• I currently have one more puppy here who is Half Basenji and half Beagle. Keiko is possibly going to her new home (see posts regarding her needing a home for those who dont already know) on Sunday. But I will have Chloe here still. I dont have time for 2 puppies which is why Im giving Keiko to one of my friends. Was just curious about whether or not a half raw diet would be okay for Chloe and Keiko (My friend is who is taking Keiko is curious too). My PB Basenji (their dad) Anubis is on a half chicken half kibble diet. Being that the puppies aren't PB would the half raw hurt them? Because if not I will be feeding Chloe half raw since it does wonders for Anubis. And my friend Haley will be feeding Keiko half raw as well. He LOVES it. And he is prone to super dry skin and I noticed when I backed off the Raw awhile back his dry skin came back but when he was eating it full time it was non existent.

  • First Basenji's

    Half basenji is still whole dog. 🙂 The half raw won't hurt them. If she doesn't take to it, it's not going to be because of her breed, but just individual taste…


  • Ahh I just figured Id ask because I tried to give raw chicken to my Pitbull/Lab and she threw it up. So I didnt know if it would make them sick. lol.


  • It is my understanding that the two should not be mixed (kibble with raw) at least not at the same feeding. There is no difference in feeding a mixed breed or purebred


  • I never feed him Raw/Kibble in the same feeding. He gets Raw in the mornings and kibble before bed.


  • Mine get the opposite, kibble in the AM and raw at night, makes no impact on their health


  • This is most likely a stupid question but: we would never eat raw anything ourselves - why is it okay to feed raw meat to our B's when we keep reading how there is so much bacteria and other bad stuff in raw meat these days, and we are warned to cook it all well? In the wild, yes, wild dogs of any kind would eat raw meat and thrive on it, but that raw meat is "on the hoof" as they say, and not farm bred, processed and packaged the way our raw meat is. Just askin'


  • It is recommended not to feed raw to a dog with Fanconi Syndrome.

    Jennifer


  • This is most likely a stupid question but: we would never eat raw anything ourselves - why is it okay to feed raw meat to our B's when we keep reading how there is so much bacteria and other bad stuff in raw meat these days, and we are warned to cook it all well?

    I don't think that is a stupid question, it is a very valid one. I have recently switched Kiora onto raw and that was a question I had asked myself. Basically what I learned about it was that dogs stomachs are very highly acidic and designed to deal with bad bacteria found in meat like salmonella and E.coli. While wild dogs and wolves do hunt, they also scavenge, and are able to easily digest and utilize meat that for a human would be toxic. Commercial kibble has been around for less than 100 years while hominids, on the other hand, have been cooking for themselves for over a million years.

    A major exception to this would be any dog with a suppressed immune system.


  • It has been a feeding staple for years for many people, myself included to feed raw… in the wild they would not get cooked food. Dogs digest different then humans and very, very, very rarely is salmonella or e.coli a problem. I have fed all my dogs raw chicken wings and backs for years along with other things...


  • http://www.petmd.com/dog/conditions/digestive/c_dg_salmonellosis#.T5LMAdXTpCp

    and this on E coli

    http://www.doggedhealth.com/diseases-a-symptoms/diseases-a-conditions/e-coli-escherichia-coli.html

    My gut feeling is that there is a difference in the digestive system of today's basenji versus basenji's in the wild and how their systems have adapted to their environment over time. I think we have made a lot of assumptions in regard as to how animals exist and what they might die or suffer from in the the wild without full knowledge or study.

    The only studies we have, are based on information we have collected from the time we started domesticating them. Wouldn't domesticated cattle eat differently than free range cattle would?


  • Another consideration is that there are more virulent strains of bacteria now, e.g. E coli 0157 H7, which is a very nasty bug. I would never feed a dog raw beef from feedlot cattle for this reason.

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