
Around 7 years ago I decided, after moving into a condo with grass, I had to have another dog. I never thought of any other path than a rescue. My first, Summer, was underweight, her coat was in terrible shape and her eyes dull. She couldn't keep down food either. In order to get her to eat I fed her chopped up chicken breast cooked in broth and steamed veggies, the same thing I was eating for dinner but without the seasoning. She ate and kept it down. Victory. I continued to feed her homemade dogfood until she was the proper weight, 6 lbs (from 2 lbs.), with a healthy coat and bright eyes. Summer has the typical Chihuahua personality, bold, brassy and smart. I got lazy and started to feed her high-grade Commercial dogwood. She was healthy but not quite the same gal. Seven months later I took on another rescue, also very ill, and unable to keep food down. I went back to my original idea of feeding her and Summer my own homemade dog food. Again, both thrived. I also decided to do some major research as far as the correct foods and forbidden foods, especially after the recall of a couple of years ago. This is what I found. First the good: cooked meat protein, raw meat is frowned upon for humans because of the recent bacterially contaminated meats found in the markets and this goes for your pets as well. Vegetables, steamed. Very good for animals and mine love them. A small amount of grains, should not make up a large part of the diet, rice is very good in small amounts. Potatoes, chopped, and about 1/2 tsp. of bone meal once a day. They will be very happy pooches with this diet. Now for the no-nos. I recently read a recipe for dog biscuits which consisted of biscotti dough and chopped up almonds. The author also added that any nut can be used instead of almonds. I was astonished. First, the biscotti dough is too high in sugar and fats. Secondly, walnuts and macadamia nuts contain toxins which would affect a dog's nervous system causing shaking and tremors. The nuts are also high in fatty acids. So you really have to be careful about the advice you are being given. Some other common foods that could prove fatal for your pet are onions which kill a dog's red blood cells because onions contain sulfoxides. Baby foods contain onion powder so they shouldn't be fed to dogs either. (A mistake I made but luckily nothing adverse happened) Grapes and raisins contain toxins which can cause kidney failure, even a few given a small dog can cause death. Cat food is also bad because it's generally too high in protein and fats. Ham and bacon is also too high in fat and salt and can cause Pancreatitis. (Now I have to eat my Pepperoni pizzas in hiding)
The best thing that happened to me was finding a book I use as a bible. It's 'Healthy Food For Dogs: Homemade Recipes' by John Miller. This book is chuck full of advice, recipes, etc. If you would like to check it out go to: http://c78e2hgojcoqfzaluhtaclaw46.hop.clickbank.net/. I highly, highly recommend it.
Get back to me with comments or questions. Would love to hear from you. (The picture is Summer with her favorite person playing on the DS. Notice the eyes;))
The best thing that happened to me was finding a book I use as a bible. It's 'Healthy Food For Dogs: Homemade Recipes' by John Miller. This book is chuck full of advice, recipes, etc. If you would like to check it out go to: http://c78e2hgojcoqfzaluhtaclaw46.hop.clickbank.net/. I highly, highly recommend it.
Get back to me with comments or questions. Would love to hear from you. (The picture is Summer with her favorite person playing on the DS. Notice the eyes;))
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