chewbecca
Posted : 4/10/2007 7:52:11 AM
I know, Jennie!
They have tried and tried foods with their Giant Schnauzer (who comes from AMAZING bloodlines and is of TOTAL show quality, btw. His mother has won numerous times in conformation and his father was a martial arts combat dog--whatever "term" is correct for that), but they gave up during these "feed trials" because they gave him so much and allowed him to be so picky. He gets cooked ground beef and rice added to his kibble, but you know that the dog is relying on the kibble as the base of his diet.
Man! If they could pick a food, a good food, and give me that dog for one day. I'd have him eating whatever choice of food they pick, within that one day. If the dog was picky because the food was making him sick, that's one thing, but it doesn't make him sick.
I got my mom feeding her bearded collie Timberwolf now. He is showing SUCH an improvement in coat and in his eyes.
Raw is cannibalism??? They're NOT eating others of their own kind or humans! People are so uneducated on this stuff. I am a food snot, but I TRY not to argue with people over what they feed their animals because it gets to a point in argument, where it becomes none of my business what others feed their dogs or cats. When my fiancee was feeding his geckoes lobster roaches and he found out that the roaches eat dog food, we fed those roaches Timberwolf dog food because, to me, it's one of the best dog foods and the health of his geckoes depended on the health of those roaches, so those roaches were going to get the best of the best, IMO.
Don't get me wrong, my in-laws' dog is GORGEOUS. They take GREAT care of him, they just are older and don't want to mess with trying different foods anymore. They groom him CONSTANTLY and exercise him well. My mother-in-law spends countless hours researching products for him and the dog has more leashes and collars than I can count. He's got no less than an acre of fenced in property to run free on. So, I don't want it to sound like they don't care for or love their dog; they do.
But people need to also take diet into consideration. You get out what you put in. And this dog is barely 2 years old now, so it may take some time to see the effects of Kibbles 'N Bits. I wish I could get that across to them.
And you're right. As long as it's not on "that food recall list" people think it's GREAT. And it's not.