Feeding home-made
food
Veterinary surgeons and pet food manufacturers often warn
against feeding home-made diets. This is because of the assumed
difficulty of ensuring adequate levels of all nutrients especially
minerals and vitamins. My experience is that it is perfectly
feasible to feed a natural homemade diet even without adding
vitamin and mineral supplements. But the key to achieving
this is VARIETY!
It may be necessary to distinguish between using diet to maintain
healthy condition and using diet as a means of treating an
existing health problem (Clinical Nutrition). For example,
a severe or chronic skin condition may be caused by an underlying
dietary intolerance but the offending ingredients have not
been identified. In that case it may be necessary to keep
to a restricted, fixed diet with only a few ingredients to
avoid the risk of introducing an ingredient which could trigger
a reaction.
The following suggestions are based on my own recommendations
to avoid health problems and ensure an excellent level of
general health. Treatment of specific health conditions may
require specialist advice and careful attention to detail.
For the dog
1/3 rd by volume boiled brown rice
1/3 rd by volume meat (this should be varied regularly using
chicken, fish, lamb, beef)
1/3 rd by volume vegetable, again varied using roots and greens
and to include some seaweed (dried or fresh)
I have less experience in the use of home made food for cats
but in general cats need a higher level of protein and less
carbohydrate.
This could be achieved by increasing the meat portion to 50%
with the rice and vegetable portions of 25% each. Again, some
seaweed should be included to provide trace minerals.
Donald Strombeck, has written a book on homemade diets for
the treatment of disease of the dog and cat. (Strombeck, Donald
R. 1999. Home Prepared Dog and Cat Diets – The Healthful
Alternative. Iowa: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-8138-2149-5)
Any information above is given in good faith
by our Nutritional advisors and may not necessarily reflect
the opinion of Burns Pet Nutrition. The advice of Burns Pet
Nutrition or a qualified veterinary surgeon should always
be sought before changes are made to the diet in the nutritional
management of health problems. Burns is a food and not a medicine.
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