@lustopher No ! they will gum them if they can't chew and it all helps with teething.
Lamb and fish
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beef of horse? Did you mean beef OR horse?
Okay, use logic. Dogs (and all mammals) take tens of thousands of years to change on a molecular level. I am not saying we couldn't breed dogs so they only thrive on ONE protein source, but we aren't there yet and would be insane to breed for it. I want to spit at companies that produce breed specific food.. what a scam.
YES there are special needs for breeds who have some disorders (such as copper toxicity), for giant or tiny breeds, for geriatrics and very active. Yep. But in general, unless your dog is allergic to a certain protein (and BEEF is the one most allergies form to, then chicken.. but they also get allergic to lamb and venison), any high quality protein (including horses) would be fine.
I had never heard of Red Moon so looked them up… they look interesting
http://www.redmoonpetfood.com/why-redmoon.html
But I suspect their cost is much more than the quality would justify for me… however if your dog likes it, looks good. I didn't find them on the dog food comparison chart but I will ask around.
http://www.doberdogs.com/menu.html -
Hi,
thanks for all the information. I saw Cesar Millan when he was in town and Red Moon was the food he was promoting, so I thought I would try it. I like that they deliver to your home at no extra cost as I don't drive.
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Welcome to the forum.
My boy don't do well on lamb, but he does eat fish based foods.
That is just one out of three b's that I have, so its just him. -
Cesar Milan is an abusive POC. Please, I beg you, read up, don't do his nonsense to your dear dog!
Here is a thread with links and info on trainers.
http://www.basenjiforums.com/showthread.php?t=9598 -
I agree Debra. Harsh treatments won't work for our beoved b's.
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My girls do well on lamb, also on fish, chicken, foods with oatmeal, rice, sweet potato, various veggies (one of their "treats" is frozen green beans - they think they are koolpops. Unless you discover an allergy after feeding them something specific, our B's will tolerate lots of foods.
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I was told to always look for Lamb as the main ingredient and to stick with Iams or the other top brand. I've had a rescue dog that had been mistreated, bit thru my boot and all, when I went to push him out the door. He got to know me and never a problem after that, well almost.
Dave -
I feed my B Taste of the Wild, both Salmon and Bison protein based dry foods and occasionally wet as well…She does really well on both but the Salmon can give her gas which smells fishy...lol, but she loves it.
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I was told to always look for Lamb as the main ingredient and to stick with Iams or the other top brand. I've had a rescue dog that had been mistreated, bit thru my boot and all, when I went to push him out the door. He got to know me and never a problem after that, well almost.
DaveSorry, Iams isn't that great, not even in the top 50 of Whole Dog Journals.
Whoever told you to just use lamb probably needs some reeducation.
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Paco loves canned tuna. He nom nom noms it up.
When I took him to the vet after he turned one, the vet asked if I had been feeding him fish because there was something in his stool that looked suspicious. I said he'd had canned tuna but that was all, and apparently that was fine.
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Coincidentally, the packaging on this product intersects with this discussion topic:
http://www.vitaldogfood.com/product-lamb.htm
It's the lamb and ocean whitefish formula of Vital brand refrigerated dog foods. And if you'll notice, there's a basenji on the packaging.
I recently had a chance to do a feeding trial and write up a review of these foods, and was only slightly miffed that they did NOT include the one product that actually has a basenji on it… though they sent us practically everything else!
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Oh and to add to this conversation, our Basenji gets pretty much all commercially available proteins, including lamb and lots of fish. She'll take lamb in kibble form, doesn't much like it raw or as chew treats, and she eats fish in kibble and raw form. She does seem to do well with red meat, but not entirely beef-based recipes.
The situation will, of course, vary with each dog.
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I'm always switching Magnum's protein, in the hopes of not enticing an allergy. So he has had most commericially-available protein sources. No problems at all (fingers crossed), even with chicken, which is the top protein allergen (according to my sources and research).