Feed Pets Raw Food

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

[rawfeeding] Digest Number 12222

There are 25 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:

1a. Re: Brand new puppy
From: marclre

2a. Re: Newbi eIntro
From: Andrea
2b. Re: Newbi eIntro
From: jaygaughan
2c. Re: Newbi eIntro
From: Andrea
2d. Re: Newbi eIntro
From: KIMBERLY
2e. Re: Newbi eIntro
From: costrowski75
2f. Re: Newbi eIntro
From: jaygaughan

3. insight from a newbie
From: babyboyfila1

4a. Re: We also have a new pup and a million questions
From: Andrea
4b. Re: We also have a new pup and a million questions
From: costrowski75

5a. Re: Salmonella question
From: Andrea
5b. Re: Salmonella question
From: marlena_adema
5c. Re: Salmonella question
From: Howard Salob
5d. Re: Salmonella question
From: amvilppu

6a. Re: Allergies in raw vs. cooked meats
From: Andrea
6b. Re: Allergies in raw vs. cooked meats
From: mgitaville

7a. 7# Chihuahua Ready for more than chicken
From: autumnji@aol.com
7b. Re: 7# Chihuahua Ready for more than chicken
From: Andrea
7c. Re: 7# Chihuahua Ready for more than chicken
From: Kelly

8a. Re: How Long to Freeze Fresh Venison (first time)
From: Tina Berry
8b. Re: How Long to Freeze Fresh Venison (first time)
From: helpshelteranimals
8c. Re: How Long to Freeze Fresh Venison (first time)
From: mgitaville

9a. Re: Eating less normal?
From: susrob061174

10a. Re: ground food
From: Sandee Lee
10b. Re: ground food
From: costrowski75


Messages
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1a. Re: Brand new puppy
Posted by: "marclre" marclre@aol.com marclre
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:36 am ((PDT))

"why do you say no chicken necks? Cornish game hens. Where do you
get
them? I looked at the rodent supply link someone was kind enough to
include, but they don't have game hens."

***Tamara - cornish game hens are just miniature chickens and so my
feeling is they're not worth the ridiculous price I'd have to
shell out around here...for heavens sake the ones I can get don't
even
have guts left in. If I'm gonna splash out I'd rather it was for
something really special that can't be duplicated by something else.
Grass fed meat for instance...which you can get if you look for. Or
range fed poultry which you can also find if you look hard enough.
Just
hack up a bog-standard chicken and for your pup the effect will be
the
same believe me ;) I agree with Chris and wouldn't feed necks
separately either, your boy will enjoy the bird just as much with it
still
attached so why look for hassle? He would enjoy the heck out of a
jelly doughnut too probably ;);)Nope Rodentpro doesn't have game hens
but they do have quail. Also not cheap but as a high quality whole
prey
item, *much* better value. Still getting the feeling you're thinking
teeeeeny tiny.
Marie-Claire ;)***

Messages in this topic (13)
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2a. Re: Newbi eIntro
Posted by: "Andrea" poketmouse45@yahoo.com poketmouse45
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:38 am ((PDT))

Hi, Jay, welcome to the group. Sounds like you're doing fine, we are
just having confusion with terminology is all. In the raw feeding
world BARF generally refers to a system of feeding that relies on
ground foods, a veggie "slop" with loads of expensive supplements and
more bare bones. This group follows a much more relaxed natural style
of feeding that attempts to recreate what our carnivorous friends would
eat in the wild.

>Whole prey and practical representation??? Are you telling me you feed
> whole chickens with feathers or a full size Doe to your dogs?

If I could I sure would! But alas, it is not in the cards for me and
many of us on this list. Instead we try our best to give a variey of
parts from a variety of animals in the same general proportions you
would find in a prey animal. That is, mostly meat, some bone, and some
organ.

> Is there any guidelines here I can read up on?

The best thing is to just read all the posts from day to day here. We
have lots of newbies coming in every day and so the guidelines are
covered often. Also you could get a copy of Tom Lonsdale's books "Raw
Meaty Bones" is a more scientific read and "Work Wonders" is a good
newbie book. These cover the "why" of raw feeding, not so much
the "how."

Andrea

Messages in this topic (9)
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2b. Re: Newbi eIntro
Posted by: "jaygaughan" jaygaughan@yahoo.com jaygaughan
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 8:53 am ((PDT))

Thank you Andrea. I do plan on a totally raw diet for my new family
member. So I guess I should be careful about calling raw feeding BARF
from now on.

I have a problem with the thought of letting my dog eat any dead
animal that is still intact. I would think this could be very
confusing to my dog. How do you tell him it's okay to eat a dead deer
I drag out of the woods for him and not the ones walking around in my
yard?

It's totally illegal to hunt down animals with a dog here in CT as in
most other states. If anyone sees a dog chasing down a deer or any
game animal they can legally shoot the dog on sight.

I have deer and turkeys in my yard daily. I don't want my dog
thinking its meal time when he smells or sees a deer and starts
chasing one down.

Also the taste and smell of fresh blood being associated with meal
time pops up flags in my book. 190lbs of hungry Great Dane that likes
the taste of blood just doesn't sit well with me.

I can get fresh meat for my dog all year. But it will all be bled out
and butcher by me prior to him getting his portions.

Jay


Messages in this topic (9)
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2c. Re: Newbi eIntro
Posted by: "Andrea" poketmouse45@yahoo.com poketmouse45
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 9:45 am ((PDT))

It's actually not as confusing as you might think. It breaks down
like this, you are the hunter in the pack. *You* bring home food and
thus he never has to. After all, it is a lot of work to bring down
an animal. A dog with a naturally high prey drive will chase animals
no matter what he is fed. Feeding a raw diet to a dog doesn't create
a high prey drive. It's really a training issue to keep the dog from
chasing the deer and turkeys in the yard, same as you would have to
do if you fed doom nuggets. Dogs don't become bloodthirsty because
they eat a proper diet.

Andrea

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "jaygaughan" <jaygaughan@...>
wrote:

> I have a problem with the thought of letting my dog eat any dead
> animal that is still intact. I would think this could be very
> confusing to my dog. How do you tell him it's okay to eat a dead
> deer I drag out of the woods for him and not the ones walking
> around in my yard? <snip> Also the taste and smell of fresh blood
> being associated with meal time pops up flags in my book. 190lbs of
> hungry Great Dane that likes the taste of blood just doesn't sit
> well with me.

Messages in this topic (9)
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2d. Re: Newbi eIntro
Posted by: "KIMBERLY" currysmax@embarqmail.com currysmax
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 10:17 am ((PDT))

Thank you Andrea because I had the same fears but your response makes since.

Kimberly

----- Original Message -----
From: Andrea <poketmouse45@yahoo.com>
To: rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tue, 30 Oct 2007 12:45:55 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: [rawfeeding] Re: Newbi eIntro

It's actually not as confusing as you might think. It breaks down
like this, you are the hunter in the pack. *You* bring home food and thus he never has to.

Feeding a raw diet to a dog doesn't create a high prey drive. Dogs don't become bloodthirsty because
they eat a proper diet.

Andrea


Messages in this topic (9)
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2e. Re: Newbi eIntro
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 11:51 am ((PDT))

"jaygaughan" <jaygaughan@...> wrote:>
> Please excuse me if I'm not familiar with the proper terminology
just
> yet Chris.
>
> As a newbie to raw feeding I kind of associated all raw feeding
with
> BARF (Bone And Raw Food).
*****
Hmm. Did you take the time to read the Admin Messages you received
when your subscription was approved? One of them addresses the
term "BARF" as well as the more representative "raw feeding". Here
is the beginning paragraph:

"On this list, we only use the term "raw feeding". Sometimes we call
it the "prey model", which refers to the way that carnivores were
designed to eat, of course.

It's a simple generic term, and we don't have to then spend a lot of
time
explaining an acronym that most people find distasteful and some even
associate
with vomit."

If you zoomed through the new subscriber messages you received or
blew them off entirely, I recommend you go find them and read them.
My guess is your questions will be fully and cheerfully answered in
those admin posts. If you cannot find them, I will be happy to send
them to you again.


> As I stated I am getting another Great Dane. So ground up meats or
> little chicken necks won't be necessary. Although my breeder did
> start the litter out with ground meat from what she told me.
*****
Yes, a litter before it is weaned can be introduced to raw meat and
bones through grinding although it's increasingly common for
rawfeeders to offer carcasses and whole meats for the puppies to mess
with. Very quickly after weaning the pups learn to eat whole (or
gently smashed) raw food. However, by the time the pup arrives at
its forever home, whole raw--not ground--is preferable.

And that whole raw food would be just like the adults eat, but
smaller. Meat, edible bone, organs.


> it seems all my dogs have
> enjoyed some veggies. I enjoy gardening and one of my other Danes
> used to pick his own green beans every time I was in the garden
with
> him.
*****
I personally think regular access to a garden is pretty artificial;
but in general windfall veggies and fruit represent--in a dim and
distant way perhaps--what wolves may come upon in their travels.
There is no need, at any rate, to use premeditated vegetation in a
dog's (ot puppy's) menu.


> "What we prefer to discuss and prefer to feed is whole prey or
> practical representations thereof"
>
> I'm a little lost on this part. Whole prey and practical
> representation??? Are you telling me you feed whole chickens with
> feathers or a full size Doe to your dogs?
*****
I am telling you that it's the model, the guideline that brings to
our carnivore's (our domestic wolf's) diet the most appropriate
foods. Yes, I do feed whole feathered chickens sometimes, but not
always. No, I've not let my dogs feed on a doe but that's only
because I have none to offer. They do eat whole chickens and turkeys
and rabbits and baby goats and if not all of their food is whole what
isn't is dished out in hunks.

The practical representation is a feeding plan that includes a
variety of meats and a variety of body parts. Not a lifetime supply
of chicken wings, not a truckload of turkey necks. Not just chicken
necks but also chicken quarters and backs and feet. Not just heart,
but also liver and gizzard.

Not just pork neck bones, but also pork shoulders and feet and
haunches and loins and ribs and brisket and ears and tails. Not just
pork meat but pork organs--heart, liver, spleen.

Not just ground beef, but ribs and necks and whole tails and meaty
shanks and feet. Not just liver but also heart and spleen and
pancreas and tongue and unprocessed green tripe.

The most natural way to fully nourish your dog is though the food you
feed. Whole critters (however you assemble them) are one big,
ungainly, perfectly balanced vitamin tablet.


Is there any guidelines here I can read up on?
*****
Well, no doubt browsing the list archives will be enlightening.

You should also suss out<http://rawfeddogs.net> for some excellent
recipes. And you should take the time to read <http://rawfed.com>
Both websites should provide I think a good beginning education.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (9)
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2f. Re: Newbi eIntro
Posted by: "jaygaughan" jaygaughan@yahoo.com jaygaughan
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:08 pm ((PDT))

Sorry Andrea. I'm not trying to debate you on this. It's just something
I have not heard of in anything I read as far as feeding raw. Out of
the norm for me.

You are correct Andrea. This is a training issue.

I won't have anything to worry about.


Jay


Messages in this topic (9)
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3. insight from a newbie
Posted by: "babyboyfila1" babyboyfila1@yahoo.com babyboyfila1
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:40 am ((PDT))

When I first started feeding raw in the back of my head, I had the
old stuff pecking away...no chicken bones....etc...
Well let me share with you some mind settling advice.

I started raw feeding about 9 months ago...

My dog had no idea what to do with a turkey neck...he sat there and
looked at it. Now he will eat 3 or 4 for a breakfast snack. He lets
me know when he is full and they are very satisfied. Hardly any
begging at all. Shiney coat, clean teeth, energy.

Chicken backs...same thing...what the heck mom?
Now he eats them with delight... I freeze them, because my guys like
frozen treats. I have a boxer that will eat really meaty beef ribs.

I was worried about portion size as well at first...but don't, they
will let you know. I haven't had a problem with them over eating.
They eat, they get full and if they are still nosing around, I offer
a little more and most times, they just wanted to make sure things
were in order and turn it down. I put it in the fridge for
later...no waste.

I don't give cut pork bones or any cooked bones. But I do feed
boneless pork chops. I have an old dog who loves boneless chicken
breasts that are frozen.
I also freeze balls of hamburger and they think that is the greatest
thing in the world.

there is really great advice here.

As a matter of fact my vet won't listen to how I feed my dogs, all
she keeps saying is pancreatitis.
I say look at them...

I am looking for a vet in or around cocoa who is open to raw feeding,
but it is proving quite difficult.

Good luck and just sit back and enjoy watching your dogs eat as close
to natural as we can provide and know that they will benefit from it.
Dawn


Messages in this topic (1)
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4a. Re: We also have a new pup and a million questions
Posted by: "Andrea" poketmouse45@yahoo.com poketmouse45
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 7:02 am ((PDT))

Hi, Aldona, congrats on the new pup!

> I fed him chicken wings, which apparently is not advised on this
> list. Or did I misunderstand something?

Wings aren't recommended because they are pretty small and it is too
easy for an eager pup to try and swallow it whole, also because they
are soo heavy on bone. As you found out, feeding a really boney meal
often results in bone bit vomit later.

> Anyway, he ends up barfing up the biggest bone of the wing. Seems
> he doesn't break up the bones well enough. So now I chop off wing
> tip part, and grind the other.

The problem was that there wasn't enough meat with the bone, not that
he wasn't chewing the bone properly. Feed larger foods with more
meat, more like a chicken quarter, and you'll be ok.

> Now with pup Marley, I'm a total rookie. Billinghurst recommends
> one diet, Wendy Volhard recommends a different but similar diet, so
> which diet does this list recommend?

It boils down to one scientific fact: dogs are carnivores, not
omnivores, and they should be fed accordingly. That means a variety
of parts from a variety of animals. Mostly meat, some bone, some
organ. That's it, no mixing, no supplements, no grinding. Boring
book, huh?

> I'm just so unsure of myself. I'm not sure, do I supplement during
> the pup months? or not?

No supplementing needed. A good prey model diet gives everything a
growing pup could need in the right proportions. Well, depending on
whether or not you get grassfed meat, you might want to give fish oil
to add omega 3 fatty acids to the diet.

> Should I give brewer's yeast? Vit. E in form of oils? Kelp? I put a
> half a teaspoon of crushed egg shells with his breakfast meal,
> which consists of oatmeal, milk, honey, brewer's yeast, kelp, oil.
> He's not very fond of this first meal of the day, I'm sorry to say,

He's a smart pup! He doesn't need any of that stuff.

> Our vet has also told me several times already, that Marley is
> gaining too much too fast,

Rawfed pups often grow more slowly and steadily than their ki**lefed
brothers. Both of my pups grew so slowly that I didn't notice until
I saw older pictures of them. Your vet may mean he is growing too
quickly, not that he's gaining too much weight.


Andrea

Messages in this topic (3)
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4b. Re: We also have a new pup and a million questions
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 7:24 am ((PDT))

GoldenGirlAldi <aldona99@...> wrote:
> I fed him chicken wings, which apparently is not advised on this
list. Or did I misunderstand something?
*****
No, you didn't misunderstnad something. Except for (some) cats or
small dogs, chicken wings deliver too much bone/not enough meat and
are frequenly the right size for misjudged swallowing. Chicken wings
attached to a larger hunk of bird are more useful.

Anyway, he ends up barfing up the biggest bone of the wing. Seems he
doesn't break up the bones well enough. So now I chop off wing tip
part, and grind the other. After reading the past few posts on the
subject, I'm reading I shouldn't grind anything up for him.
*****
No you should not grind. Time on the job will help your pup fully
digest bones (chicken bones are easily digestible soon enough) and
horking up the indigestible bits is a healthy response to irritants.
Feed body parts with more meat and less bone and this is much less
likely to happen.


Billinghurst recommends one diet, Wendy Volhard recommends a
different but similar diet, so which diet does this list recommend?
*****
Neither Billinghurst nor Volhard are attuned to whole prey and the
significance it has to a simple, healthy species appropriate diet. I
would utterly dismiss both of these resources as out to lunch.

If you need to read a book, read Tom Lonsdale's "Work Wonders", which
costs about 10 bucks and has got at least 10 bucks worth of useful
information in it.


> I'm just so unsure of myself. I'm not sure, do I supplement during
the pup months? or not?
*****
Not.
What your pup needs is in the food you feed. If it's not, change the
food you feed.


Should I give brewer's yeast? Vit. E in form of oils? Kelp?
*****
Stop! Stop all this artifice. No brewer's yeast to pup or adult,
vitamin E if you can't bear not feeding it but it's not a puppy thing
so if you didn't feed it to your adult dogs you do not have to feed
it to the pup. Kelp is totally irrelevant. So is alfalfa. A
species appropriate diet has got the nutrients in it, naturally.


I put a half a teaspoon of crushed egg shells with his breakfast
meal, which consists of oatmeal, milk, honey, brewer's yeast, kelp,
oil.
*****
Oh dear oh dear. Please, no more. No more crushed eggshells, ho
more oatmeal (no more grains not ever, nope, never) no milk, no
honey, no brewer's yeast, no kelp. And unles the oil you offered was
salmon oil, no oil either.

There is NOTHING in that meal that is appropriate for a dog. Please
get RID of Ian and Wendy. What you feed is not healthy, if you got
this recipe from either of them, they are not healthy advisors.

Your pup needs what adults need: meat, edible bone, organs.
EVERYTHING else is extraneous. Everything.


Our vet has also told me several times already, that Marley is
gaining too much too fast, even though I can easily feel his rib
cage.
*****
Probably the grains. An inappropriate diet will grow pups
inappropriately. Once you get rid of the junk and focus on meat,
meaty bones and organs (in amounts useful to a bitsy pup) your baby
will grow more slowly and will develop muscle instead of fat.

I am glad your vet is concerned about fat pups, since most vets
appear to ignore weight issues entirely for fear of insulting their
human patients. Bah. Keep your pup lean and fit. Fat goldens have
bad hearts and bad joints. Moreso even than goldens in general do.


this pup sure does have large poops in between. Sometimes he poops
three times in one outing! So I then think, gee, maybe I'm giving him
too much!
*****
You probably are; certainly the grains you feed will bulk up not only
him but also his stools. Remember: meat, edible bone, organs.


He will go up and down on his own, if I let him, but I already had a
dog with real bad HD on both of her hips, and with our other "then"
pups, we also carried them up for the longest time.
*****
HD isn't likely to come from gently using the stairs, it's genetic.
My guess is you got yourself a monster golden. He's going to weigh
more than a "standard" golden so your vet will never be comfortable
with his scale weight: you have to maintain his functional weight
based on your observations.

It is especially important to get the grains out and keep them out.
Chris O


Messages in this topic (3)
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5a. Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "Andrea" poketmouse45@yahoo.com poketmouse45
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 7:06 am ((PDT))

> Should I not raw feed my dog because she's already
> been 'vaxed2thamax'?

The only way you'll begin to fix any immune system damage is to give
her a healthy diet. Continuing to feed her junk food isn't the
answer.

> Could that have weakened her immune system enough to make her
> vulnerable to salmonella?

Doubtful. Lots of raw fed dogs have seen lots of vaccines and have
never been overrun by salmonella.

> How could I find out if my dog in fact has a weakened immune system?

If it was weakened to the point that she couldn't handle a the
bacteria that might be on raw food you would know by now. She's been
eating raw for a month now, right? She's fine.

> What about if someone feeds my dog something she shouldn't have -
> or she eats something outside that doesn't digest as quickly as
> chicken and the chicken takes longer to come out. In that case
> could the salmonella multiply inside her or something, and make her
> sick?

You're really making a mountain out of a molehill here. I've seen
pretty unhealthy dogs switch to a raw diet without bacterial
overgrowth. Though vaccines do challenge the immune system they
aren't going to break it down to the point that a dog can't handle
normal bacteria. Otherwise the entire country would be filled with
dogs on their deathbeds.

> What about if I miss a spot while cleaning the floor where she's
> eaten raw chicken. Is there a chance if she licks that spot a day
> later that enough salmonella to sicken her?

Time to take a breath. You can't make the world sterile for her, and
you shouldn't want to. Bacteria are around, they always have been.

Andrea

Messages in this topic (15)
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5b. Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "marlena_adema" marlena_adema@yahoo.ca marlena_adema
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 7:14 am ((PDT))

Hi Alex,

I too am new to the raw diet, and I totally get your concerns! The
biggest one for me also, was salmonella. When I first started I
would disinfect the counters, the mat on which my dog ate, my hands
and anything else I thought got exposed to the evil bacteria. I
reasoned that yes, a dog could probably deal with the quantities of
salmonella present on a freshly thawed chicken, but what about the
colonies that grew on the floor where I didn't clean? And what
about me? Could I infect myself or others by contaminated areas in
my house where bacteria was growing out of control!? OMG!

But as I kept reading the messages posted here (and this seems to be
a big issue out there for newbies), I slowly relaxed. The veterans
keep assuring us they have been doing this for years w/o the extreme
care us newbies exercise, and they have had no problems. Indeed, an
earlier post talks about 10,000 members and no-one has reported
salmonella poisoning.

Of course you want to use good hygiene when dealing with chicken and
any other raw food - that goes w/o saying. But perhaps our culture
is overly obsessed with disinfecting EVERYTHING and have made us all
a little too paranoid??? In all my research, I keep hearing about
salmonella fears, but I've yet to hear someone say they actually
went thru salmonella poisoning. I did some investigating for
specific cases of canine Salmonellosis, and didn't find anything on
the web. However, I did find this good article and hope it will put
your fears to rest:
http://www.mountaindogfood.com/HealthCare/Salmonella2.htm

Marlena


Messages in this topic (15)
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5c. Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "Howard Salob" itiskismet1968@yahoo.com itiskismet1968
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 8:53 am ((PDT))

Dear Marlena,

I loved this article. People have asked me for the research and i did not have it until now. I love rawfeeding and believe it has helped saved my dog's life. I tell everyone I can and cannot thank the good people enough involved with this site- some include Chris O, Bill Carnes, Andrea and Giselle ( to name a few- there are many).

Sincerely,

Howard

marlena_adema <marlena_adema@yahoo.ca> wrote:
Hi Alex,

I too am new to the raw diet, and I totally get your concerns! The
biggest one for me also, was salmonella. When I first started I
would disinfect the counters, the mat on which my dog ate, my hands
and anything else I thought got exposed to the evil bacteria. I
reasoned that yes, a dog could probably deal with the quantities of
salmonella present on a freshly thawed chicken, but what about the
colonies that grew on the floor where I didn't clean? And what
about me? Could I infect myself or others by contaminated areas in
my house where bacteria was growing out of control!? OMG!

But as I kept reading the messages posted here (and this seems to be
a big issue out there for newbies), I slowly relaxed. The veterans
keep assuring us they have been doing this for years w/o the extreme
care us newbies exercise, and they have had no problems. Indeed, an
earlier post talks about 10,000 members and no-one has reported
salmonella poisoning.

Of course you want to use good hygiene when dealing with chicken and
any other raw food - that goes w/o saying. But perhaps our culture
is overly obsessed with disinfecting EVERYTHING and have made us all
a little too paranoid??? In all my research, I keep hearing about
salmonella fears, but I've yet to hear someone say they actually
went thru salmonella poisoning. I did some investigating for
specific cases of canine Salmonellosis, and didn't find anything on
the web. However, I did find this good article and hope it will put
your fears to rest:
http://www.mountaindogfood.com/HealthCare/Salmonella2.htm

Marlena

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Messages in this topic (15)
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5d. Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "amvilppu" amvilppu@hotmail.com amvilppu
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:06 pm ((PDT))


> Hi Alex,
> Thought I would add this..maybe for your comfort :)...but I have
> crawled in bed with a chicken wing and a beef rib before. I have found
> chicken parts behind the plant stand in my living room, a rib bone
> stuffed in my couch...

Yes I learned to supervise meal time very closely after I went to bed and found a drumstick
buried in my down comforter. Not many places to bury treats in an apartment with a deck.

Annaliisa, Drew and Boxer pup Laila

Messages in this topic (15)
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6a. Re: Allergies in raw vs. cooked meats
Posted by: "Andrea" poketmouse45@yahoo.com poketmouse45
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 7:39 am ((PDT))

I don't know that you really need studies to prove it. Someone is
allergic to something because their body sees a specific protein as
an antigen and produces antibodies to get rid of it. The protein
needs to be a specific shape in order for the antibodies to hook up
with it. Cooking denatures many proteins, that is, it changes their
shape, so they can't connect with the antibodies anymore. Or vice
versa, cooking changes the shape of the protein so that it *does*
hook up with an antibody.

Here's a website that has a good description of what allergies are
http://www.eufic.org/jarticle/en/food-nutrition-guide/food-
allergy/expid/basics-food-allergy-intolerance/
It's a long address, so the hyperlink might not work. I'm not saavy
enough to force the link, sorry. The page talks about allergies to
milk and how different methods of cooking the milk can reduce
allergic reactions in people.

This website talks about how many proteins in beef are denatured
during the cooking process:
http://allallergy.net/fapaidfind.cfm?cdeoc=133

"Beef contains BSA and bovine gamma globulin (BGG). These are heat
labile proteins found also in cow's milk. This may explain the
different clinical responses to raw and cooked beef in milk-allergic
patients. (Werfel ) 24 allergens found of which many are heat-labile
and denatured during cooking (Werfel)."

Andrea

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Kristin" <girlndocs@...> wrote:

> I wonder if anyone here knows of an informative article or study on
> the subject?

Messages in this topic (5)
________________________________________________________________________

6b. Re: Allergies in raw vs. cooked meats
Posted by: "mgitaville" mgitaville@hotmail.com mgitaville
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:23 pm ((PDT))

So, myself being one of those allergy dog owners who no longer has
such issues I feel the need to chime in. I was thinking that while I
as well know of no sources to prove your statement there is another
way to go about showing someone the difference of raw vs. cooked when
related to allergies....

Most owners I have found really do not understand the physical
reaction that occurs as Andrea was explaining in a previous post.
They do not realize that allergies are an immune system issue, plain
and simple. They also do not realize that what is perceived as a
food allergy is actually likely an inhalant allergy, but that is
another issue. When a histamine reaction occurs as a result of
contact with the allergen the "symptoms" of allergies we see are due
to an immune system that is over working itself to combat the
allergen. So, strengthen the immune system and we strengthen the
ability to deal with the allergen.

My point in all this babble is that while I can not provide you with
sources to prove your statement that we all know to be true, I would
think you could find sources that reference the strengthened immune
system from raw vs. comprised immune system from cooked/kibble.

A true food allergen isn't going to go away due to raw... I still
can't feed lamb and we are still allergic to wheat and various other
grains. The difference is now if someone comes by and gives my dog a
treat without asking we are not dealing with vomitting immediately
and explosive stools. His body can handle the small amounts of
allergen without OVER-reacting. Inhalant allergies are now able to
be dealt with while not overloading his system b/c we were able to
take the constant weakening of his immune system that was occurring
trying to deal with grains in his kibble.

Make sense at all? I could be incorrect in my explanation but this
is how I have always seen it. I have found sometimes the easier
explanation to give people is to talk of how it of course does not
cure allergies, but it strengthens the body's ability to deal with
the allergens.

Marguerita

Messages in this topic (5)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

7a. 7# Chihuahua Ready for more than chicken
Posted by: "autumnji@aol.com" autumnji@aol.com jayagurumayi
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 9:17 am ((PDT))

she's been doing great on chicken backs, organs
and necks for over 2 months. i mean really great.
she'll do anything i ask, for me to please put that bowl down.
moving on is long overdue.

if i give her a chicken quarter, do i let her try to eat the larger
bones, or remove them after she knaws off the meat?
is it permissible to ask butcher to quarter the chicken?
(sorry im a vegetarian and the meat counter is a whole new world)

what other meats should i ask for?

is there a raw egroup for small dogs? i love this group but
i have tons more small dog questions. or would any other little dog
people please email me a sample weekly diet? thanks.

autumn


**************************************
See what's new at

http://www.aol.com


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

Messages in this topic (3)
________________________________________________________________________

7b. Re: 7# Chihuahua Ready for more than chicken
Posted by: "Andrea" poketmouse45@yahoo.com poketmouse45
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 9:38 am ((PDT))

Little dogs may not be able to consume the large bones that large
dogs do, but they sure have a great time working on them! My
sister's chi does great with chicken bones, there isn't anything he
can't consume. I would suggest you serve anything we talk about here
for big dogs, just don't worry if she doesn't eat the bones. Edible
bone is a small part of the diet, so chicken and small animal bones
will do fine for that.

> is it permissible to ask butcher to quarter the chicken?

Absolutely.

> would any other little dog people please email me a sample weekly
> diet?

A sample diet for a little'un isn't all that different from the big
ones meals, really. When my sister's chi stays with me I end up
putting a lot of half eaten stuff back in the freezer so he gets a
variety of foods instead of eating the same rabbit for a week. Last
time he stayed with me he ate the following:
Beef heart and turkey neck
Rabbit
Pork shoulder
Chicken quarter
beef heart and turkey neck with some liver
goat and green tripe
rabbit

Of course he didn't eat all of each item, I just put the food down
and let him eat until he is finished.

Andrea

Messages in this topic (3)
________________________________________________________________________

7c. Re: 7# Chihuahua Ready for more than chicken
Posted by: "Kelly" kelism@gmail.com vt_stuff
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:05 pm ((PDT))

On 10/30/07, autumnji@aol.com <autumnji@aol.com> wrote:
>
> if i give her a chicken quarter, do i let her try to eat the larger
> bones, or remove them after she knaws off the meat?


Let her eat the whole thing, she won't have a problem doing so. I have
chihuahuas that are about 3 lbs and they are able to eat any chicken bone I
give them.


what other meats should i ask for?


Anythning you see mentioned on the list goes for small dogs too. They may
not be able to consume the larger bones, but they will still be able to eat
anything a large dog can. I could send you a sample weekly diet, but it
probably won't be a huge difference from anyone's sample diet.

--
Kelly


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

Messages in this topic (3)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

8a. Re: How Long to Freeze Fresh Venison (first time)
Posted by: "Tina Berry" k9baron@gmail.com k9antje
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 10:17 am ((PDT))

"You mean I don't have to freeze at all????!!!"

Correct - mine eat it right out of the barrels fresh from the butcher (while
I'm trying to package it up and get it in the freezers LOL).
--
Tina Berry - MT
Kriegshund German Shepherds
Working Lines ~ Naturally Reared
www.kriegshundgsds.com


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

Messages in this topic (6)
________________________________________________________________________

8b. Re: How Long to Freeze Fresh Venison (first time)
Posted by: "helpshelteranimals" helpshelteranimals@yahoo.com helpshelteranimals
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:06 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Tina Berry" <k9baron@...> wrote:

> Correct - mine eat it right out of the barrels fresh from the butcher
(while
> I'm trying to package it up and get it in the freezers LOL).
> --
> Tina Berry - MT
***********

How adorable! My dog has not shown any interest in the venison yet,
but one of my cats attacked it like nothing I've ever seen! It's from
a processing/taxadermy (sp?) place.

Thanks!

AG & Ruffian

Messages in this topic (6)
________________________________________________________________________

8c. Re: How Long to Freeze Fresh Venison (first time)
Posted by: "mgitaville" mgitaville@hotmail.com mgitaville
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:31 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "helpshelteranimals"
<helpshelteranimals@...> wrote:

>
> How adorable! My dog has not shown any interest in the venison yet,
> but one of my cats attacked it like nothing I've ever seen! It's
from
> a processing/taxadermy (sp?) place.
>
> Thanks!
>
> AG & Ruffian
>

******Smaller quantities than normal is my recommendation!!!! Just my
experience after a 1am blowout the first 2 times I fed venison! It is
rich and new so I would cut back to a small amount the first time or 2
and make sure they can then handle more.

Marguerita

Messages in this topic (6)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

9a. Re: Eating less normal?
Posted by: "susrob061174" susrob061174@yahoo.com susrob061174
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 10:17 am ((PDT))

Tia,

<<During the past week or so he has been not wanting to eat in the
morning but does fine at dinner. Is it normal for him to be eating
less, (when he first started he seemed ravenous), just walking away,
and to only want to eat one meal a day?>>

This is normal not wanting to eat everytime. When a dog is getting the
correct food and nutrient, he may not want nothing, this is called
fasting. I fast, I don't know about anybody else, but I do it at least
once a week. In stead of getting meat or organs I give a meaty bone so
that they still think they are getting feed.

<<"Louie da Pug", 12 mos old and 25 lbs., has been on raw for about 3
months now,>>
<<this Pug looks more like a small Bulldog in the body and much
taller/larger that most.>>

You may be feeding to much too. A normal Pug should weight between 14
and 18 lbs, but that can depend on the parents and what they look
like. It is also so easy to overfeed and cause obesity on raw too.
That why you feed based on the dogs condition.

Susanne, Courtney & The Danes
Life is GRAND when you love a DANE! Have you licked you DANE today?:P


Messages in this topic (3)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

10a. Re: ground food
Posted by: "Sandee Lee" rlee@plix.com mariasmom2001
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 10:45 am ((PDT))

Hi Kitty,

Necks and backs will not provide enough meat and of course they will require
red meat, more variety and organs eventually. Better to feed nice whole
pieces and parts tho....you might want to read through the rawfeeding myths.
There is one specifically that pertains to ground food and feeding small
dogs!!

Sandee & the Dane Gang

From: "Ashley Myers" <miragehairsalon@yahoo.com>

> I was fortunate to find a raw supplier at a local farmers market who buys
from Lancaster Pa.
> Ihave three little dogs 15,11,& 5 lbs, all in good shape. Is it enough
to feed them ground chicken necks and backs?They enjoy it but I'm concerned
if they're getting enough or should I put more meat in?How about
gizzards,liver,hearts?
> He gave me some tripe,was anxious to try it but can't get past the
smell! The dogs loved it, little yorkie was a bit skeptical. Cat not so
much.

Messages in this topic (4)
________________________________________________________________________

10b. Re: ground food
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 11:01 am ((PDT))

Ashley Myers <miragehairsalon@...> wrote:

Is it enough to feed them ground chicken necks and backs?
*****
No, it is not nearly enough. Enough bone, for sure. Too much bone,
actually. What's missing is meat--red meat in particular--and
organs. Oh, and what's also missing from their diet is whole food.

These small dogs are perfectly, absolutely, positively capable of
eating whole meats and organs, and chomping whole bones. Not big old
beef bones of course, but those chicken backs? You can hand them out
whole or perhaps (maybe at first) gently bashed. Those necks? You
can feed them whole to small dogs. To VERY small dogs they are of a
good size, although they do lack sufficient meat. YOu can let your
little ones work on whole pork necks, on lamb shanks, probably on
lamb chops and pork chops and whole beef and pork ribs as well. NOT
ground, whole. They may do little damage to these bones but little
is good for little dogs.


They enjoy it but I'm concerned if they're getting enough or should I
put more meat in?How about gizzards,liver,hearts?*
*****
Yes, heart and liver are essential. RED MEAT is essential. Gizzards
are not organs but they do contribute more meat to the menu, so yes,
feed them as well. Just don't grind them.


> He gave me some tripe,was anxious to try it but can't get past
the smell!
*****
It's a smell worth getting past. Tripe isn't a miracle food but you
need to get more meat into that diet and tripe is one way to do it.

While you may have to transition your cat slowly to whole raw foods,
you can take a more forthright approach with your dogs. Stop
grinding, start feeding whole bits and pieces. Whole cleans the
teeth and gums, exercises the body and the brain and includes
natural, built-in fun. Grinding is a one-way trip to dental issues
and gingivitis.

Chris O

Messages in this topic (4)
________________________________________________________________________
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All information on this list represents personal opinion only. By staying on this list, you agree to never hold anyone from this list or associated with this list liable for any information posted through this list. You agree to take personal responsibility for your learning, and for personal responsibility for what you feed yourself, your family, and your dogs, cats, ferrets, or any other animal that lives under your care. If you don't agree, please unsubscribe immediately.

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[rawfeeding] Digest Number 12221

There are 9 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:

1a. Re: Bella, yet again.
From: Renate

2a. Re: Salmonella question
From: connie

3a. Re: {Raw Feeding} Took Max to the vet!
From: Brandi Bryant

4a. Re: Great "recipe" website
From: marlena_adema

5. We also have a new pup and a million questions
From: GoldenGirlAldi

6a. ground food
From: Ashley Myers
6b. Re: ground food
From: Andrea

7a. ADMIN/Re: Don't know if this is an allowable question????
From: babyboyfila1

8a. Re: Newbi eIntro
From: jaygaughan


Messages
________________________________________________________________________

1a. Re: Bella, yet again.
Posted by: "Renate" renate.tideswell@gmail.com tideswell_renate
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 5:08 am ((PDT))

Kinda stupid, wasn't it, trying chicken backs? She doesn't want chicken at
all so of course, she didn't eat the backs. she had a good time crunching up
the boiled egg, though, will give it raw next time. I got some sardines and
tuna, so I can try a bit of that later. But I get the message, let her eat
what she wants and stop worrying.... Thank you, will try to do that.;-)
Renate

On 10/30/07, Sandee Lee <rlee@plix.com> wrote:
>
> Well obviously your vet does not understand what a "balanced" diet for a
> carnivore consists of, does she???? :))
>
> If Bella is not wanting bone, there's no way she'll touch a back...maybe
> breast meat, but I thought she didn't want chicken at all? Whatever...feed
> her what she wants at this point. She knows what she needs.
>


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

Messages in this topic (12)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

2a. Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "connie" justbullies@hotmail.com bullienut
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 5:35 am ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "alexanderdewey"
<alexanderdewey@...> wrote:
>
>

Hi Alex,
Thought I would add this..maybe for your comfort :)...but I have
crawled in bed with a chicken wing and a beef rib before. I have found
chicken parts behind the plant stand in my living room, a rib bone
stuffed in my couch...lol...and varies other raw foods buried in the
dirty laundry basket...I am a clean person...but don`t go
overboard...bacteria is everywhere!! I did learn to shut my bedroom
door during feeding time...:) And if you have to resort to k*bble I
suggest a grain free..from an pet food outlet..can`t find in a grocery
store.
~connie~
and a bunch of bulldogs
www.justbullies.com


Messages in this topic (11)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

3a. Re: {Raw Feeding} Took Max to the vet!
Posted by: "Brandi Bryant" bbryant573@gmail.com bbryant573
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:04 am ((PDT))

Thank you but I'm gonna wait to see what he finds from the blood that he's
already taken and I agree with the vet I don't think it's hypothyroid
anymore -

Brandi

>
>
>

--
Brandi
Bartlesville, Ok


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

Messages in this topic (6)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

4a. Re: Great "recipe" website
Posted by: "marlena_adema" marlena_adema@yahoo.ca marlena_adema
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:12 am ((PDT))

> It and http://rawfed.com are the websites I recommend most
frequently.
> Chris O
>

And a great recommendation it is - this is the website that convinced
me to go raw. It answered all my questions and it's credibility
factor is high.

Marlena

Messages in this topic (6)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

5. We also have a new pup and a million questions
Posted by: "GoldenGirlAldi" aldona99@yahoo.com aldona99
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:12 am ((PDT))

Hi,
We also have a new Golden Retriever puppy in the house. He was on kibble and green tripe at the breeders. We took him home with 7 weeks. With 9 weeks, we took a urin sample, because I thought he was peeing too often, and it came in trickles sometimes. The urin showed a high white blood count, along with a large amount of crystals. She told me to feed him moist foods, and no more dry food, saying that the dry stuff had too many minerals that were collecting in his bladder, and this could cause stones in the future.

I had no problem with dropping the kibble, as I'm for the more natural diet anyway.

I fed him chicken wings, which apparently is not advised on this list. Or did I misunderstand something? Anyway, he ends up barfing up the biggest bone of the wing. Seems he doesn't break up the bones well enough. So now I chop off wing tip part, and grind the other. After reading the past few posts on the subject, I'm reading I shouldn't grind anything up for him.

Same for the tripe, which I picked up at the slaughterhouse. It was a whole tripe! Never knew it was so humongous, or that heavy! But I cut a piece off for him to chew on. He chewed like about 5 minutes, then left it. But he'll his his 200 grams of ground tripe!

When we had our adult Goldens, they could and would eat anything! No problems! Although I've never reached the stage of giving them something like a whole pig's head, or similar. Feeding raw became a way of life, before Gina had whelped. It was easy getting the pups on an all raw diet, but our adult dogs have all passed away, and all we had was our Sheltie girl, whom I'm also switching onto the raw diet again. But she is such a peculiar dog, quite different than our goldens.

Now with pup Marley, I'm a total rookie. Billinghurst recommends one diet, Wendy Volhard recommends a different but similar diet, so which diet does this list recommend?

I'm just so unsure of myself. I'm not sure, do I supplement during the pup months? or not? Should I give brewer's yeast? Vit. E in form of oils? Kelp? I put a half a teaspoon of crushed egg shells with his breakfast meal, which consists of oatmeal, milk, honey, brewer's yeast, kelp, oil. He's not very fond of this first meal of the day, I'm sorry to say, but I never problems with our other dogs eating it. They ate ANYTHING!

Our vet has also told me several times already, that Marley is gaining too much too fast, even though I can easily feel his rib cage. Before he eats you can clearly see the indentation between rib cage and hips, so then I worry that he might not be getting enough.

Oh, and about his poop... I had the lovely experience of having small portions of poop from our adult dogs, and this pup sure does have large poops in between. Sometimes he poops three times in one outing! So I then think, gee, maybe I'm giving him too much!

He is now 13 week, 2 days, and weighs 15 kilos/33.7 lbs. We also live on the 2nd floor, so we carry him down 3 flights of stairs several times a day, so his joints won't be stressed from going up and down himself, but golly jeepers!! He's over 30 lbs! and I'm supposed to do this how long? He will go up and down on his own, if I let him, but I already had a dog with real bad HD on both of her hips, and with our other "then" pups, we also carried them up for the longest time.

I hope someone here can help me sort things out, so I can get my act together, and become more sure of myself that I'm doing it properly.

Sincerely,
Aldona with Sheldon the Sheltie, almost 7 yrs., Marley the GR, 13 weeks, Chinny the persian, 8 yrs (only likes tuna in a can and kibble)

Marley's stool is often quite dark. I've wondered how much dark stools should he have? Then he has some runny stool.

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

Messages in this topic (1)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

6a. ground food
Posted by: "Ashley Myers" miragehairsalon@yahoo.com miragehairsalon
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:12 am ((PDT))

I was fortunate to find a raw supplier at a local farmers market who buys from Lancaster Pa.
Ihave three little dogs 15,11,& 5 lbs, all in good shape. Is it enough to feed them ground chicken necks and backs?They enjoy it but I'm concerned if they're getting enough or should I put more meat in?How about gizzards,liver,hearts?
He gave me some tripe,was anxious to try it but can't get past the smell! The dogs loved it, little yorkie was a bit skeptical. Cat not so much.
Thanks for your help, still learning.
Kitty


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Messages in this topic (2)
________________________________________________________________________

6b. Re: ground food
Posted by: "Andrea" poketmouse45@yahoo.com poketmouse45
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:29 am ((PDT))

One of the greatest things about a prey model diet is that it acts as
natural toothbrush and floss for the dog when they rip tear and crunch
their food. Feeding ground food does nothing to keep their mouths
clean and healthy. Whole necks and backs need more meat added in like
gizzards or hearts. Stick with whole stuff and your dogs' mouths will
thank you.

Andrea

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, Ashley Myers <miragehairsalon@...>
wrote:

> Is it enough to feed them ground chicken necks and backs?They enjoy
> it but I'm concerned if they're getting enough or should I put more
> meat in?How about gizzards,liver,hearts?

Messages in this topic (2)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

7a. ADMIN/Re: Don't know if this is an allowable question????
Posted by: "babyboyfila1" babyboyfila1@yahoo.com babyboyfila1
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:26 am ((PDT))

thank you all.
I will keep feeding raw, they get plently of love, fresh air, clean
water and bye bye trips. LOL not to mention our bed space...ROFLMAO...
Dawn


Messages in this topic (8)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

8a. Re: Newbi eIntro
Posted by: "jaygaughan" jaygaughan@yahoo.com jaygaughan
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 6:27 am ((PDT))

Please excuse me if I'm not familiar with the proper terminology just
yet Chris.

As a newbie to raw feeding I kind of associated all raw feeding with
BARF (Bone And Raw Food).

As I stated I am getting another Great Dane. So ground up meats or
little chicken necks won't be necessary. Although my breeder did
start the litter out with ground meat from what she told me.

Grain and fruits are not in my plans but it seems all my dogs have
enjoyed some veggies. I enjoy gardening and one of my other Danes
used to pick his own green beans every time I was in the garden with
him.

"What we prefer to discuss and prefer to feed is whole prey or
practical representations thereof"

I'm a little lost on this part. Whole prey and practical
representation??? Are you telling me you feed whole chickens with
feathers or a full size Doe to your dogs? I didn't get that from the
heading on this site. Is there any guidelines here I can read up on?

Jay


Messages in this topic (3)
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________

All information on this list represents personal opinion only. By staying on this list, you agree to never hold anyone from this list or associated with this list liable for any information posted through this list. You agree to take personal responsibility for your learning, and for personal responsibility for what you feed yourself, your family, and your dogs, cats, ferrets, or any other animal that lives under your care. If you don't agree, please unsubscribe immediately.

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[rawfeeding] Digest Number 12220

There are 25 messages in this issue.

Topics in this digest:

1a. Re: Allergies in raw vs. cooked meats
From: carnesbill
1b. Re: Allergies in raw vs. cooked meats
From: Sandee Lee

2a. Re: Don't know if this is an allowable question????
From: Sandee Lee

3a. Re: Bella, yet again.
From: Sandee Lee

4a. Re: Brand new puppy
From: Tamara
4b. Re: Brand new puppy
From: Dawn Crosier
4c. Re: Brand new puppy
From: costrowski75

5a. Re: Eating carcass but not whole chicken?
From: Laurie Swanson
5b. Re: Eating carcass but not whole chicken?
From: jennifer_hell

6a. Re: Ok I know it has to be in here
From: carnesbill

7a. Eating less normal?
From: Virginia Snider
7b. Re: Eating less normal?
From: carnesbill

8a. Dogs Losing Weight Advice
From: Andrea Roher
8b. Re: Dogs Losing Weight Advice
From: Giselle

9a. Re: Salmonella question
From: alexanderdewey
9b. Re: Salmonella question
From: Sandee Lee
9c. Re: Salmonella question
From: alexanderdewey

10a. Re: Pork Neck
From: JIMMIE A FORBES
10b. Re: Pork Neck
From: costrowski75

11a. ADMIN/Re: Salmonella question
From: costrowski75

12a. ADMIN/Re: Don't know if this is an allowable question????
From: costrowski75

13a. Re: upset tummy
From: Giselle

14a. Re: {Raw Feeding} Took Max to the vet!
From: Giselle

15.1. Re: New to group
From: Giselle

16a. Re: Somebody kill me NOW
From: jennifer_hell


Messages
________________________________________________________________________

1a. Re: Allergies in raw vs. cooked meats
Posted by: "carnesbill" carnesw@bellsouth.net carnesbill
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 6:57 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Kristin" <girlndocs@...> wrote:
>
> I wonder if anyone here knows of an informative article or study
> on the subject?

Unfortunately, I doubt there is one. I would love to see it if
there was. However, I have seen many many posts on this list from
people whose dog was allergic to a particular meat in kibble that
eats it with no problem now that they have switched to a raw diet.

The statement you made is correct. I just don't know how to prove
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 (3)
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1b. Re: Allergies in raw vs. cooked meats
Posted by: "Sandee Lee" rlee@plix.com mariasmom2001
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:58 pm ((PDT))

Kristin,

I don't know about studies, but allergy tests for foods are very unreliable
and based on denatured proteins which have no correlation to raw proteins.
This has been discussed quite often on this list, but don't know if there
has been any evidence posted.

Carrie should know if she's around.

Sandee & the Dane Gang

From: "Kristin" <girlndocs@hotmail.com>
>
> I passed on the idea, on a dog discussion forum, that a dog allergic to
cooked meat may not be allergic to that meat in a raw form.
>
> I was asked if I have any studies or evidence to back that up and to my
shame (normally I'm of the "make the claim, have the evidence" school) I
don't.
>
> I wonder if anyone here knows of an informative article or study on the
subject?

Messages in this topic (3)
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2a. Re: Don't know if this is an allowable question????
Posted by: "Sandee Lee" rlee@plix.com mariasmom2001
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:32 pm ((PDT))

Dawn,

This is getting pretty far off topic for this list, but just continue
building up the immune system of these pups with appropriate diet, lots of
fun, fresh air, good water, eliminate stress, vaccines and toxins as much as
possible. Localized demodex is very common in puppies, it has to do with
the immune system being stressed. It is best to do what you can to build
up the immune system, lower stress and let the problem resolve itself

Treating with the recommended poisons is counterproductive and
harmful...don't do it!

Sandee & the Dane Gang

From: "babyboyfila1" <babyboyfila1@yahoo.com>

I have lurked here for a while now and have learned so much from you.
My dogs have done well with the raw diet. I have two rescue pups that
are now 7 months and 6 months and 1 week. Two different mothers, same
father and one really horrible breeder...they are having a real problem
with demodex mange. I really don't want to do the dip routine and the
puppy tried to bite the kennel help. I have heard that you can give
injectable ivermectin 1/10 of a cc to 10 pounds of body weight for
this. But I would like to know if anyone out there has tried a natural
cure and had it work or where I might be directed.


Messages in this topic (7)
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3a. Re: Bella, yet again.
Posted by: "Sandee Lee" rlee@plix.com mariasmom2001
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:37 pm ((PDT))

Well obviously your vet does not understand what a "balanced" diet for a
carnivore consists of, does she???? :))

If Bella is not wanting bone, there's no way she'll touch a back...maybe
breast meat, but I thought she didn't want chicken at all? Whatever...feed
her what she wants at this point. She knows what she needs.

Sandee & the Dane Gang

From: "Renate" <renate.tideswell@gmail.com>


> Thank you Sandee. I picked up more of the stuff she is willing to eat
and
> some whole chickens (on sale for buy one, get one free LOL). I thought
I'd
> try her with the backs - no way. She always did have a stubborn streak.
I
> seem to have the vet's little voice in my head saying, make sure she gets
a
> balanced diet..... She actually asked what I use for training treats and
> when I said Rollover, she said 'At least part of her diet will be properly
> balanced' I guess she doesn't get the fact that I'm not going to be doing
> any agility training with Bella this far into a pregnancy, and training
> treats do not a diet make, at least not in this house. If they are an
> eighth of an inch square, they are lucky.

Messages in this topic (11)
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4a. Re: Brand new puppy
Posted by: "Tamara" tsfairish@sbcglobal.net tamarafairish
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:52 pm ((PDT))

Thank you so much, everyone!

I didn't get to the store today, so I used what I had on hand to feed
pup --
* ground bison (I know, I know, I'm not supposed to use ground, but
it's what I had on hand),
* chicken heart & liver,
* a chicken neck (half at one meal, and the other half at another meal)

She enjoyed the heck out of the chicken neck.

Chris, why do you say no chicken necks? Is it because so much bone
and so little meat? Are they ok when used the way I used it today?

Also, several of you suggested Cornish game hens. Where do you get
them? I looked at the rodent supply link someone was kind enough to
include, but they don't have game hens.

Thank you again, so much! Tamara

Messages in this topic (12)
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4b. Re: Brand new puppy
Posted by: "Dawn Crosier" dlcrosier@sbcglobal.net dlc110161
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:55 pm ((PDT))

Congratulations on the new baby!

I'd go ahead and feed the new Golden chunks of meat. You need to feed 2 to
3% of the expected body weight of the adult dog, so cut a whole chicken in
quarters and feed one quarter. You may have to help a little in that you may
need to cut strips into the meat so that it is *ribboned* and provides a
place for the pup to get a hold of the chicken.

The recommendation is to feed a week of one protein and then a week of
another, so feed the chicken until gone. Don't grind your meat except as
treats.

Dawn


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Messages in this topic (12)
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4c. Re: Brand new puppy
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 9:51 pm ((PDT))

"Tamara" <tsfairish@...> wrote:
>
> * ground bison (I know, I know, I'm not supposed to use ground, but
> it's what I had on hand),
> * chicken heart & liver,
> * a chicken neck (half at one meal, and the other half at another
meal)
>
> She enjoyed the heck out of the chicken neck.
>
> Chris, why do you say no chicken necks? Is it because so much bone
> and so little meat? Are they ok when used the way I used it
today?
*****
They are too little for most dogs and pups. I give them to my 10
pound cat along with the heart and gizzard and maybe a smidge of
liver; I seriously question the suitability of chicken necks in a
golden puppy's diet.

Chicken necks are too bony/not meaty enough and they are just the
right size for hasty swallowing. Even for a golden pup. Perhaps
especially for a golden pupster.l They are probably their most
benign when fed to the very small and to the very large.

Clearly you and your pup survived the experience. It would certainly
be my choice not to repeat it.


> Also, several of you suggested Cornish game hens.
*****
You can buy them at most supermarkets. Generally they are foolishly
pricey and for no good reason--they are, after all, just young
chickens. I buy them when they're on sale; I buy them from my local
Grocery Store Outlet for a tolerably high price. For pups and small
dogs and cats they really are nifty though. IMO their accomodating
size is compensation for their absurd expense.

I buy dressed quail at Asian markets, and some Latino markets and
from a meat wholsaler. They were quite useful for my BC pup, but she
was a small thing as a babe. Heck, she's a small thing now. Quail
weigh about 4 ounces each and as part of a four-meal puppy feeding
plan, they are nicely one meal.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (12)
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5a. Re: Eating carcass but not whole chicken?
Posted by: "Laurie Swanson" laurie@mckinneyphoto.com las_lala
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:52 pm ((PDT))

Hi Nicole,

He might have been confused that his food looked different today. Or
else it was bigger and more daunting? You can try leaving it down for
15 mins. and see if he gives it a try, and if he doesn't eat, just keep
feeding that piece for the next few meals til he gets hungry enough to
work a bit harder. You can also "ribbon" the meat (cut/slice some
strips into it so parts are a bit floppy. Or cut it in half (so you'll
have a chicken quarter then) to make it seem a bit more manageable to
him.

He does probably need a bit more meat, so keep working on it. Also,
how's he doing with the drumsticks? Those can be choking hazards for
big dogs. You'll probably not want to feed anything smaller than a
quarter chicken.

Laurie

Messages in this topic (4)
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5b. Re: Eating carcass but not whole chicken?
Posted by: "jennifer_hell" jenniferhell@web.de jennifer_hell
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 4:28 am ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Nicole" <reotec@...> wrote:
>
> He had a bit of a lick and then walked away. i tried to entice him -
> but to no avail. (took off the skin - exposed the meat)
>
Mine did that too at first- I poured a little boiling water on it,
then she ate it. She still prefers frames, but will eat the whole
chicken if I take it away after a few minutes. The third time I give
it to her she's like "Oh well, if there reeeeeally isn't anything else
to eat...". Lol!!

Jennifer with Mandy

Messages in this topic (4)
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6a. Re: Ok I know it has to be in here
Posted by: "carnesbill" carnesw@bellsouth.net carnesbill
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:53 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "deisel01" <deisel01@...> wrote:
>
> But the X amount os posts i guess I will ask anyways. I hae 7 dogs
the
> are on hard kibble but I want to change them to raw, I want to
start
> with only 2 of them and see how it goes. My question is where do I
> start? What do I feed for a biginning & how often?
>
How do I begin?
First off, you want to begin with one meat source until your dog
gets used to digesting meat. I suggest chicken, specifically chicken
backs only for the first week. Chicken meat is easily digested and
the bones are soft and pliable. The second week, I suggest chicken
backs in the morning and chicken quarters in the evening. The third
week I think it would be good to alternate chicken quarters with
turkey necks in the evening, sticking with chicken backs in the
morning. So one evening you would feed chicken quarters, the next
evening it would be turkey necks, then quarters again then necks,
etc. After a week of that, add another meat. I suggest pork. One
pork meal that week. The next week add one meal of fish. I use
canned salmon or mackerel but raw fish will work just fine. Feed
with bones and organs still attached if you can get that. I feed one
fish meal every week for the omega 3 fatty acids for good bright
shiny coats. Then next week, try something in place of the pork,
maybe lamb or beef. So, after a few weeks you will be feeding most
any meat available. After a month or so of feeding raw, you can add
organ meat. You don't feed a meal of organs, just add some organ
meat to one or 2 meals a week. Not a lot of organ meat as they are
rich and can cause runny stools. Now let's put it all together and
look at the diet I feed my dogs after the introduction period. Every
morning they get chicken backs. The evening meals are alternated
between chicken quarters and turkey necks. One of those evening
meals will be fish + organs + a raw egg (shell and all) + anything
else I may have left over in the fridge. One other night during the
week is for "something else". I may feed a pork roast or pork ribs
or pork shoulder. It may be beef, or lamb. Just something other than
chicken, turkey, or fish. That's it. I keep it as simple as
possible. The more you complicate it, the more complicated it
becomes.

What organs do I feed?
Liver is the most important and should be at least 50% of the organs
fed. Any kind of liver will do. Chicken, beef, pork, lamb, any of
them. A variety is best over time. Kidney is the next most
nutritious organ to feed. Also lung and pancreas. Heart is not an
organ but a muscle and is good to feed too. Gizzard is also a muscle.

How much do I feed my adult dog?
Each dog is different and that's impossible to say. However, begin
with 2% to 3% of his IDEAL adult weight each day. Watch him over
time and adjust as necessary. If he gets fat, feed less and vice
versa. Many new raw feeders have this great need to measure
everything. That need will quickly disappear and you will just know
how much to feed. You will also stay in touch with your dogs "build"
and adjust his food accordingly.

How much do I feed my puppy?
This one is a little more complicated so pay attention here. Begin
feeding him 10% of his weight a day. Once 10% of his weight exceeds
2% to 3% of his IDEAL ADULT weight (not present weight), feed the 2%
to 3%. All the time you are doing this you are conscious of his
build and adjust the amount of food accordingly. The puppy will tell
you how much to feed him by his build.

How young can I begin feeding raw?
I personally have fed a 12 week old puppy raw. I know breeders who
will wean their puppies directly to raw. My suggestion is to begin
feeding raw the day you bring him home.

What about fruits & veggies?
A lot of people feed their dogs veggies but if you look to nature,
you will see that your dog wouldn't eat veggies in any measurable
amounts. He might eat a few berries or maybe some grass but
certainly not zucchini, carrots, potatoes or any of the veggies that
many people feed. Also you must know that all the cells in all
vegetable matter is covered by a think layer of cellulose. This
cellulose must be crushed during the eating process in order for the
nutrients in the vegetables to be available for digestion. This is
called bioavailablity. The nutrients in vegetable matter is not
bioavailable to our dogs because they don't have the flat molar
teeth that plant eating animals do. Humans, for example, have flat
molars for crushing cellulose during chewing. Dogs molars are called
carnassal teeth and are not flat but work like scissors to rip and
tear meat and crush bones. So, by looking at your dog's teeth, you
can tell that veggies just are not appropriate food for them. The
vegetable material doesn't harm your dog, but it does them no good
either. Giving carrot treats occasionally doesn't hurt. Just make
sure that you don't feed enough veggies to interfere with the amount
of meat, bones, and organs your dog eats.

Tell me how to balance the diet.
People worry an awful lot about balancing their dog's diet. It seems
to me that they worry more about their dog's diet than their own or
their family's diet. They are dogs. Their digestive systems and
their bodies are not that fragile. Feed meat, bones, and organs from
a variety of animals and the diet will balance itself over time.
Remember that term "over time". It's not necessary to balance each
meal. Balance over time. People getting into raw feeding tend to
worry a lot about ratios and percentages and weights. Forget all
that. Feed raw meat and bones and organs from a variety of animals
and things magically work themselves out. What is ideal? The average
prey animal has about 10% to 15% bone, about 10% organs, and the
rest muscle and fat and connective tissue. If you feed 5% bone or
25% bone, it won't matter. 5% organs or 20% organs doesn't make any
difference. Just stay somewhat in the ballpark and you will be ok.
One thing I look at is the dog's poop. You will become an expert
poop watcher. Ideally, the poop should be solid and turn white and
powdery in a day or 2. If the poop is runny, it generally means you
need to feed more bone. If it is white and powdery when it comes
out, feed less bone. The poop and my dog's build is all I watch and
I don't look at poop very often anymore.

Do I feed supplements?
As long as you feed raw meaty bones and organs from a variety of
animals then you shouldn't need to supplement a healthy dog. Of
course if your dog has a health problem, you might want to add
supplements for that. One more possibility. Some add salmon oil
capsules for omega 3's. I don't because I feed fish at least once a
week.

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 (2)
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7a. Eating less normal?
Posted by: "Virginia Snider" vsnider@cogeco.ca rawbglass
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:55 pm ((PDT))

Hi,

"Louie da Pug", 12 mos old and 25 lbs., has been on raw for about 3
months now, got him through the organ cannon butt stage, and on all meats.

During the past week or so he has been not wanting to eat in the morning but
does fine at dinner. Is it normal for him to be eating less, (when he first
started he seemed ravenous), just walking away, and to only want to eat one
meal a day? Sometimes he will even not want a treat and just turns his head
or takes just a bite and leaves the rest. It just seems a bit weird to me
since I have never seen a dog not take food when offered.

Otherwise he seems to be fine, normal energy levels and is really
beefing out to "manly dog" chest/neck/leg muscles - this Pug looks more like
a small Bulldog in the body and much taller/larger that most. Fur feels
like velvet. Down to one tiny poop a day from 4.

TIA

Virginia

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

Messages in this topic (2)
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7b. Re: Eating less normal?
Posted by: "carnesbill" carnesw@bellsouth.net carnesbill
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 9:57 pm ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Virginia Snider" <vsnider@...>
wrote:
>
> Otherwise he seems to be fine, normal energy levels and is really
> beefing out to "manly dog" chest/neck/leg muscles - this Pug
> looks more like
> a small Bulldog in the body and much taller/larger that most.
> Fur feels
> like velvet. Down to one tiny poop a day from 4.

As long as the above is true, I woudln't be very concerned about
volume of food consumed.

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 (2)
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8a. Dogs Losing Weight Advice
Posted by: "Andrea Roher" evenstar75@gmail.com evenstar75
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:56 pm ((PDT))

I have two Samoyeds. Both have been rawfed since last December or
thereabouts. We're also in very tight finances, so we've been feeding
them almost exclusively whole Menhaden fish (which we can get at an
amazingly low price) with occassional chicken and pork thrown in when
the budget allows. I generally let them eat as much fish as they
want, but they don't seem interested in doing the gorge/fast thing.

Here's the problem: both of my dogs are pretty significantly
underweight. They're under a lot of hair, so it's hard to tell, but
my girl is blowing coat right now, and she looks pretty awful. A
closer inspection of my boy reveals he also is quite a bit too thin
(and he's always been a food hound and a bit heavy before raw
feeding).

I completely believe that raw feeding is the only way to feed dogs,
but my mother (who breeds Samoyeds and gave me these dogs) freaked
when she saw how thin my girl was, and said if I can't get weight back
on these dogs, and pronto, she wants me to put them back on something
that we know they'll keep the weight on with (kibble). I figure they
probably need more fat and red meat, but that's difficult on my tight
budget. Is their weight loss likely just a lack of fat in their diet?
Is there anything else I should be looking at? Would adding pork fat
to the fish be helpful or cause more problems? We just this weekend
found a good price on bulk chicken "giblet" packages (the neck/organs
found stuffed inside grocery store chickens), so I'm adding that, but
is that likely to directly help this issue?

If any responses could be copied to me directly off list, I'd
appreciate it, as I read on digest.

--
Andrea L. Roher
Searching for my place in "Life, the Universe, and Everything" one day
at a time.
... maybe I've finally found it in NH! (www.FreeStateProject.org)
Visit my blog at evenstar75.blogspot.com.


Messages in this topic (2)
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8b. Re: Dogs Losing Weight Advice
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:21 am ((PDT))

Hi, Andrea!
More red meat, more fatty meat will put on the pounds. Pork,
tongue and beef heart with the fat cap left are good choices.
Check out The Lis List for ways to cheaply source meat, edible bones and
organs for your dogs.

*http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/139618*

*Post #139618*
TC
Giselle
with Bea in New Jersey


On 10/29/07, Andrea Roher <evenstar75@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I have two Samoyeds. Both have been rawfed since last December or
> thereabouts. We're also in very tight finances, so we've been feeding
> them almost exclusively whole Menhaden fish (which we can get at an
> amazingly low price) with occasional chicken and pork thrown in when
> the budget allows.
>

<snip>
>

If any responses could be copied to me directly off list, I'd
> appreciate it, as I read on digest.
>
> --
> Andrea L. Roher
> Searching for my place in "Life, the Universe, and Everything" one day
> at a time.
> ... maybe I've finally found it in NH! (www.FreeStateProject.org)
> Visit my blog at evenstar75.blogspot.com.
>
>


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

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9a. Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "alexanderdewey" alexanderdewey@yahoo.com alexanderdewey
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 8:58 pm ((PDT))


> On Oct 29, 2007, at 12:03 PM, KIMBERLY wrote:
>
> >
> > My question is:
> > Does this mean that we should not be giving rawfed dogs any
vaccines?
> >

Or in my case, Should I not raw feed my dog because she's already
been 'vaxed2thamax'?

Could that have weakened her immune system enough to make her
vulnerable to salmonella?

How could I find out if my dog in fact has a weakened immune system?

What about if someone feeds my dog something she shouldn't have - or
she eats something outside that doesn't digest as quickly as chicken
and the chicken takes longer to come out. In that case could the
salmonella multiply inside her or something, and make her sick?

What about if I miss a spot while cleaning the floor where she's
eaten raw chicken. Is there a chance if she licks that spot a day
later that enough salmonella to sicken her?

Does Salmonella multiply on a kitchen floor? lol.

But seriously, I'd love to know some Salmonella facts if anyone
knows.. I will locate the literature that supported the idea that
dogs CAN and DO get sick from Salmonella so I can reference the
source of my concern.

Alex

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9b. Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "Sandee Lee" rlee@plix.com mariasmom2001
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 9:40 pm ((PDT))

Alex,

Why are you looking for problems where there aren't any? Your dog is no
more likely to get sick from Salmonella when eating raw than he would from
kibble, treats, or just normal day to day activity regardless of diet.
Salmonella is *everywhere*. You cannot avoid it. The best possible way to
build up and support the immune system of any dog, compromised or not, is by
feeding a species appropriate diet. You will never avoid bacteria by
feeding something other than raw food.

Probably the majority of us have damaged dogs...the best way to undo that
damage is through appropriate diet. Stick around here, read through the
daily messages and archives where we have discussed Salmonella many times,
read the rawfeeding myths. Stick with facts and don't let fear dominate
your life. I have been on this list since 2003 where there are now close
to 10,000 members and haven't heard of one case of Salmonella attritubuted
to raw feed yet.

Sandee & the Dane Gang

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

What about if someone feeds my dog something she shouldn't have - or
she eats something outside that doesn't digest as quickly as chicken
and the chicken takes longer to come out. In that case could the
salmonella multiply inside her or something, and make her sick?

What about if I miss a spot while cleaning the floor where she's
eaten raw chicken. Is there a chance if she licks that spot a day
later that enough salmonella to sicken her?

Does Salmonella multiply on a kitchen floor? lol.


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9c. Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "alexanderdewey" alexanderdewey@yahoo.com alexanderdewey
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 4:06 am ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, "Sandee Lee" <rlee@...> wrote:
>
> Alex,
>
> Why are you looking for problems where there aren't any?

My dog doesn't appear at all sick, thank god, but I read that Dogs
get Salmonella, so I'm asking here about what increases the risk of
it.

>Your dog is no
> more likely to get sick from Salmonella when eating raw than he
would from
> kibble, treats, or just normal day to day activity regardless of
diet.

But how about under the circumstances I mentioned earlier? Does
anyone know?

> Salmonella is *everywhere*. You cannot avoid it. The best
possible way to
> build up and support the immune system of any dog, compromised or
not, is by
> feeding a species appropriate diet. You will never avoid bacteria
by
> feeding something other than raw food.

I agree.

> Probably the majority of us have damaged dogs...the best way to
undo that
> damage is through appropriate diet. Stick around here, read
through the
> daily messages and archives where we have discussed Salmonella
many times,
> read the rawfeeding myths. Stick with facts and don't let fear
dominate
> your life. I have been on this list since 2003 where there are
now close
> to 10,000 members and haven't heard of one case of Salmonella
attritubuted
> to raw feed yet.

Thank you. It is the knowledge shared by people like you on this
list that made it possible for us to make the switch to raw with
such confidence a month ago. The archives on salmonella that I've
read didn't address the specific questions I have though.

One more thing that has been lingering - and has gotten me thinking
more about the potential risk of bacterias - When I go away next
week and leave my dog in the care of someone else, could she be
seriously harmed if fed 'doom nuggets' for 4 days?

In other words, she's been eating raw chicken (and some pork ribs)
for a month - so what risks could be involved if she's now fed
k**ble for 4 days??

Thanks,

Alex

Messages in this topic (10)
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10a. Re: Pork Neck
Posted by: "JIMMIE A FORBES" jforbes05@sbcglobal.net rocketblasther
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 9:15 pm ((PDT))

Hello All,

The market I go to have really large pork necks, 12 inches at the least. They appear to be very meaty. Is it ever okay to feed as a stand alone meal or should I always add more meat to it? I never fed it before because I always here that it's too bony.

Thanks,
Jim & Sara


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10b. Re: Pork Neck
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 9:55 pm ((PDT))

JIMMIE A FORBES <jforbes05@...> wrote:
>The market I go to have really large pork necks, 12 inches at the
least. They appear to be very meaty.
*****
Almost certainly they are not. If you can easily see how the bone lays
out, there's not enough meat on it.

If you want to feed these necks, add plenty of meat to the meal, since
12 inches of mostly bony bone can produce a big old helping of
difficult stools.
Chris O

Messages in this topic (5)
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11a. ADMIN/Re: Salmonella question
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 9:18 pm ((PDT))


Please take all vaccine discussions to RawChat, DogHealth, Truth About
Vaccines or Justsayno. Further posts will be rerouted.
Chris O
Mod Team

Messages in this topic (10)
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12a. ADMIN/Re: Don't know if this is an allowable question????
Posted by: "costrowski75" Chriso75@AOL.COM costrowski75
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 9:31 pm ((PDT))

It's not an allowable question but you managed to get some mileage out
of it. Time for the topic to move to RawChat or DogHealth, or
private. It is not a topic centrally related to rawfeeding.
Thank you.
Chris O
Mod Team

Messages in this topic (7)
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13a. Re: upset tummy
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 9:34 pm ((PDT))

Hi, Katherine!
An agreement worked out between you and your husband, to
give the raw whole prey model diet a REAL try, for Oh say, three months,
would be more fair than mixing kibble and raw - to the dogs, and to you.
This type of negotiation has worked with couples before, with very good
results. Once the kibble is out of the house, and the 'other' partner is
committed to a true trial, the dogs adapt well, changes in health,
appearance and even behavior become more apparent, the shopping partner of
the couple has a chance to gain experience in shopping and sourcing cheaper
raw food and the 'other' partner becomes more invested in feeding raw. And
usually, changing back to Doom Nuggets *tm (Carrie!) is never mentioned, and
is a non issue.

The best argument? Kibble has already had a more than fair trial. ; )

Vets don't have any experience in feeding raw, they don't realize that the
diseases and abnormalities they see daily are complicated by poor nutrition.
They don't get much nutritional education in school, and what they do get is
bought and paid for, and almost always 'taught' by the pet food corps. These
corps not only spend millions of $$ on advertising, but they endow chairs at
universities, offer free or discounted pet food for student's studies and
inducements to vets if they sell their pet food. The vets who buck this
system are few and far between, and often have their own 'special' twist on
raw feeding, some sort of supplement or prepackaged raw food to reel in the
$$ for themselves. Don't depend on the pet food corps, vets, or anyone who
stands to make money from BRANDED foods, kibbled, canned, cooked, ground,
raw or otherwise, to talk truth or know what can be accomplished by feeding
real raw whole prey.

The Merck Veterinary Manual: "The carbohydrates added to pet foods are
mainly in the form of polysaccharides (starch and cellulose),
disaccharides (sucrose and lactose), and monosaccharides (glucose and
fructose). Carbohydrates are a less expensive source of energy than
fat or protein. In dogs, there appears to be **no dietary requirement
for carbohydrate**."

The Lis List, is a great compilation of ways to source raw food. You can
even use your local craigslist or FreeCycle to find a cheap or free freezer
to store your scores in;

*http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/139618*

*Post #139618*

Some links to print out to read to your husband to help win your case;

http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/143301

message # 143301

http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/144402

http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/144075

and websites;
<http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/144075>

http://www.rawlearning.com/rawfaq.html

http://www.rawlearning.com/supplementmyths.html

http://www.rawfed.com/myths/index.html

http://rawfeddogs.net/Recipes

http://rawfeddogs.net/FAQlist
Easy 'how to' start all raw;

*http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/rawfeeding/message/141374 *

*post # 141374*

whole prey websites;
**

http://www.rodentpro.com/products.asp

http://www.prey4pets.com/servlet/StoreFront

http://www.hare-today.com/index.php?cPath=23

www.taylorpondfarm*s*.com/ <http://www.taylorpondfarms.com/>
TC and let us know how you progress!
Giselle
with Bea in New Jersey


On 10/29/07, dutcher_katherine <katherinedutcher@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> +++Mod note. please sign and trim your emails. This one trimmed for you
> by a mod. ta. ++++++++++++
>
> I see all of your points and actually probably would go cold turkey
> if it was totally up to me. However, I share my dogs with my
> husband and he is not at all keen on raw feeding.
>

<snip>
>

It also doesn't help that every vet we have been
> to, and recently I've tried out 4, is very leery about raw.
>

<snip>
>

I'm hoping to get more information on this group to make the transition to
> raw easier and to convince my husband that we can make it work for our dogs
> without
> making them sick and going broke buying raw meat for four dogs.
> _
>
>


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

Messages in this topic (20)
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14a. Re: {Raw Feeding} Took Max to the vet!
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Mon Oct 29, 2007 10:42 pm ((PDT))

Hi, Brandi!
Save yourself and Max some aggravation and insist your vet
send the blood to Dr Jean Dodds for analysis and diagnosis to definitively
rule hypothyroidism in or out - you'll be very glad you did. She will even
directly send you her findings, if you want.
http://www.canine-epilepsy-guardian-angels.com/diagnostic_testing.htm

TC
Giselle


On 10/29/07, Casey Post <mikken@neo.rr.com> wrote:
>
>
> > But he does not think that he's
> > got hypothyroid because Max isn't fat.
>
> Typical. Just so you know, dogs don't have to be fat to be hypothyroid.
> Too many vets think that they do, so you may have to be more proactive on
> this one.
>

<snip> <http://www.kateconnick.com/library/cushingsdisease.html>
>
> Casey
>
>


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

Messages in this topic (5)
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15.1. Re: New to group
Posted by: "Giselle" megan.giselle@gmail.com megangiselle
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:42 am ((PDT))

Hi, Heidi!
Nope! Cold turkey is the way to go!

Have you read the files, recommended websites and archived messages from
THIS list?

TC
Giselle
with Bea in New Jersey

On 10/29/07, Heidi <dolphin_6876@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> Hi everyone, my name is Heidi and I live in Hannibal, Mo w/ my fiance,
> 3 kids, 4(soon to be 5) dogs, 2 cats, 5 rats, goose, and rabbit. I am
> seriously considering to switching from cooked food and kibble to 100%
> raw for the dogs and cats. I have read a lot on switching and it seems
> to be to just do it. Will this cause any digestive problems instead of
> switching over slowly?
> Thanks,
> Heidi
>
>


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

Messages in this topic (82)
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16a. Re: Somebody kill me NOW
Posted by: "jennifer_hell" jenniferhell@web.de jennifer_hell
Date: Tue Oct 30, 2007 4:28 am ((PDT))

--- In rawfeeding@yahoogroups.com, Shelly <StuartLittle@...> wrote:
>
If you really need her to finish up the hearts that you have, try
> mixing it with green tripe, my dogs will eat anything mixed with tripe.
>
Thank you! We've not yet advanced to tripe, but I tricked her using
very very finely grated parmesan that couldn't be licked of, and she
ate it all. Hehehe!

Jennifer


Messages in this topic (9)
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