What we fed today

Yesterday the dogs had two meals of chicken RMB parts.  For breakfast tomorrow I have beef liver and 2 lbs of ground chuck thawing.  I’ll add a can of Tripett for each dog to that, along with supplements.

What we fed today

I got a great score of food yesterday.  A friend cleaned out their deepfreeze and passed along some old meat.  Freezer burned meat is fine to use.  I personally wouldn’t feed a diet of only that, but it’s not going to hurt the dogs and they don’t seem to mind.

The dogs enjoyed some of that for breakfast – pork patties and beef liver.  I also included 1/2 can of Tripett each and a few heaping spoonfuls of yogurt.  Supplements added.

Dinner tonight will be chicken RMB (Raw Meaty Bones).

What we fed today

This morning, the dogs ate a 5 lb roll of AFS meat.  Supplements added.  Skyy wasn’t as interested as normal and Kizzy managed to polish off the majority of the food.  They seem to take turns being pigs, so unless one dog is getting really short changed, I tend to let the hungrier one eat more.  Works well for the appetite for the less hungry dog for the following meal!

For dinner, they split 1 lb of beef organ mix (heart, liver, kidney), one can of Tripett each and some leftovers.

What we fed today

For dinner last night, the two girls consumed a 5 lb roll of AFS meat between the two of them, with the kids’ dinner leftovers on top (eggs, pancakes and a little bacon).  As long the items fed are in moderation, leftovers are fine to feed.  For supplements, I added Vit C, Vit E and Fish Oil.  They haven’t normally been eating quite that much, but Kizzy needs to gain a few pounds right now so I feed extra of the things they really like.

They had a light breakfast of one (tom) turkey neck each.  For dinner tonight, they had ground hamburger (split about 3.5 lbs), sliced up lamb liver, 1/2 can of Tripett each and a couple heaping tablespoons of plain yogurt.  Same supplements added.

For breakfast tomorrow, they will each get one can of Salmon, one can of Tripett and some leftover chicken & noodles that have been sitting in the frig.

What we fed today

In effort to give people an idea of what a raw fed dog might eat, I’m going to try to make frequent postings on my dogs’ meals.

This morning for breakfast, Skyy ate a pork neck bone and Kizzy ate a pork neck bone and a turkey neck.  I don’t weigh RMBs (Raw Meaty Bones) any longer, but imagine Skyy’s meal was about 1 lb and Kizzy’s was about 1.5-2 lbs.

For dinner, each dog had a can and a half of beef Tripett, mixed with 1 lb of a beef organ mixture (heart, kidney, liver) from My Pet Carnivore.  I added one raw egg (shell included), Vit C, Vit E and Fish Oil to each dog’s meal.

Dinner:

For tomorrow’s breakfast, I have pork ribs thawing on the counter.

Nails – Dremel

Keeping your dog’s nails short is good for your dog’s foot.  Long nails can cause discomfort for the dog and be hard on your floors or furniture.   Not to mention they hurt like mad when the dog steps on your foot!

I use a dremel to grind my dogs’ nails. I like the dremel as I’m less likely to injure the dog (quicking the nails with clippers can be a bloody mess) and the nails end up smooth.  I picked up my cordless dremel at Target for around $20.  Use the course sanding head.

There are now specific dremel tools for doing your pets’ nails.  It isn’t necessary to get the pet-specific tool, although if they’re price comparable, there isn’t anything wrong with them either.

I have to charge the battery immediately before use (I plug it in the night before I plan on doing nails), in order to make it through both dogs’ nails.  I also find that I have to replace my dremel about once every year or so as the battery gets to the point it will barely make it through the job.  I’ve thought about going to the electric variety, but like the freedom of the cordless.

To keep the nails short, I do nails about once a week.  If your dog currently has long nails, you won’t be able to get them short in one sitting, you’ll have to make the quick recede over a period of time by doing the nails more frequently, every 3-4 days.

When dremeling the nails, keep in mind that the friction will cause heat to build.  Use a tap-tap method on the nails and be mindful of the heat.

To start, I dremel off the ends, taking the desired length off of all of the nails on one foot, similar to if I was using a nail clipper.

Notice how the end of the nail is blunt

Then, I go back to each toe and smooth all the sides:

In the end, you’ll have nice, smooth short nails!  They look nice on the dog and help prevent injury to their feet – and yours!  (Please disregard Kizzy’s dirty feet – we had just come inside from a run in the field!)

Pet Expo

Today both Skyy and Kizzy got to attend the Great Iowa Pet Expo in Des Moines with me.  We volunteered at two different booths:

Upper Midwest Great Dane Rescue booth:

Tiana (Bree’s mom) with Skyy, Kizzy and Bree

…and the Central Iowa Kennel Club booth for the Meet the Breed:

The Expo was a lot of fun.  Lots of different booths and lots of people in attendance.  The girls both got to work for rescue by wearing donation collection vests (made by a creative rescue volunteer!):

The dogs thoroughly enjoyed all the attention lavished on them by all the people.  They were tuckered out by the end of the day!

Bree was tired, too, and convinced her mom to become a human dog bed:

Forget to thaw a raw meal in advance?

You can purchase foods for your dog’s raw diet anywhere, so if you do happen to forget to lay something out in advance, a quick trip to the store can take care of the problem.

The drawback of picking things up from the grocery store is the cost.  It’s cheaper to buy in bulk.

Here is the meal my dogs ate this morning:Dogs raw meal

Sometimes, like this meal, I’ll pick up something from the local grocery store to offer something different than what I have in the deep freeze.  I purchase beef liver in bulk, so my dogs haven’t had chicken liver in awhile.

I try to vary the things I feed my dogs, although I find it easy to get stuck in ruts of feeding the same things over & over.

I don’t know what (if anything) chicken gizzards offer for nutritional value, but it’s something different (and the package also contained chicken hearts).  Liver, of any sort, is very important and needs to be fed the most frequently of any organ meat.  Heart is actually a muscle meat, although it also contains taurine (something vitally important in a cat’s diet).

Between my two dogs in this one meal, they ate the whole 3 lb roll of hamburger and a 1/3 of each of the packages of liver and gizzards/hearts.  Because I wasn’t feeding any bone in this meal, I didn’t want to feed too much organ meat as it could cause a little too loose of stool.  I repackaged and froze the other 2/3’s of the hearts/gizzards and livers.

My dogs detest the texture of most organ meats, so I chop them up and mix them in with other food.

Chopped up chicken liver
chopped up chicken liver

I could try holding out, to see if I could force my dogs to eat the liver without cutting it up, but it isn’t a huge deal to chop it up and mix it in with something else.  All of my dogs have been the same way about the texture of organ meats.

If you’re new to raw, you might find that your dogs have preferences for various things.  If your dog balks at eating certain things, try feeding them in different ways before completely giving up on the item.  For instance, try room temp or nearly frozen.

Keep in mind that the meal pictured above does not contain any bone.  It’s fine as a meal (not every meal has to be balanced), however bone is critically important in a raw diet.  I could not feed only this to my dogs.

The dogs’ evening meal was one large (tom) turkey neck each.

Update of my broken leg:  I’m out of my boot and healing well!  For the most part, I walk with only a minor limp and it’s getting better every day.  Doc says it won’t be “completely” healed for another few weeks and I’ll have to deal with swelling for quite awhile.  All in all, I was very lucky to have avoided surgery.