brookcove
Posted : 11/16/2006 11:57:59 PM
On those berries - you can get strawberries, or mixed blue/raspberries, frozen almost anywhere, at anytime. Freezing them fresh does little to degrade their nutritive value. Zhi is recovering from a serious wound and she's been getting frozen berries every day - I just whirl them into her special meals (she's on my special super recovery diet).
I guess it's doing some good - she hasn't had a bit of infection, or reaction to the Keflex she's on. The hole that was the size of a quarter (her leg's only the size of a drumstick at KFC) and deep enought to stick your finger in up to the knuckle, is now flush to the surface (whew) and about as big around as a pencil eraser. It's been about ten days, so that's pretty good. Her hair is growing like crazy, too. I'm going to have to take her to the groomers, I think, to get caught up with her body shave. [8|]
Here's what she's on:
1/4 pound ground meat
4 oz canned fish
1 chicken liver, kidney square, or 1/2 oz beef liver
1 egg, with shell
4 oz starchy veggie (rotating sweet potatoes, green peas, squash, carrots - steamed, processed)
1 or 2 oz greens (collards and mustards are what I had around - processed fresh)
1 tbsp berries, processed fresh
1 tsp coconut oil
This is divided in three meals. She also has a smoked bone to keep her company. I didn't want a raw bbone in there with the open wound.
On supplements. Mostly animal protein diets are particularly lacking in B vitamins, E, and selenium - these vitamins reside in brain and nervous tissue and skin and other parts that are hard to get in the store. So I supplement with these when I go all homemade unless I'm feeding whole intact animals. She's also taking a teeny bit of zinc and a glucosamine/chondroitin supplement that contains C and biotin. I've found all these things helpful when we're recovering from surgery, illness (assuming the dog is able to eat) or a major accident.