Skip to content

Thoughts about feeding a raw diet?

Basenji Feeding
  • okay, you must have realized very quickly that I am a novice at this!!

  • I've been feeding my boys raw since they were puppies. Mostly ground beef, mixed with two spoonfuls of regular canned dog food, freshly chopped broccoli and carrots and scoop of plain yougurt. I throw in a raw egg once a week and often mix in chicken stock if I'm boiling chicken for myself. Cottage cheese once in a while as well.

    For snacks they both LOVE raw baby carrots!

    In the summertime they get raw chicken necks and wings to eat outside.

  • I was thinking of giving raw chix necks and wings to joey too, but was hesitant about the bones even tho I give him larger raw bones. I know cooking the bones makes them brittle and not suitable for dog snacks. I guess I will give it a whirl

  • Does anyone else have any concerns about potential bacterial issues with feeding raw food?
    I mean, I know that dogs in the wild eat raw, but I also know that dogs in the wild aren't generally as healthy nor do they live as long, {for a variety of reasons, one of which I suspect is unhealthy food}
    I don't feed a raw diet partially for that reason. I'm really leary of ground beef and raw chicken.
    Jazzy gets very little raw meat.

    Not trying to start a raw-vs-cooked debate; I really am just curious if I'm the only one with that concern.

  • @JazzysMom:

    Does anyone else have any concerns about potential bacterial issues with feeding raw food?
    I mean, I know that dogs in the wild eat raw, but I also know that dogs in the wild aren't generally as healthy nor do they live as long, {for a variety of reasons, one of which I suspect is unhealthy food}
    I don't feed a raw diet partially for that reason. I'm really leary of ground beef and raw chicken.
    Jazzy gets very little raw meat.

    Not trying to start a raw-vs-cooked debate; I really am just curious if I'm the only one with that concern.

    We tryed feeding the gang some raw venison last night and they didn't want it. They tryed it, but just spit it back out…....the wife ended up cooking it, then they loved it.

    Up to last nights attempt, that has always been our concern, being careful about bacteria.

    We know a few people that feed nothing but raw.

  • No, the bacteria thing doesn't scare me about raw. I am leery of it because I am afraid I won't get the balance correct for best health. From what I can tell, it is much more complicated than feeding ground meat…there has to be the correct balance of calcium and phosphorus, which is apparently why the bone part of feeding raw is important.

    And as someone else pointed out...I am a little scared of the bones. I know it is really rare for a dog to have a perforation from raw bone...but it does happen. And a dog never gets a perforation from kibble ;)

    I have fed raw chicken wings and necks occasionally. I fed raw ribs one time, and one of the dogs as a puppy swallowed a short rib whole! I nearly died, I though for sure she was a gonner...but she was fine. My dogs also swallow chicken necks whole, which scares me.

  • Yeh, feeding a BARD diet is all about getting the balance right but not at every meal. Thats one of the things that lets the comercial stuff down; they make every meal balanced. But so long as it is balanced over the weeks, you've got no problem.

    I think it is worth the extra time preparing the raw diet just to have a healthy dog.

    With a BARF diet you know what he's eating!

  • I just don't know about the raw diet. The thing about raw is that yes dogs did eat raw in the wild but it was fresh kill and eaten fairly soon. Not killed, then processed and handled in a factory, packaged and shipped around in a truck.

  • With a BARF diet you know what he's eating!


    just don't know about the raw diet. The thing about raw is that yes dogs >>did eat raw in the wild but it was fresh kill and eaten fairly soon. Not killed, >>then processed and handled in a factory, packaged and shipped around in >>a truck.


    Right. AND you really DON'T know what he's getting. I mean, look at the problems with the feed recently. The tainted product from China was in pig food, fish food…God knows what else. So, if you are buying meat or even growing your own but buying the feed, you still can't be sure of what you're feeding. If you are buying the meat,as you said, you're not buying fresh.

    And feeding raw to Basenjis here is not going to be the same as their natural diet in Africa anyway.

    I don't know. . . It's an idea I toyed with, but I think I'll stick with kibble.
    {besides, I can store the kibble in a bin in my garage. I don't have room to keep raw meats fresh for three dogs and still have room in the fridge/freezer--and time to prepare -- foods for my family of eight! LOL}

  • I have fed my raw and still give them chicken wings and necks… and yes sometimes they swallow the entire thing... ggg... When Jamari was a 3 month old, I gave him a chicken wing and he darn near swallowed the entire thing whole...yikes... while he was fine... it was an adventure when he pooped the first time!!!! Part of wing came out as it went in!!!! But I do give mine veggies, sweet potatoes, pumpkin, egg, yogart, cottage cheese, so they get a lot of different stuff at different times....

  • So you feed raw meats, but other foods are processed or cooked{yogurt, cottage cheese, etc} ?

    Do you feed any kibble? Or just raw meats, veggies, and dairy?

  • No I feed kibble, I used to use Canidae senior but have recently change to EVO that has no grains. Because I am feeding at home all seniors, I am using the new EVO low fat that is meat and fruit…. The raw meat I will use once or twice a week instead of the kibble, and the other stuff I will add to the kibble, different stuff, different days... and yes the other stuff is processed like the yogurt and cottage cheese... the veggies I do both raw (cause they like them) and steamed also.... I do not do many carrots due to the high sugar content..

  • I have also fed raw but it is the prep work that gets to me. If I could go and premake a month's worth of food so all I had to do was pull a bag out of the freezer every day I would do it. I am just not organized enough to get to that point. One big advantage feeding raw has over kibble, is variety. Since when you feed raw you vary your meats and vegetables you also decrease the bioaccumulation if one of those things is contaminated. When you feed kibble your pet will bioaccumulate more of the contaminant over a shorter period of time because it is all they are eating.

  • @lvoss:

    I have also fed raw but it is the prep work that gets to me. If I could go and premake a month's worth of food so all I had to do was pull a bag out of the freezer every day I would do it. I am just not organized enough to get to that point. One big advantage feeding raw has over kibble, is variety. Since when you feed raw you vary your meats and vegetables you also decrease the bioaccumulation if one of those things is contaminated. When you feed kibble your pet will bioaccumulate more of the contaminant over a shorter period of time because it is all they are eating.

    Bioaccumulate….hmmm....that must be what has happened on my butt! :rolleyes:

  • @Quercus:

    Bioaccumulate….hmmm....that must be what has happened on my butt! :rolleyes:

    Hey, that explains it!!! ggg… and not only my butt, but my "gut" too!

  • LOL! Me too…both rhyming body parts. Thanks for the laugh, Andrea...I was reading it and didn't "get it" at first...I'm reading your prior posts in this thread looking for "butt"...then I re-read it and literally laughed out loud!!

Suggested Topics

  • Raw feeding programs

    Basenji Feeding
    8
    0 Votes
    8 Posts
    4k Views
    R
    we still have "butchers" here in Australia. these are usually local shops, that sell meat. After they have cut up the large sides of beef, they are left with some bones. The bones you are after are the breast bone, which is usually discarded as waste, but is good for dogs. Get them to cut the bone (which is about 1 metre (about 1 yard) long), into the size that is good (mine are cut into chunks about 7.5cm (about 3 inches)) or whatever size you want. The cutting is done on a bandsaw so no effort on their behalf. The advantage is that there is no debris left for the motor mower to fling at your windows, or for insects to settle on. Even at the supermarkets there are some to be had, but find out from the meat section when they get deliveries. You will pay more at the supermarkets, but you should not pay more than necessary.
  • Raw feeding and "older" basenjis?

    Basenji Feeding
    11
    0 Votes
    11 Posts
    8k Views
    DebraDownSouthD
    I agree with agilebasenji… yes he needs checked. But, I also need to ask if you are reading up and following raw diet protocols or JUST feeding meat. Dogs need more than meat. It is possible you are doing damage by not having that diet balanced since you say almost entirely protein.
  • Raw food

    Basenji Feeding
    28
    0 Votes
    28 Posts
    14k Views
    L
    We switched our 2 boys to raw from kibble about 6 months ago. The switch came because we were simply exhausted from walking them 3 times a day because they had loose stool (we don't have fenced in yard, so we need to walk them to go to the bathroom). Our vet recommended more fiber in their diet to help with loose stool. This intuitively just didn't resonate with us. Basenji are one of the most ancient breeds of dog… why on earth would more fiber be a solution to their problem (I know the theoretical why, but logically it was counter-intuitive)? We read many sources or literature on the raw diet and thought this would be a good switch for them. Again, they are an ancient breed so moving toward raw foods seemed appropriate and logical. It took that about a month for them to get really accustomed to eating raw chicken quarters, rabbit halves or pork shoulders but now they have no problem gulping their meal right down, bone and all (for those of you who don't feed raw, gulping is a normal behavior and bone is an essential part of the diet). Their digestion issues have vanished and we've even seen marked improvement in their destructive behavior. Two super happy boys now, two super happy Basenji owners!!
  • Inadvertent promotion for raw feeding

    Basenji Feeding
    7
    0 Votes
    7 Posts
    2k Views
    P
    I once bought a book, 'The Food Dogs Die For' - after page 1 I stopped reading it was very revealing about manufactured feeds - a bit too much for me!
  • Raw feeding

    Basenji Feeding
    5
    0 Votes
    5 Posts
    2k Views
    KipawaK
    As a newbie to the breed, I appreciate that all of the information is contained in one spot. It is great to be able to get a broad range of opinions in one thread.
  • Starting our dogs on the raw diet-pics added

    Basenji Feeding
    14
    0 Votes
    14 Posts
    4k Views
    basenji_fanB
    @JazzysMom: I have some concerns about the raw diet, but was thinking about giving once a week or so raw to give the dogs a treat but have decided against it. I had been giving them raw bones to chew, purchased from a local butcher, but then realized that every time I did that, Keoki got severe diarrhea for a day. So…. I'm sticking with kibble and cans. What really might be the problem is not the bones but the marrow, if you scrape out the marrow prior to giving them to your dogs then they should have no problems AT ALL with chewing on the raw bones and it will greatly help with cleaning their teeth and giving them something to do. Good choices are like beef knuckle bones as there is very little marrow there (also can cut off excess meat too) and beef ribs are good too (again scrape out as much marrow as you can) the bone marrow is what can cause the looser stool not chewing on the bones themselves or anything to do with actual raw feeding. So go ahead and try it again, I'm sure Keoki would love having it again just takes a little prep she can have it :D