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View threadActually dogs are omnivores. You can look it up for yourself.
They require a balanced diet of meat, grains, etc. If all you give your dog is meat, they won't live a long and healthy life. They generally will get thyroid problems as they age which will wreak havoc on their body and organs. If you don't give them meat, it is the same outcome.
We give our Pit and our lab puppy a combination of meat, eggs and vegetables mixed in with their dry food with Omega 3 oil. The Pit is 10 years old and growing better each day. No issues of any kind and great skin and shiny coat.
A vegan dog would be pretty unhealthy but look at vegan humans....no surprise
Actually dogs are omnivores. You can look it up for yourself.
They require a balanced diet of meat, grains, etc. If all you give your dog is meat, they won't live a long and healthy life. They generally will get thyroid problems as they age which will wreak havoc on their body and organs. If you don't give them meat, it is the same outcome.
We give our Pit and our lab puppy a combination of meat, eggs and vegetables mixed in with their dry food with Omega 3 oil. The Pit is 10 years old and growing better each day. No issues of any kind and great skin and shiny coat.
A vegan dog would be pretty unhealthy but look at vegan humans....no surprise
Taste of the wild is what our dog gets. She thinks it's a treat, not just dinner
Taste of the wild is what our dog gets. She thinks it's a treat, not just dinner
What we use as well
Are ya'll familiar with www.chewy.com ?
You can order online and have it shipped to your door cheaper than you can buy it locally...un less youre getting one hell of a price.
Well, I'll be a monkey's uncle.
Apparently Rebecca switched her food to slow the puppy bone growth.
She said that they told her Taste of the Wild would cause rapid bone growth and might cause her problems.
So, she switched to Zignature brand until the pup is a year old.
How about that shit? I didn't even know...
I tend to defer to the scientists on subjects such as this. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5035952/
Much of what a particular animal will need will depend on the breed and that animal's upbringing as well. Most domesticated dogs are true omnivores, producing amylase in their saliva to begin the breakdown of carbs and all. Others that are closer to the wolf, who are true carnivores, will respond poorly to an omnivore diet. While some wolves are known to eat grains in the wild, the same can be said for Haitians eating dirt (yes real dirt), just to put something in their stomach.
It is pretty much animal cruelty to attempt to put a dog on a vegan diet, same goes for putting a child on vegan. As much as ignoring biology seems to be the trendy thing these days, it will only lead to health problems and an early grave.
Interesting read, though I mostly skimmed it.
One thing it got right on is this. Animal farming IS hazardous to the environment. Heres some interesting statistics, which I read years ago and cannot find the reference, so my numbers may be a bit off, but in the right direction. On one acre of land you can raise enough meat to reed aobut 4 people for a year. On that same acre you can feed 60 on a plant based diet and 200 on a purely fruit based diet. I takes roughly 10 pounds of grain and 200 gallons of water to make one pound of meat. That one pound of meat will feed one person for a day while the 10 pounds of grain will feed 4 for a week. Additionally, apart form purely organic gardening, raising all that grain puts literally tons of bio hazardous materials like nitrates and phosphates into the water system where it promotes un healthy levels of plant growth. Animal husbandry is NOT good for our planet.
As I mentioned above I feed Taste of the Wild, but add in meat that I buy just out of date at a great discount, and in the fall stock the freezer with left over venison scraps I get from the local processor. Interestingly, the wolves will let me pet them while eating kibble, chicken, or beef, but when the venison hits the bowl if I get to close the snarling starts and I have learned to leave them the fuck alone.
Maggot,
Animal husbandry isn’t necessary bad for the environment. To be technically correct. It’s industrialized farming that’s bad, because it’s essentially a mining operation. I’ve been in agriculture over 15yrs now.
The real problem is bad stewardship of our natural resources. Texas has millions of wild boars running around destroying everything, but they simply refuse to reintroduce wolves. We also have terrible soil conditions for most of plains in North America. Since millions of Buffalo were essentially eradicated for various reasons.
Interesting read, though I mostly skimmed it.
One thing it got right on is this. Animal farming IS hazardous to the environment. Heres some interesting statistics, which I read years ago and cannot find the reference, so my numbers may be a bit off, but in the right direction. On one acre of land you can raise enough meat to reed aobut 4 people for a year. On that same acre you can feed 60 on a plant based diet and 200 on a purely fruit based diet. I takes roughly 10 pounds of grain and 200 gallons of water to make one pound of meat. That one pound of meat will feed one person for a day while the 10 pounds of grain will feed 4 for a week. Additionally, apart form purely organic gardening, raising all that grain puts literally tons of bio hazardous materials like nitrates and phosphates into the water system where it promotes un healthy levels of plant growth. Animal husbandry is NOT good for our planet.
As I mentioned above I feed Taste of the Wild, but add in meat that I buy just out of date at a great discount, and in the fall stock the freezer with left over venison scraps I get from the local processor. Interestingly, the wolves will let me pet them while eating kibble, chicken, or beef, but when the venison hits the bowl if I get to close the snarling starts and I have learned to leave them the fuck alone.
Maggot means actual wolves. The big snarly type that eat sheep
Sorry, but it doesn't matter what goes into the bowl. If you trigger reactive behavior at chow time, you've failed in your training or the dog has had less than stellar care somewhere along the line... Unless by wolves, you're not being cute, and mean actual fucking wolves. If that's the case, then you either have some massive stones... or are not very attached to your hands.
Sorry, but it doesn't matter what goes into the bowl. If you trigger reactive behavior at chow time, you've failed in your training or the dog has had less than stellar care somewhere along the line... Unless by wolves, you're not being cute, and mean actual fucking wolves. If that's the case, then you either have some massive stones... or are not very attached to your hands.
Edit: Slightly less off-topic, I've been feeding my dog mostly Merrick; sometimes I'll feed him chicken, rice, veggies, cooked eggs, or fish to keep some variety in the mix. Cant imagine trying to keep up his energy or metabolism with a vegan diet without severe weight loss or lethargy.
Maggot means actual wolves. The big snarly type that eat sheep
To be 100% truthful mine are only about 65% wolf and both of mine female, a mother and here black phase daughter. Thats really all you want for a companion animal, and even that is a lot. They are so damn independent and escape artists to the max. Much faster and stronger than a dog of comparable size. Ive seen the mother put a German shepherd 20-30 pounds heavier on its back in a split second. She even backed down a larger Malinois.
I had to get rid of the male because he was just too rough, and nope is right, I wouldnt fuck with him when eating. You could very easily lose a hand.
If youve got the place, and time, and it takes a lot of time, they are really something to behold. Id have trouble going back to a dog.
You've got some serious commitment. I've been around just one wolf-mix for the lesser part of an afternoon. I have no idea what the ratio of the mix was but she had a presence for sure- being used to "dogs" I'm not going to lie, her independence made me a bit uncomfortable at first but I really do see how if you knew what you're doing you wouldn't want a dog as a companion ever again.
If you don't mid me asking, how did you start? Or what was your introduction into deciding that you wanted to have wolf?
They'll get in your lap for a belly rub.
That was you walking around Lowes or something with your wolfdog on a leash, wasn't it? You still got that pic?