. Continue to feed chicken for a week or so, until you are comfortable with
the concept and your dog is comfortable digesting it (you may see some loose
stool initially, but it should clear up before you proceed to the next step.
You will feed the entire chicken - meat, skin, and bones together. I rip the
excess fat off, when present in chunks, but don't get crazed about it. Take
all of the giblets (the stuff inside of the chicken) and freeze them for
later.

7. Slowly introduce another meat into the dog's meals. Pork is another
available and inexpensive option. Replace a portion of the chicken meat with
an equal amount of pork meat, increasing it each day. Continue to monitor
your comfort and his digestion. You can feed any pork as long as it is raw
and not enhanced with a salt solution or broth and not smoked or cured. Pork
chops (omit the bone), hunks of pork cut from a pork roast or pork shoulder,
etc.

8. When your dog is ready to eat full meals of pork, start adding pork bones.
Any bone that has been sawn is potentially sharp, so we prefer to feed the
bones within pork shoulders and other bone-in roasts, or pork ribs. Pork feet
are also tasty but ride the fence between a meal and a treat because there's
not much meat to them.

9. Now pull out those frozen giblets from the first week or two. Common items
include chicken necks, hearts, gizzard and liver. Out of these, liver is the
only item that is considered an "organ" for the purposes of raw feeding. The
rest is considered meat. In general, heart from any animal is quite rich, so
it's best to feed as a portion of a meal until you know how your dog's
digestion will react.

10. Introducing organ to the meal is done as you've already learned - a
little at a time, with monitoring. Some dogs hate the texture of thawed
liver, but will eat it frozen. Over time, your dog should be fed liver as
about 5% of its total intake (per month, per year, per lifetime), with other
organs making up another 5%. Other organs are identified using the "squidgy
rule" - if you touch and it feels "squidgy," it's an organ. They include
(depending on the animal) kidney, spleen, pancreas, reproductive organs,
lung, and brain. Heart, tongue, testicles, tails, feet, and heads are
considered meat.

11. After pork, you're free to pick another meat, just introduce it as you've
learned, a little at a time, with monitoring. Common choices include beef,
bison/buffalo, goat, lamb, mutton, veal, turkey, duck, goose, elk, venison,
fish, and rabbit. There are some additional rules for feeding wild game and
fish - keep reading the messages on the list and you'll pick those up, or ask
when you're ready.

12. Weight-bearing bones of large livestock (beef, bison, buffalo, elk,
venison, and possibly mutton) are stronger than your dog's teeth and will
break them. Depending on your dog, you can either trim the meat off and toss
the bone away, or feed the meat and bone together and remove the bone when
the meat is gone.

Returning to your post:

>he is giving half a chicken a try as we speak.

Okay, you've already fed steak, but stick with chicken now for awhile so it
will be easy to identify a problem if he has any digestive issues.

>I'm not sure what the deal is but he has been licking
>the chicken for the past 25 minutes, not really
>chewing into it. The only he thing he is chewing on is
>the skin, but not ingesting it. I feel like he has no
>idea what to do with it. He definitely is more
>interested in the skin than the meat.
>He he supposed to eat the skin?

He will, as soon as he learns how to do it. Give him time, and perhaps a
smaller portion of chicken. I recommend a thigh - good amount of meat and an
approachable bone.

>How do I get him to actually chew and ingest the meat?

Leave him alone, he'll figure it out.

>How long should every night's feeding take? I'm used
>to him eating within 5 minutes so I'm not sure what to
>do. Should I take the food up within a certain period
>of time?

Only if he's not really interested in it. Right now, he has to learn how to
eat real food.

>Also, should I keep the wings in tact? I thought I
>read that they could be a choking hazard.

Fed alone, to some dogs, they can be. Keep them attached and your dog will
chew off portions that he can swallow.

>And I think I'm looking at the chicken's ribs--they
>are pretty small and skinny--is this a choking hazard?

Only if you feed them to him one at a time.

>Is he supposed to chew and ingest the chicken ribs?

He will. Think about your dog as a mini-wolf. He would catch and kill the
chicken, then eat it. Period.

>I pulled the insides out of the chicken--You'll have
>to forgive me--I don't know what parts each is. They
>all kind of look the same. It just looks like kidney
>shaped pieces. There are a ton of them. How do I feed
>him the insides?

See Step 9 above.

>I've noticed after he chews on a beef bone (and he is
>now doing it again with the chicken)--he goes into his
>crate and lies on his side and scratches at it, growls
>and mushes his face on it. Is this normal behavior?
>What is it?

He's happy, is enjoying his food, and is delighted that he has such a smart
mom that's also a great hunter for the pack!

>One more thing...What is the best raw meaty bone for a
>pekingese? A few options would be great.

See Step 12. Over time, feed as many parts of as many animals as you can
comfortably and affordably obtain. There is no "best" part.

Lora
Evanston, IL


Messages in this topic (4)
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13a. Re: (Giselle) Needing help on my second night of raw
Posted by: "Eve" loulou_bean@yahoo.com loulou_bean
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 9:05 pm ((PDT))

Giselle,
Thanks so much for all the advice. This has been a
bit stressful, but it seems to be getting better.
It's hard to find detailed info. about feeding, but it
really seems we have to figure it out as we go along.
Cutting ribbon strips into the chicken seems like a
great idea. Thanks for the help.
-Eve


--- Giselle <megan.giselle@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi, Eve!
> Slowed him down a bit, did we? ; )
>
> He's new to raw, and its not shaped the way he's
> used to, nor is it of
> an easy size to scarf!
>
> We just need to give him a bit of help to figure out
> where to start
> chewing. Its good that he's working on the skin, it
> means he's not
> into giving up.
>
> As far as his antics with the chicken, who knows? It
> may just be his
> way of showing happiness, or frustration.
>
> Take the half chicken. I know, how to get it from
> him?! You know those
> squidgy things in the paper package you took out of
> the chicken? Offer
> him a chunk of heart or the gizzards, not the really
> squidgy red
> thing, thats liver and you should give him only a
> tiny bit at each
> meal. When you offer this special treat to him, lure
> him out of the
> crate and close the door. Put him outside if you
> need to, to get the
> chicken out of the crate.
>
> Take a pair of kitchen shears or a knife and cut
> into the meat, making
> ribbon like strips that are still attached to the
> bone. This will give
> him plenty of pieces to grab onto and chew. You
> could remove part of
> the skin, since he had a bit of trouble with it, but
> he'll learn how
> to deal with that soon, too. You can do this with
> each portion you
> give him, gradually ribboning less until he can
> figure out where to
> begin on his own.
>
> This should make it easier for him to figure the
> whole chewing thing
> out. Generally, you would want to take up the meal
> after 10-15 minutes
> or when you think he's had enough for a meal or when
> he walks away
> from it after eating all he wants. It really
> depends.
>
> As long as the wings are on the bird, they're OK to
> feed. Same with
> necks. If it isn't attached to a bigger portion, it
> encourages
> scarfing, and they could choke or have to hork up a
> whole uncrunched
> piece. The chicken ribs are OK, too. Same thing, if
> its attached to
> the bird, its good.
>
> The best raw meaty bone to feed any dog is one that
> is edible, or
> mostly so. This will vary with the size of the dog.
> Beef bones are
> referred to as tooth breakers, not good to feed.
> They are very dense,
> after all, they hold up a pretty huge critter! It is
> safe, however, to
> let your dog strip the meat from any bone that is
> too dense to
> consume, and then take it away.
> Its not that hard, really!
> TC
> Giselle
> with Bea in New Jersey
>
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > So following last night's event where I started my
> 17
> > lb pekingese on a slab of steak (realizing it was
> too
> > small as he scarfed it down whole), he is giving
> half
> > a chicken a try as we speak.
> <snip>
> I know it's only the first night,
> > but It doesn't seem as easy as everyone makes it
> out
> > to be;)
> >
> > Eve, NY
>
>



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Messages in this topic (4)
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[rawfeeding] Digest Number 11783

There are 25 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:

1a. Re: Canned Clams/fish
From: Lyse Garant
1b. Re: Canned Clams/fish
From: Giselle

2a. Re: Fermented stomach grass
From: Lyse Garant

3a. Re: Lethargic dogs
From: pelirojita

4a. Re: Pooping bone - Guidance please
From: Giselle

5a. Re: picky eater
From: wenigj
5b. Re: picky eater
From: Sandee Lee
5c. Re: picky eater
From: Becky Brooks (Marsh)
5d. Re: picky eater
From: carnesbill

6a. Re: GSD diarrhea
From: Giselle

7a. Re: labwork
From: Casey Post
7b. Re: labwork
From: Sandee Lee
7c. Re: labwork
From: cypressbunny

8a. Getting ready to take the plunge!
From: Lori Poirier
8b. Getting ready to take the plunge!
From: costrowski75

9. Feeding Giant breed puppy
From: nathaliebiron

10a. Needing help on my second night of raw
From: Eve
10b. Re: Needing help on my second night of raw
From: Giselle

11a. Re: Agression
From: Dijana

12a. Huma Risks
From: Eve
12b. Re: Huma Risks
From: cypressbunny

13a. Re: Hi guys! Some ?s about GSDs, puppies, and RAW diet :)
From: Rebecca Little

14a. Re: Tooth extraction question
From: Kasandra

15a. Re: Raw and vacations
From: patty89123

16a. Re: Feeding raw bravo food, how much to feed exactly?
From: costrowski75


Messages
________________________________________________________________________

1a. Re: Canned Clams/fish
Posted by: "Lyse Garant" lyse_garant@yahoo.com lyse_garant
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:19 pm ((PDT))

Hey, with these canned clams, canned mackeral suggestions...aren't those items COOKED?
Lyse & Guinness

Yasuko herron <sunshine_annamaria@yahoo.com> wrote:
Hi. I have seen canned squid in ink. If you were me,do you get it and feed? I was not sure about ink is ok for dog to digest so,I did not get it.

Fresh Squid,I think I saw frozen in package.I do not know if it had cartilige or not.

yassy

PS:I have fed canned clam once and my dog loved it a lot!

---------------------------------
Be a better Heartthrob. Get better relationship answers from someone who knows.
Yahoo! Answers - Check it out.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Lyse


---------------------------------
Take the Internet to Go: Yahoo!Go puts the Internet in your pocket: mail, news, photos & more.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Messages in this topic (10)
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1b. Re: Canned Clams/fish
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:58 pm ((PDT))

Hi, Lyse!
Yes, they're cooked!

I wouldn't feed cooked as a regular part of the diet, but do I keep
canned (in water) salmon, mackerel or sardines in the cupboard as a
very infrequent *emergency* meal.

Its fish, it has (soft) bones and doesn't need thawing or refrigeration.

TC
Giselle
with Bea in New Jersey


> Hey, with these canned clams, canned mackerel suggestions...aren't
those items COOKED?
> Lyse & Guinness

Messages in this topic (10)
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2a. Re: Fermented stomach grass
Posted by: "Lyse Garant" lyse_garant@yahoo.com lyse_garant
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:20 pm ((PDT))

Hey, at least you're trying! People here shouldn't be so hard on you. And I'm glad you posted your question, because now I won't make that mistake.
Lyse & Guinness

Casey Post <mikken@neo.rr.com> wrote:

>I ordered some fermented beef stomach grass from prey4pets and I have
> tried it on the dogs. Only a tablespoon to see how they reacted.
> Well that night the puppy (8 weeks old) who has been on raw now for 3
> weeks had a vomitting episode that lasted a few hours. Does anyone
> have any experience with fermented grass?

Angela,

My crew wouldn't touch it, but a friend's Rotties absolutely love the
stuff...of course, they'll eat grass out of the lawnmower, too...

They never had any trouble with it, but it sounds like it may be something
to avoid in future for your little one...

Casey


Lyse


---------------------------------
Don't get soaked. Take a quick peak at the forecast
with theYahoo! Search weather shortcut.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Messages in this topic (5)
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3a. Re: Lethargic dogs
Posted by: "pelirojita" kerrymurray7@gmail.com pelirojita
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:24 pm ((PDT))


> >
> > >My daughter switched her dogs (German Shep and corgi) to raw
> serveral months ago. They are adjusting ok to the raw diet,
> however, she says that they have lost their energy. Neither dog is
> as energetic or as playful as they used to be.
> > >
> > >
>
Would they mellow out due to heat? It's been in the 100's here and my
dogs are pretty much parked underneath the AC vents and reluctant to
move unless food is involved. My friends with dogs pretty much report
the same behavior in their animals. The only ones still raring to go
are the good desert breeds such as Australian Cattle Dogs. Is it hot
where your daughter lives? Both Corgis and GSDs are colder climate
dogs, no?

Just a thought.

Kerry
Tucson, AZ

Messages in this topic (5)
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4a. Re: Pooping bone - Guidance please
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:26 pm ((PDT))

Hi, Caren!
Hoo boy, Poor little guy!

I'd fast him for a day, maybe two. Offer plenty of water. Dose him
with Slippery Elm Bark Powder frequently during the fast days to
soothe his gut.

When you reintroduce food, give boneless meat, chicken is bland, so
its a good choice. But whatever meat he usually eats would be fine, I
think.

I'd offer meals that were 1/4 to 1/3 the size of his normal meals and
feed 3 to 4 times a day until he shows by eliminating normally and
comfortably that his digestive system is back to what it should be.

I'd feed SEBP with each meal, and gradually increase the size of the
meals as you lessen the frequency of them. And reduce the doses and
phase out the SEBP, too. I'd reintroduce bone last of all, when the
meal size is what it should be, and you are sure he is healed.

You know your dog best; so you can guess better if it was stupid
eating on his part and if you need to offer Big Food to eliminate this
problem in the future. Have you ever seen bone bits of any size in his
stool before?

Since this happened when you were gone and someone else was looking
after the dogs, maybe you need to review with your pet sitter what
they know about raw feeding in general and your instructions about
feeding and caring for the dogs in particular. Maybe have her prep and
feed the dogs a meal while you are watching one time. It might be
something different that she does, slightly different routine or where
she feeds each dog in relation to the other that affected him to gulp
a too large piece of bone. Or not. : )

It may have just been a one-in-a-million accident.

At least the bone did pass! My first Schipperke used to swallow
regularly objects that wouldn't. Had several scary, expensive
operations to remove said objects. And innumerable sleepless nights
spent waiting for objects that would eventually pass. Finally, I had
to keep him on lead with me or put him in an ex-pen to prevent him the
run of the house. I've often wondered what effect a raw diet would
have had on his problem.

TC
Giselle
with Bea in New Jersey

> Dear list members -
> Has anyone experienced this problem? Upon my return home today
from Northern Virginia, my pet sitter called me to say that one of my
Cavalier boys had what she thought to be a bone or rock obstructing
his rectum, and he couldn't poop. Since I was just a few hours away,
I told her I would take care of it when I got home.
> Sure enough, when I got home the bone was half-way out of his
rectum, covered by yellow pus, and his bottom looked red and puckered,
like a pair of lips - sorry if it's graphic. I just trimmed his nails
yesterday so I KNOW this wasn't an issue with him until today. I have
removed the bone, put hydrogen peroxide on his bottom, iced him down
to reduce the swelling, and given him an antibiotic. It's barely
bleeding, if I put pressure on it and the swelling IS going down.
> Is there anything else I need to do to help him out with his sore
bottom? Is there anything I can do to prevent this in the future? (it
was a chicken bone from a chicken leg).
> Thanks for your help:)
> Caren O'Connor
> Nansemond Cavaliers

Messages in this topic (10)
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5a. Re: picky eater
Posted by: "wenigj" wenigj@aol.com wenigj
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:43 pm ((PDT))

How do we encourage those two to eat? Any advice is
> appreciated!
> Becky
Hi Becky,
I'm pretty new to raw feeding as well and introduced my two dogs
about 2 months ago. I also had a 10 month old and started on chicken
quarters...she looked at it and licked it a little and pretty much
that was it. After a few meals she was eating like a champ. At the
time I was still feeding her two meals a day, so we were starting with
a little smaller amount each time, but for the first meal I pulled
pieces off the chicken and hand fed for awhile, also made sure the
older dog was inside so she would'nt be distracted. She ate the pieces
I hand fed, then I held the bone while she ate, then I finally put it
down and let her finish. It really only took about 5-10 minutes.
Second time, I broke the bone into several pieces and ribboned the
meat a bit before I gave it to her, again separated the dogs so she
could concentrate on her own meal. Don't remember exactly, but about
the 3rd or 4th mealtime, she figured it out. She still eats much
slower than my older dog (13 years old) and when I introduce a new
food she takes her time figuring it out.
Good luck!
Jill W.
>


Messages in this topic (18)
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5b. Re: picky eater
Posted by: "Sandee Lee" rlee@plix.com mariasmom2001
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:18 pm ((PDT))

Hi Becky,

Warm it, slice into the meat, sprinkle with Parmesan!

Sandee & the Dane Gang

From: "Becky Brooks (Marsh)" <kidcreations1@yahoo.com>


We are new to rawfeeding and have just given our 4 dogs their first
chicken leg quarters today. One ate it right away, one ate it after
about 1 hour of picking at it, burying it, and digging it up again,
and two of the dogs (each 10 months old) just licked theirs and didn't
know what to do. How do we encourage those two to eat? Any advice is
appreciated!

Messages in this topic (18)
________________________________________________________________________

5c. Re: picky eater
Posted by: "Becky Brooks (Marsh)" kidcreations1@yahoo.com kidcreations1
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:23 pm ((PDT))

***MODERATOR'S NOTE: TRIM YOUR POSTS OR RISK HAVING THEM DELETED.***


--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "wenigj" <wenigj@...> wrote:
>Hi Jill,
Thanks for the advice! Three of the four dogs ate, but our Great Dane
puppy (10 months) did not eat at all. We tried mangling the
meat(which worked for our Boxer)and then tried 1/2 chicken, tripe and
beef kidneys, but no luck so far. We'll try again tomorrow with the
chicken and hope she gets the hang of it! Did you have any trouble
with loose stools in the beginning? I once gave my Rott. mix a raw
beef bone and she had major accidents in the house for a week, so I'm
nervous!
Becky


> How do we encourage those two to eat? Any advice is
> > appreciated!
> > Becky
> Hi Becky,
> I'm pretty new to raw feeding as well and introduced my two dogs
> about 2 months ago. I also had a 10 month old and started on chicken
> quarters...she looked at it and licked it a little and pretty much
> that was it. After a few meals she was eating like a champ. At the
> time I was still feeding her two meals a day, so we were starting with
> a little smaller amount each time, but for the first meal I pulled
> pieces off the chicken and hand fed for awhile, also made sure the
> older dog was inside so she would'nt be distracted. She ate the pieces
> I hand fed, then I held the bone while she ate, then I finally put it
> down and let her finish. It really only took about 5-10 minutes.
> Second time, I broke the bone into several pieces and ribboned the
> meat a bit before I gave it to her, again separated the dogs so she
> could concentrate on her own meal. Don't remember exactly, but about
> the 3rd or 4th mealtime, she figured it out. She still eats much
> slower than my older dog (13 years old) and when I introduce a new
> food she takes her time figuring it out.
> Good luck!
> Jill W.
> >
>


Messages in this topic (18)
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5d. Re: picky eater
Posted by: "carnesbill" carnesw@bellsouth.net carnesbill
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:27 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Becky Brooks (Marsh)"
<kidcreations1@...> wrote:
>
> How do we encourage those two to eat?
>
The less you do the better off you will be. If you are not careful,
you will create a REAL picky eater. Right now, they just don't know
what to do. Give them the quarter and let them figure it out. As
long as they are playing with it, let them play. Once they leave it
for 10 minutes, take it up until next mealtime then start all over
again. It won't take them long to figure it out.

This is one of those rare problems where encouragment does more harm
than good. Give it to them and get out of their way and let them do
it.

Bill Carnes
http://www.skylarzack.com/rawfeeding.htm

Feeding Raw since October 2002

"Unnatural diets predispose animals to unnatural outcomes"
Dr. Tom Lonsdale

Messages in this topic (18)
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6a. Re: GSD diarrhea
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:50 pm ((PDT))

Hi, Leslie!
If you can't get SEBP tonight, I'd fast her. Offer plenty of water.

As soon as you can, get the SEBP and feed a few doses a few hours
apart before you offer food.

When you reintroduce food, keep the meals bland (chicken?), boneless
and smaller than usual. Trim off visible fat and skin. Feed small
meals 3-4 times a day, and feed SEBP before you feed.

Gradually increase the size of the meals and reduce the frequency.
Reduce the doses of SEBP gradually, too. Add bone back into her diet
after that. Then, trim less and less of the fat and skin, to bowel
tolerance.

TC
Giselle
with Bea in New Jersey

> Should I fast her for tonight?
<snip>
> I dont think I can get my hands on any slippery elm bark this evening
> but I can prolly get my hands on some tomorrow so not sure what to do
> for this evening..
>
> Thanks for all the good info-
> Leslie
>


Messages in this topic (6)
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7a. Re: labwork
Posted by: "Casey Post" mikken@neo.rr.com mikkeny
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 5:08 pm ((PDT))


> Back to the original post, I also have just had my vet tell me that
> my dog's BUN level is elevated, at 31. He is a 3yr old border
> collie and has been raw fed for about 9 months. She said the other
> kidney enzyme was normal, that hydration was a little below normal,
> and that hemoglobin was slightly down but still normal.

And if he was slightly dehydrated, that alone could account for a higher
BUN...


> If anything, I'd rather cut the meat
> a bit with some chopped up veggies, so we've started adding a bit in.

You could also just increase the fat - fat isn't protein...

> Someone suggested fasting before bloodwork, but my vet said that
> will not give us accurate levels, it won't show us the levels he's
> usually walking around with...

Oh for heaven's sake...this is silly unless your dog is eating all day long!
"Fasting" before bloodwork at my house means that the animal goes in for
testing in the morning (no breakfast beforehand). That way, they've been
"fasting" all night long. And the vet should know that the "normals" on the
blood values are BASED on fasting levels. Honestly, the things some vets
say...


>
> A vet friend suggested we do urinalysis with albuminiuria, as that
> will show kidney damage before the BUN does. Still, my question
> remains, how high of a BUN level is too high for the kidneys? Anyone
> familiar with this or know of any studies that has been done?

Ugh. This is one for Carrie as she's way cleverer than I on such matters.
If you're very concerned, Heska makes a early detection test that's
available. Wait, I'll find a link...http://www.heska.com/erd/index.asp.

I've said it before and I'll say it again, the protein in a raw diet will
NOT burn out carnivore kidneys. Having lost an animal to renal failure, I
can assure you that if I had the LEAST doubt on this, I wouldn't be feeding
my crew this way (and I certainly wouldn't be feeding it to my 20 year old
cat who has some renal compromise!). You cannot compare the protein in raw
to any of the other "studies" on high protein in renal failure in dogs
simply because the proteins they were using were denatured, rendered, dry
crap. They bore no resemblance to anything occurring in nature and it's
little wonder that carnivores would have a problem with such dietary
abominations. The wonder is that they were able to survive on it as long as
they did.

Casey

Messages in this topic (17)
________________________________________________________________________

7b. Re: labwork
Posted by: "Sandee Lee" rlee@plix.com mariasmom2001
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:33 pm ((PDT))

From: "m_towslee" <m_towslee@yahoo.com>

>Back to the original post, I also have just had my vet tell me that
>my dog's BUN level is elevated, at 31. He is a 3yr old border
>collie and has been raw fed for about 9 months. She said the other
>kidney enzyme was normal, that hydration was a little below normal,
>and that hemoglobin was slightly down but still normal.

Elevated BUN can result from dehydration, from stress, from digestion
(because the dog wasn't fasting). With other levels being normal and a
slight elevation, this is nothing to be concerned about.

>She is
>concerned that the raw diet (obviously very high in protein) is
>putting too much strain on his kidneys, and worries that they will
>give out before the rest of him does. She suggested adding rolled
>oats to his diet. Well, my husband and I have dogs, not horses, and
>we'd rather not do that. : ) If anything, I'd rather cut the meat
>a bit with some chopped up veggies, so we've started adding a bit in.

The raw diet as fed is not high in protein...it is high moisture. Protein
does not harm kidneys. Protein is far more beneficial to the organs than
carbohydrates...feeding veggies is not the solution if there even is a
problem, which I highly doubt!

>Someone suggested fasting before bloodwork, but my vet said that
>will not give us accurate levels, it won't show us the levels he's
>usually walking around with...

This has got to be one of the most ridiculous vet statements I have ever
heard! The lab values are based on fasting dogs! How else are you going to
get an accurate reading?

Sandee & the Dane Gang

Messages in this topic (17)
________________________________________________________________________

7c. Re: labwork
Posted by: "cypressbunny" cypressbunny@yahoo.com cypressbunny
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:45 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Casey Post" <mikken@...> wrote:
>
> > my dog's BUN level is elevated, at 31.
> > Someone suggested fasting before bloodwork, but my vet said that
> > will not give us accurate levels
> > Still, my question
> > remains, how high of a BUN level is too high for the kidneys?
> Ugh. This is one for Carrie as she's way cleverer than I on such
matters.

*** Carrie has been overwhelmed with personal matters lately, but
I'll drop in quickly to say that your vet needs to put down the
crack pipe. A BUN of 31 is barely elevated at all, only a few
points outside the normal range. Rawfed dogs sometimes have normal
BUNs slightly above the kibblefed average, according to an Antech
study. If the dog was not fasted for at least 8 hours and preferably
12 or more, a BUN of 31 isn't worth worrying about at all. If the
vet thinks fasting doesn't affect blood results, you need a new vet.
BUN *should* be elevated after a meal, especially after a meal of
raw meat, since BUN measures the by-products of protein metabolism.
With a BUN barely above normal and a creatinine within normal, do
not worry about kidney disease, worry more about your vet taking you
for a ride.

--Carrie

Messages in this topic (17)
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________________________________________________________________________

8a. Getting ready to take the plunge!
Posted by: "Lori Poirier" chaparraltrail@yahoo.com chaparraltrail
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 5:24 pm ((PDT))

I feed meat (sometimes cooked, sometimes raw), plus Innova Evo, both canned and kibble. I work very full time, and am not committed to a full raw diet, especially since most of my time off is spent backpacking with my dog...where I am eating "human kibble" AKA dehydrated food...cuz wet food spoils.

Isn't there something to be gained from some raw meat, for those of us who are not going to be feeding a full raw diet? I am asking because I don't want to give partial raw, if it would be harmful, and I doubt my current lifestyle would allow full raw feeding.

Lori

RE: There is nothing to be gained from feeding kibble
once the commitment has been made to feeding a species appropriate
diet


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Messages in this topic (9)
________________________________________________________________________

8b. Getting ready to take the plunge!
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:59 pm ((PDT))

Lori Poirier <chaparraltrail@...> wrote:

> Isn't there something to be gained from some raw meat, for those
of us who are not going to be feeding a full raw diet? I am asking
because I don't want to give partial raw, if it would be harmful, and
I doubt my current lifestyle would allow full raw feeding.
****
I suspect it makes the human feel a lot less guilty about feeding
kibble. Too bad it does little to mitigate the damage that any
carbohydrate-based pseudofood does.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (9)
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________________________________________________________________________

9. Feeding Giant breed puppy
Posted by: "nathaliebiron" nathaliebiron@yahoo.ca nathaliebiron
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 5:56 pm ((PDT))

Hi everyone!!! Can you give me some advices. I'll have my mastiff
puppy next year and I want to be ready !! Is somebody who have a giant
breed, how did you start, what did you give your puppy (ex.: chicken
neck, chicken leg... etc)

Thank you so much
Nath.

Messages in this topic (1)
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________________________________________________________________________

10a. Needing help on my second night of raw
Posted by: "Eve" loulou_bean@yahoo.com loulou_bean
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 6:39 pm ((PDT))

Hello,

So following last night's event where I started my 17
lb pekingese on a slab of steak (realizing it was too
small as he scarfed it down whole), he is giving half
a chicken a try as we speak.

I'm not sure what the deal is but he has been licking
the chicken for the past 25 minutes, not really
chewing into it. The only he thing he is chewing on is
the skin, but not ingesting it. I feel like he has no
idea what to do with it. He definitely is more
interested in the skin than the meat.

He he supposed to eat the skin?

How do I get him to actually chew and ingest the meat?
How long should every night's feeding take? I'm used
to him eating within 5 minutes so I'm not sure what to
do. Should I take the food up within a certain period
of time?

Also, should I keep the wings in tact? I thought I
read that they could be a choking hazard.

And I think I'm looking at the chicken's ribs--they
are pretty small and skinny--is this a choking hazard?
Is he supposed to chew and ingest the chicken ribs?

I pulled the insides out of the chicken--You'll have
to forgive me--I don't know what parts each is. They
all kind of look the same. It just looks like kidney
shaped pieces. There are a ton of them. How do I feed
him the insides?

I've noticed after he chews on a beef bone (and he is
now doing it again with the chicken)--he goes into his
crate and lies on his side and scratches at it, growls
and mushes his face on it. Is this normal behavior?
What is it?

One more thing...What is the best raw meaty bone for a
pekingese? A few options would be great.

Sorry for the long email--I am just getting started
and am very nervous! I know it's only the first night,
but It doesn't seem as easy as everyone makes it out
to be;)

Eve, NY



____________________________________________________________________________________
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http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/webhosting

Messages in this topic (2)
________________________________________________________________________

10b. Re: Needing help on my second night of raw
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:37 pm ((PDT))

Hi, Eve!
Slowed him down a bit, did we? ; )

He's new to raw, and its not shaped the way he's used to, nor is it of
an easy size to scarf!

We just need to give him a bit of help to figure out where to start
chewing. Its good that he's working on the skin, it means he's not
into giving up.

As far as his antics with the chicken, who knows? It may just be his
way of showing happiness, or frustration.

Take the half chicken. I know, how to get it from him?! You know those
squidgy things in the paper package you took out of the chicken? Offer
him a chunk of heart or the gizzards, not the really squidgy red
thing, thats liver and you should give him only a tiny bit at each
meal. When you offer this special treat to him, lure him out of the
crate and close the door. Put him outside if you need to, to get the
chicken out of the crate.

Take a pair of kitchen shears or a knife and cut into the meat, making
ribbon like strips that are still attached to the bone. This will give
him plenty of pieces to grab onto and chew. You could remove part of
the skin, since he had a bit of trouble with it, but he'll learn how
to deal with that soon, too. You can do this with each portion you
give him, gradually ribboning less until he can figure out where to
begin on his own.

This should make it easier for him to figure the whole chewing thing
out. Generally, you would want to take up the meal after 10-15 minutes
or when you think he's had enough for a meal or when he walks away
from it after eating all he wants. It really depends.

As long as the wings are on the bird, they're OK to feed. Same with
necks. If it isn't attached to a bigger portion, it encourages
scarfing, and they could choke or have to hork up a whole uncrunched
piece. The chicken ribs are OK, too. Same thing, if its attached to
the bird, its good.

The best raw meaty bone to feed any dog is one that is edible, or
mostly so. This will vary with the size of the dog. Beef bones are
referred to as tooth breakers, not good to feed. They are very dense,
after all, they hold up a pretty huge critter! It is safe, however, to
let your dog strip the meat from any bone that is too dense to
consume, and then take it away.
Its not that hard, really!
TC
Giselle
with Bea in New Jersey


> Hello,
>
> So following last night's event where I started my 17
> lb pekingese on a slab of steak (realizing it was too
> small as he scarfed it down whole), he is giving half
> a chicken a try as we speak.
<snip>
I know it's only the first night,
> but It doesn't seem as easy as everyone makes it out
> to be;)
>
> Eve, NY

Messages in this topic (2)
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11a. Re: Agression
Posted by: "Dijana" dpopovic@gmail.com dpopovicmsc
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:20 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Michael Bynum" <mdbynum@...> wrote:
> And instead of taking
> the bone away, trade it for something really nice like a special
treat or
> toy, so he gets the idea that it is not a big deal if you try to take
the
> bone away.
>
If you really want the dog to get the idea that it is not a big deal if
you try to take the bone away, the best way is to use the bone itself
as the reward - i.e. take the bone, but then give it back right away
and let the dog eat in peace.
If the dog is already very serious about guarding the bone (freezing
upon you approach, whale eye, growling, etc), then it is best to find
an experienced positive trainer to work with you.

Cheers,
Dijana

Messages in this topic (7)
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________________________________________________________________________

12a. Huma Risks
Posted by: "Eve" loulou_bean@yahoo.com loulou_bean
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:20 pm ((PDT))

Hi again,

So here's my question--I am so used to giving my dog
kisses on the mouth--I don't know if anyone thinks it
gross, but I just love him to bits.

I don't know if this is a stupid question, but, now
that he's on the raw diet, should I not do that any
longer? Can I get sick? And the same goes for his long
floppy ears which lay on the raw chicken as he eats.
Is this going to contaminate what he lays on in the
house? He sleeps in our bed, on our pillows and his
face has been in the carcass of a raw chicken!

Any thoughts?

Thanks again,
Eve, NY



____________________________________________________________________________________
Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the tools to get online.
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Messages in this topic (2)
________________________________________________________________________

12b. Re: Huma Risks
Posted by: "cypressbunny" cypressbunny@yahoo.com cypressbunny
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:35 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, Eve <loulou_bean@...> wrote:
>
> I don't know if this is a stupid question, but, now
> that he's on the raw diet, should I not do that any
> longer?

*** Kissing a kibble-fed dog on the mouth is so much grosser than
kissing a rawfed dog! Rawfed dogs have much cleaner mouths than
kibblefed. If the ears are dragging over the food, you might consider
using a snood at feeding time. My long-eared dogs have on occasion
chewed some of their ear feathers off by accident while chewing on raw
food.

--Carrie

Messages in this topic (2)
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________________________________________________________________________

13a. Re: Hi guys! Some ?s about GSDs, puppies, and RAW diet :)
Posted by: "Rebecca Little" pbgs@delhitel.net canucme278
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:24 pm ((PDT))

***MODERATOR'S NOTE: TRIM YOUR MESSAGES.***


Ditto on this!! You may want to do a little searching around for a different breeder. He needs the whole pack to socialize with so just leaving him and having the rest sold and gone at 6 weeks would do no good. In alot of states its aginst the law to sell pups prior to 8 weeks.
Rebecca Little
Peakes Brook German Shepherds
http://sites.centralpets.com/mammals/peakesbrookgsd/index.html

----- Original Message -----
From: streakinsixx
To: rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, July 09, 2007 9:41 AM
Subject: [rawfeeding] Re: Hi guys! Some ?s about GSDs, puppies, and RAW diet :)


-Just my two cents, but a reputable breeder should NEVER let a pup go
before 8 weeks.

Good luck.
Jenn

-- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, Hllywoodcaper7@... wrote:
>
> > Now we are starting on the right path from the beginning with our
new puppy;
> also a GSD. So, since this is our first puppy on the RAW diet and,
of course,
> we have only limited exposure of this diet from our prior
experience, I am in
> need of some help. :)
>
> We will be picking our puppy up in a few days; he will be 6-7 weeks
old and
> may already be 18 lbs. Someone in another group suggested I should
wait to
> pick him up at 8 weeks to ensure proper "doggie language"
socialization to cut
> down on aggression. Any views?
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Messages in this topic (8)
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14a. Re: Tooth extraction question
Posted by: "Kasandra" klhesek@yahoo.com klhesek
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:26 pm ((PDT))

Thanks Krissy. That's what I figured. I just hate feeding him mush
because he's such a gulper.

I am lucky though, my vet knows I feed raw, and he doesn't say a word
to me about it. I actually mentioned it before they did the blood
work, and all he said was "Oh, that's fine. His BUN might be a little
high, but there will be other signs if there's kidney or liver
damage." Yay for vets being moderately informed!

Kasandra, Gypsy, and a still woozy Shady


> Go mushy for at least one week. You're right, you want the gum to
> heal and don't want to tear out the stitches (which means more $$ at
> the vet, and worse - a lecture on the inappropriateness of raw
> feeding...spare me).
>

Messages in this topic (3)
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15a. Re: Raw and vacations
Posted by: "patty89123" dewette123@cs.com patty89123
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:28 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "trayc2244" <BreeZ119@...> wrote:
y feed him 2-3 meals a day. I don't have any particular
> concerns. I just wanted to hear from some people that might have some
> ideas to make the trip easier in regards to raw feeding.

I just got back from a 10 day family vacation with my papillon and
portioned out ziplocks, dry ice and a cooler worked very well. just
had to remember to thaw the food :)
patty

Messages in this topic (8)
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________________________________________________________________________

16a. Re: Feeding raw bravo food, how much to feed exactly?
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 7:51 pm ((PDT))

"shefy7" <shefy7@...> wrote:

> Snowy is doing wonderful,
*****
Yes, it certainly sounds like it!


I've got a hold of his hotspots
*****
And if this isn't proof, I don't know what.


In the morning I give him
> meat with bone and in the evening just meat. He gets buffalo,
> chicken, turkey, elk, ostrich, beef, venison, lamb breast,
> tilapia...
*****
Good variety, but it appears you are missing organs. At the very
least feed liver (any kind); 3%-5% of his diet should be liver. You
can feed it often in bits, or occasionally in larger amounts,
depending on his tolerances. But you need to feed it. Also
consider adding heart as a muscle meat and kidney as additional
organ meat.


> He poops pretty regular, usually twice a day, sometimes once.
*****
As long as you feed regular, he's likely to poop regular. It's not
crucial that you feed regular, and likewise it's not crucial that
his poops are regular. This regularity is more for human comfort
than dog. It's not wrong though.


I give him snacks
> throughout the day as well, like frozen chicken paste w/freeze
dried
> lamb or fish or something...
*****
I suggest you ask him to work for these snacks, and that you make
sure they are not adding unwanted weight. He sounds lean and fit
now, keep him that way!


> I want to make sure I'm feeding him correctly since he's competely
> raw.
*****
You are more apt to feed him well on raw even if you aren't
feeding "correctly"! And it's dang near impossible to feed him well
if you are not feeding raw, so you can hardly lose!


He gets ~8oz/day. With 4 in the morning and 4 in the evening.
*****
I think as you gain experience and time on the job, you'll find you
can be more casual with his mealtimse but for now getting everything
stable and keeping it that way is job enough.


I
> think I remember reading that only 10% should be bone. Can someone
> tell me if I'm feeding him right or not?
*****
You don't need to chain yourself to 10% edible bone, but it's an
easy reminder that you do not have to feed lots of bone. And of
course not every day must be precisely right. 10% is the long view,
over time, more or less, sooner or later. Unless the meaty bones
you feed as one meal are in fact mostly bone day after week after
month, you're probably doing fine and dandy with bone.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (2)
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[rawfeeding] Digest Number 11782

There are 25 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:

1a. Re: Raw and vacations
From: Giselle
1b. Re: Raw and vacations
From: Laurie Swanson
1c. Re: Raw and vacations
From: carnesbill
1d. Re: Raw and vacations
From: trayc2244

2a. Re: labwork
From: Andrea

3a. Are Sea Shells like Abalone Shells Edible?
From: Anntiga@aol.com
3b. Re: Are Sea Shells like Abalone Shells Edible?
From: costrowski75
3c. Re: Are Sea Shells like Abalone Shells Edible?
From: Anntiga@aol.com

4a. Pooping bone - Guidance please
From: Caren OConnor

5a. Re: Fermented stomach grass
From: carnesbill
5b. Re: Fermented stomach grass
From: ginny wilken
5c. Re: Fermented stomach grass
From: Casey Post

6a. Re: Cushings Disease
From: Morledzep@aol.com

7a. Re: Hi guys! Some ?s about GSDs, puppies, and RAW diet :)
From: Linda

8a. Re: Squid?
From: Yasuko herron
8b. Re: Squid?
From: temy1102
8c. Re: Squid?
From: Maggie Smith

9. frozen burning more calories
From: imaginationdead

10a. picky eater
From: Becky Brooks (Marsh)
10b. Re: picky eater
From: Doguefan@aol.com
10c. Re: picky eater
From: Becky Brooks (Marsh)

11a. Re: Tooth extraction question
From: Krissy

12. Feeding raw bravo food, how much to feed exactly?
From: shefy7

13a. Re: GSD diarrhea
From: leslie

14. first meal
From: Alan & Andrea Southern


Messages
________________________________________________________________________

1a. Re: Raw and vacations
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 2:13 pm ((PDT))

Hi, Tracy!
A gorge meal is where the dog eats as much as it wants. Thats why
there's no need to feed the next day, and why you can offer a snack
meal and lighter meal the next few days. Dogs can eat several days
worth of food in one huge meal. It depends on the individual dog, some
will only eat a couple days worth, then stop. Others eat until they
can barely walk!
: )

Wolves eat this way after a large kill in the wild, since they eat
when they can, and go without when they can't. Since dogs are closely
related, this is a viable way to feed our 'house' wolves.

There are advantages; the travel thing, some dogs learn that sometimes
their stomachs will be really full and they learn to relax more about
food, no need for strict mealtimes and a lot of dogs learn to self
regulate. It can be a way to feed Big Food without having to take it
up multiple times.

It is something you need to allow your dog to adjust to, if you are
interested in feeding this way.
TC
Giselle


> Thanks Giselle,
> I have to ask, what is a gorge meal? I don't know that I have heard of
> that.
> Also, Do you usually take raw food with you or buy it once you are
> where you are going.
>
> Tracy
>
>
>
> > If you haven't fed Big Food or gorge/fast before, you have the month
> > to introduce it.
> > TC
> > Giselle
>


Messages in this topic (7)
________________________________________________________________________

1b. Re: Raw and vacations
Posted by: "Laurie Swanson" laurie@mckinneyphoto.com las_lala
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 2:40 pm ((PDT))

As another option in addition to gorging, just bring a cooler and some
meals! You could bring most of it frozen and thaw it as needed. Don't
worry about feeding during the drive. Just feed when you get there.
If you need to stop at the store for more, that should be easy, too.

Bring some towels or something for the dog to eat on.

How do you normally feed? Do you have any particular concerns?

Laurie

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "trayc2244" <BreeZ119@...> wrote:
>
> Hello,
> We are going on vacation in a month and we are taking Mac with us. We
> will be gone for 4-5 days and it's an eight hour drive one way. What
> is the best way to feed raw "on the go"? I

Messages in this topic (7)
________________________________________________________________________

1c. Re: Raw and vacations
Posted by: "carnesbill" carnesw@bellsouth.net carnesbill
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 2:52 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "trayc2244" <BreeZ119@...> wrote:
>
> Thanks Giselle,
> I have to ask, what is a gorge meal? I don't know that I have
> heard of that.
> Also, Do you usually take raw food with you or buy it once you are
> where you are going.

I wouldn't feed a gorge meal just before a long car trip. In my
mind, thats asking for car sickness problems. I would feed a
lighter than normal meal the morning before leaving and feed a
normal meal in the evening after arriving.

Take a cooler with iced down food in 1 meal packages. If you can't
carry 4 or 5 days worth, there will probably be grocery stores where
you are going. You can buy chicken quarters anywhere in the country.

Bill Carnes
http://www.skylarzack.com/rawfeeding.htm

Feeding Raw since October 2002

"Unnatural diets predispose animals to unnatural outcomes"
Dr. Tom Lonsdale

Messages in this topic (7)
________________________________________________________________________

1d. Re: Raw and vacations
Posted by: "trayc2244" BreeZ119@catt.com trayc2244
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:01 pm ((PDT))

Thanks again to everybody.
I normally feed him 2-3 meals a day. I don't have any particular
concerns. I just wanted to hear from some people that might have some
ideas to make the trip easier in regards to raw feeding. The advice
was very helpful. Thank you.

Tracy


> How do you normally feed? Do you have any particular concerns?
>
> Laurie


Messages in this topic (7)
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2a. Re: labwork
Posted by: "Andrea" poketmouse45@yahoo.com poketmouse45
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 2:39 pm ((PDT))

I don't have any answers for how high is too high, but I've always read
that the "normal" levels that are given are fasting levels. In all the
stuff I've looked at, "normal" BUN levels for canines are around 24-27
and those specify that the dog should be fasted for 12 hours prior to
the test. Given those figures, 31 doesn't seem very high when the dog
hadn't been fasted. If you are still worried you can have another test
run and make sure he doesn't eat for 12 hours prior. Hope that helps a
little.

Andrea

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "m_towslee" <m_towslee@...> wrote:
> Back to the original post, I also have just had my vet tell me that
> my dog's BUN level is elevated, at 31.

Messages in this topic (14)
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3a. Are Sea Shells like Abalone Shells Edible?
Posted by: "Anntiga@aol.com" Anntiga@aol.com anntiga
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 2:39 pm ((PDT))

Hi!

Are sea shells like abalone shells edible? If my dog finds an abalone shell
on the beach and starts to eat it is that okay?

Thanks,

Ann and Norman (Portuguese Water Dog)
San Francisco Peninsula, CA, USA

"Never underestimate the warmth of a cold nose."


************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.


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3b. Re: Are Sea Shells like Abalone Shells Edible?
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:15 pm ((PDT))

Anntiga@... wrote:
>
> Hi!
>
> Are sea shells like abalone shells edible? If my dog finds an
abalone shell
> on the beach and starts to eat it is that okay?
*****
Most of the abalone shells I've seen are about dinner plate size,
although I'm sure they have to start out smaller than that. At any
rate, they are pretty sturdy; I'd think they would be more than Norm
could eat or want to.

Starting to eat is one thing, being determined to finish is another.
Were I lucky enough to be on a beach with my dog today, I'd let the
dog investigate the shell but not consume it.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (3)
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3c. Re: Are Sea Shells like Abalone Shells Edible?
Posted by: "Anntiga@aol.com" Anntiga@aol.com anntiga
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:33 pm ((PDT))

Thank you Chris!

Ann and Norman
Los Altos, CA, USA

************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.


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4a. Pooping bone - Guidance please
Posted by: "Caren OConnor" cavkist@yahoo.com cavkist
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 2:42 pm ((PDT))

Dear list members -
Has anyone experienced this problem? Upon my return home today from Northern Virginia, my pet sitter called me to say that one of my Cavalier boys had what she thought to be a bone or rock obstructing his rectum, and he couldn't poop. Since I was just a few hours away, I told her I would take care of it when I got home.
Sure enough, when I got home the bone was half-way out of his rectum, covered by yellow puss, and his bottom looked red and puckered, like a pair of lips - sorry if it's graphic. I just trimmed his nails yesterday so I KNOW this wasn't an issue with him until today. I have removed the bone, put hydrogen peroxide on his bottom, iced him down to reduce the swelling, and given him an antibiotic. It's barely bleeding, if I put pressure on it and the swelling IS going down.
Is there anything else I need to do to help him out with his sore bottom? Is there anything I can do to prevent this in the future? (it was a chicken bone from a chicken leg).
Thanks for your help:)
Caren O'Connor
Nansemond Cavaliers


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5a. Re: Fermented stomach grass
Posted by: "carnesbill" carnesw@bellsouth.net carnesbill
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 2:56 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "pitbullanholder"
<pitbullanholder@...> wrote:
>
> I ordered some fermented beef stomach grass from prey4pets and
> I have
> tried it on the dogs.

No experience but if you stop and think about it. Its grass,
period. I don't see grass as something my dogs need nutritionally
whether its fermented or not. It's still grass.

IMO it a gimmick to sell something that is otherwise unsellable.

Bill Carnes
http://www.skylarzack.com/rawfeeding.htm

Feeding Raw since October 2002

"Unnatural diets predispose animals to unnatural outcomes"
Dr. Tom Lonsdale

Messages in this topic (4)
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5b. Re: Fermented stomach grass
Posted by: "ginny wilken" gwilken@alamedanet.net ginny439
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:49 pm ((PDT))


On Jul 9, 2007, at 12:41 PM, pitbullanholder wrote:

> I ordered some fermented beef stomach grass from prey4pets and I have
> tried it on the dogs. Only a tablespoon to see how they reacted.
> Well that night the puppy (8 weeks old) who has been on raw now for 3
> weeks had a vomitting episode that lasted a few hours. Does anyone
> have any experience with fermented grass?
>
> Angela

This takes the cake for stupid ways to get people to part with their
money, in my book. Just let your dogs eat good food, and forget wild-
ass ideas like this. If you want them to get stomach stuff, it should
be tripe, which is meat with a small amount of digested material
stuck in the cracks. No way grass is food for dogs.

Sheesh!


ginny and Tomo


All stunts performed without a net!


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Messages in this topic (4)
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5c. Re: Fermented stomach grass
Posted by: "Casey Post" mikken@neo.rr.com mikkeny
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:07 pm ((PDT))


>I ordered some fermented beef stomach grass from prey4pets and I have
> tried it on the dogs. Only a tablespoon to see how they reacted.
> Well that night the puppy (8 weeks old) who has been on raw now for 3
> weeks had a vomitting episode that lasted a few hours. Does anyone
> have any experience with fermented grass?

Angela,

My crew wouldn't touch it, but a friend's Rotties absolutely love the
stuff...of course, they'll eat grass out of the lawnmower, too...

They never had any trouble with it, but it sounds like it may be something
to avoid in future for your little one...

Casey

Messages in this topic (4)
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6a. Re: Cushings Disease
Posted by: "Morledzep@aol.com" Morledzep@aol.com morledzep
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:05 pm ((PDT))


In a message dated 7/9/2007 8:53:01 AM Pacific Standard Time,
firth_malcolm@yahoo.co.uk writes:

Does anybody
have any experience of whether or not a raw fed diet would help
alleviate this condition?



Mal,

Cushings disease is NOT curable.. it is treatable to extend the dogs' life,
sometimes they can live for many years longer if the disease is kept under
control with the meds. But, no matter what your friend does, their dog will die
from Cushings Disease.

That being said, feeding raw can help.. if nothing else the dog will enjoy
his meal times more for the short time it has left..

Catherine

************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Messages in this topic (8)
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7a. Re: Hi guys! Some ?s about GSDs, puppies, and RAW diet :)
Posted by: "Linda" aumicapa@peoplepc.com micap12000
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:09 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Sunshine S. Patron"
<sbr_minirex@...> wrote:


> big deal for her. She's now coming up on 2yrs old and has by far
been
> the best raised pup that I've had: Gleaming white teeth, no bad
> breath, no body odor, no fleas, no massive land mines, and best of
all
> - her shedding is only limited to the change of the seasons and only
> for about 2-3 weeks TOPS!!!
>

>
> Hope this helps,
> Sunshine & Canine Trio including GSD 'Ms. Kajsa Commotion'
>

> Thank you so much for the answer to the question I haven't asked
yet!
I have a 4 yr. old GSD and she leaves a hair carpet on my floor
daily. In the winter it's every other day. I started raw after
joining this group and my dog and cat have taken to it great. No
digestive problems any kind although the cat is kinda picky. Ginger
licks her feet and has dry skin and am hoping is is a food issue and
not environmental. Thank you so much for the info.

Linda

>
> --- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, Hllywoodcaper7@ wrote:
> >Now we are starting on the right path from the beginning with our
new
> puppy;
> > also a GSD. So, since this is our first puppy on the RAW diet
and,
> of course,
> > we have only limited exposure of this diet from our prior
> experience, I am in
> > need of some help. :)
>


Messages in this topic (7)
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8a. Re: Squid?
Posted by: "Yasuko herron" sunshine_annamaria@yahoo.com sunshine_annamaria
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:10 pm ((PDT))

Hi. I have seen canned squid in ink. If you were me,do you get it and feed? I was not sure about ink is ok for dog to digest so,I did not get it.

Fresh Squid,I think I saw frozen in package.I do not know if it had cartilige or not.

yassy

PS:I have fed canned clam once and my dog loved it a lot!


---------------------------------
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Yahoo! Answers - Check it out.

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Messages in this topic (7)
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8b. Re: Squid?
Posted by: "temy1102" tammy.a.jp@gmail.com temy1102
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:41 pm ((PDT))

i imagine ink is okay for dogs to eat, since it's served in fancy
restaurants for people to eat.

tammy & grover


Messages in this topic (7)
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8c. Re: Squid?
Posted by: "Maggie Smith" redkeds@comcast.net redkeds1
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:59 pm ((PDT))

So are onions and chocolate but I wouldn't feed either to my dogs...

Maggie
--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "temy1102" <tammy.a.jp@...> wrote:
>
> i imagine ink is okay for dogs to eat, since it's served in fancy
> restaurants for people to eat.
>
> tammy & grover
>


Messages in this topic (7)
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9. frozen burning more calories
Posted by: "imaginationdead" deadoikos@gmail.com imaginationdead
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:11 pm ((PDT))

i've been searching the archives with no definitive answer for my
question:
feeding frozen meat takes more calories to process because it must
first be warmed by the body, is this extra use of calories significant?

thanks in advance,
scherzo

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10a. picky eater
Posted by: "Becky Brooks (Marsh)" kidcreations1@yahoo.com kidcreations1
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:33 pm ((PDT))

We are new to rawfeeding and have just given our 4 dogs their first
chicken leg quarters today. One ate it right away, one ate it after
about 1 hour of picking at it, burying it, and digging it up again,
and two of the dogs (each 10 months old) just licked theirs and didn't
know what to do. How do we encourage those two to eat? Any advice is
appreciated!
Becky

Messages in this topic (14)
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10b. Re: picky eater
Posted by: "Doguefan@aol.com" Doguefan@aol.com knoxkennels
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:43 pm ((PDT))


Hi becky!? I am newer to raw feeding myself, but since I am a bit of a newbie also I thought I might tell you what worked for or "kids".? Mine do not prefer chicken quarters, but if I cut up a whole chicken(you usually find them really cheap, like 69 cents a pound!)they gobble it up.? I don't know if they are not into that much bone or what?? Also,if I buy the fresh quarters and not the bags of frozen ones, they will eat the fresh over the frozen any day! Odd, and high maintenance I know...

Try maybe with a smaller meaty bone like a chicken breast, there is more meat and that generally entices my guys to chow down on the whole thing.? Or, just wait tilll later, make some slices in it, so? it looks a little mangled and then give it to them.
Chelsea
www.bruinbordeaux.com

-----Original Message-----
From: Becky Brooks (Marsh) <kidcreations1@yahoo.com>
To: rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, 9 Jul 2007 3:18 pm
Subject: [rawfeeding] picky eater

We are new to rawfeeding and have just given our 4 dogs their first
chicken leg quarters today. One ate it right away, one ate it after
about 1 hour of picking at it, burying it, and digging it up again,
and two of the dogs (each 10 months old) just licked theirs and didn't
know what to do. How do we encourage those two to eat? Any advice is
appreciated!
Becky

________________________________________________________________________
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Messages in this topic (14)
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10c. Re: picky eater
Posted by: "Becky Brooks (Marsh)" kidcreations1@yahoo.com kidcreations1
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:18 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, Doguefan@... wrote:
>Hi Chelsea! Thanks for your advice - my husband is outside right now
with a knife trying to make the meat look more mangled! I will also
try a whole chicken next and see what happens.
Becky
>
> Hi becky!? I am newer to raw feeding myself, but since I am a bit of
a newbie also I thought I might tell you what worked for or "kids".?
Mine do not prefer chicken quarters, but if I cut up a whole
chicken(you usually find them really cheap, like 69 cents a
pound!)they gobble it up.? I don't know if they are not into that much
bone or what?? Also,if I buy the fresh quarters and not the bags of
frozen ones, they will eat the fresh over the frozen any day! Odd, and
high maintenance I know...
>
> Try maybe with a smaller meaty bone like a chicken breast, there is
more meat and that generally entices my guys to chow down on the whole
thing.? Or, just wait tilll later, make some slices in it, so? it
looks a little mangled and then give it to them.
> Chelsea
> www.bruinbordeaux.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Becky Brooks (Marsh) <kidcreations1@...>
> To: rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Mon, 9 Jul 2007 3:18 pm
> Subject: [rawfeeding] picky eater
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> We are new to rawfeeding and have just given our 4 dogs their first
> chicken leg quarters today. One ate it right away, one ate it after
> about 1 hour of picking at it, burying it, and digging it up again,
> and two of the dogs (each 10 months old) just licked theirs and didn't
> know what to do. How do we encourage those two to eat? Any advice is
> appreciated!
> Becky
>
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________________________________________________
> AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's
free from AOL at AOL.com.
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


Messages in this topic (14)
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11a. Re: Tooth extraction question
Posted by: "Krissy" krissy@mitre.org krissyar26
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 3:56 pm ((PDT))

>> My question is, are there any special considerations I should take
>> when feeding him while he heals? No bone/less bone? ....

Hi Kasandra,

Go mushy for at least one week. You're right, you want the gum to
heal and don't want to tear out the stitches (which means more $$ at
the vet, and worse - a lecture on the inappropriateness of raw
feeding...spare me).

If you have ground food that includes ground bone on hand, use that.
If not, improvise w/whatever you have access to - heart, a can of
mackerel, ground tripe, cutting the meat off bones like pork
shoulders, turkey, chicken, etc.

Going wo/bone for a week (if you go the "improvise" route) won't hurt
Sandy one bit. It's certainly not worth the $$ for a fancy ground
mix.

After one week, depending on how the gum looks and how you are w/hand
feeding, I add something small and boney that I can hold and feed
into the other side of the mouth - a chicken wing, drumstick, or
neck. Nothing I'd feed under normal circumstances but I can only
stand one week of mush and can't wait to get my dog chewing again.

By the end of two weeks he should be able to eat as before. I've
been through this w/a canine, a molar, and a premolar (different
dogs) and it worked well.

One problem I ran into during the first "mush" week was that the dogs
ended up w/indigestion because a mush meal is consumed in seconds.
If that happens you can split it up into smaller meals, or put a soup
can in the middle of the dog dish so that the food is in a doughnut
around the can. That'll slow down consumption.

Good luck, watch the gum, don't jump the gun getting back to bones,
and Shady will be back to eating normally in no time!

Krissy

Messages in this topic (2)
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12. Feeding raw bravo food, how much to feed exactly?
Posted by: "shefy7" shefy7@yahoo.com shefy7
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:00 pm ((PDT))

Hi Everyone!

Snowy is doing wonderful, I've got a hold of his hotspots and am
feeding a variety of meats with rotation. In the morning I give him
meat with bone and in the evening just meat. He gets buffalo,
chicken, turkey, elk, ostrich, beef, venison, lamb breast,
tilapia... I usually get bravo meats, but sometimes I get them at
the store as well...

He poops pretty regular, usually twice a day, sometimes once. Snowy
is a mini american eskimo, 1 year and 3 months old. He's neutered,
full of energy. He wakes at 7am and goes to bed by 11pm with several
naps in between. He usually goes to daycare all day about twice a
week. He weighs about 24lbs. and is overall healthy. I'd like to
maintain his weight and keep all his energy! I give him snacks
throughout the day as well, like frozen chicken paste w/freeze dried
lamb or fish or something...

I want to make sure I'm feeding him correctly since he's competely
raw. He gets ~8oz/day. With 4 in the morning and 4 in the evening. I
think I remember reading that only 10% should be bone. Can someone
tell me if I'm feeding him right or not?

I want Snowy to be as healthy as possible!
Thanks and hope all is well,
shefy and snowy

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13a. Re: GSD diarrhea
Posted by: "leslie" lbuxx@yahoo.com lbuxx
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:01 pm ((PDT))

Should I fast her for tonight? As of this afternoon everything was
still liquid. Or should I go ahead & give her chicken leg quarters?
I could cut any fat & skin off if need be..

I dont think I can get my hands on any slippery elm bark this evening
but I can prolly get my hands on some tomorrow so not sure what to do
for this evening..

Thanks for all the good info-
Leslie

Messages in this topic (5)
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14. first meal
Posted by: "Alan & Andrea Southern" wykham@sa.chariot.net.au seawyndriana
Date: Mon Jul 9, 2007 4:19 pm ((PDT))

I just chucked a chicken frame into the whelping box with 9 three week old pups, they just swarmed on it sucking and licking. One even had its head in the chest cavity, ten minutes later they were all asleep.

Alan & Andrea
KITNKABOODLE BURMESE
WYKHAM BRITISH SHORTHAIR
QUINIVA STANDARD POODLES
http://users.chariot.net.au/~wykham
Aldinga Beach
South Australia
Australia

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