janet_rose
Posted : 4/14/2012 4:44:57 PM
Throwing up just bile generally means that a dog's stomach was empty for too long.
Some plain canned pumpkin (not the spiced pie mix) will help to firm up his stool. When was his last fecal?
A marrow bone can upset a dog's stomach if he got a lot of marrow and is not used to it, but so can eating a bug in the yard.
Some dogs just do not do well on kibble - grain free or not. There are so many ingredients in kibble that it is hard to pin down what a dog may be sensitive to.
Try giving him a raw chicken leg. No, I am not kidding. I bet his whole attitude toward food changes quickly and that he eats greedily.
Dogs are as likely to get salmonella from kibble as from raw meat. Besides a dog with a normal immune system (and a canine's strong stomach acid) can handle a little salmonella with no trouble. People, on the other hand, are not scavengers and have little tolerance for salmonella. We should always wash our hands after handling raw meat or kibble.
The bones that are really dangerous to dogs are cooked bones. Cooking makes bones brittle and prone to splintering. Avoid weight bearing bones because some aggressive chewers can break a tooth. Yes, a dog could choke on a bone, but dogs also sometimes choke on kibble.
Raw meat and bones are a canine's species-appropriate diet. They are carnivores - not "corn"-ivores and not omnivores. They have the teeth of a carnivore. They have the short digestive system length of a carnivore. They have the strong stomach acid of a wolf. They do not have digestive enzymes in their saliva like we do, so they get a lot of tartar from kibble diets.
The fact that dogs will eat things other than raw meat and bones does not make them omnivores. They do not digest plant matter well. A comparison of the large, stinky stool of a kibble-fed dog and the small, low odor stool of a raw-fed dog is a great demonstration of this.
If dogs were categorized only by what they are willing to chew up and swallow, some of them would have to be called "sock"-ivores.
Feeding a dog a raw diet is not rocket science. Our nutritional needs are more complicated than theirs and we seem to manage without complicated spreadsheets. A variety of meats with enough bone to keep the stool firm is great. If the dog gets constipated, cut back on the bone.
There are lots of raw feeding groups and documentation available, so instruction on raw feeding is not hard to find.
Note: More and more breeders are weaning their pups to a raw diet. The result is healthier pups with cleaner teeth.