More Dog Food Ingredients to Avoid

Posted April 22nd, 2010 by admin

If you feed your dog commercial dog food there is a good chance that he is malnourished and possibly even being slowly poisoned.  “How can that be?” you say.  “I love my dog.  He’s not just a pet, he’s a member of the family!”  I’m not suggesting that you are deliberately withholding food or slipping him a tiny dose of cyanide every now and then.  I am suggesting that the food you are feeding your dog contains crap.  Nutritionally empty crap and potentially carcinogenic crap.  If you are on a tight budget and are saving a few pennies by buying cheaper dog foods, than you are feeding your dog a greater amount of crap.

Don’t like what I’m writing?  Read the ingredients on that can of food you’re about to put down for Fluffy and then see if you still take issue.  Let’s look at some common ingredients in dog foods that you should avoid and why you should avoid them.

Corn ( including corn meal and corn gluten)

Dogs don’t have digestive systems suitable to process large amounts of vegetable material.  They especially do not produce enough enzymes to completely break down corn.  It’s tough for them to digest.  Corn has very little nutritional value and is used mainly as a filler.

Cellulose

Purified, mechanically disintegrated cellulose prepared by processing alpha cellulose obtained as a pulp from fibrous plant materials.

The most common source for cellulose is dried wood.  It is processed into a fine powder and used to add bulk and consistency to pet foods.  Negligible nutritional value.

BHA and BHT

Phenolic antioxidants, used to preserve fats and oils.  Many countries have banned these from human use, but they are still permitted in the U.S.  They are possible human carcinogens and have been demonstrated carcinogenic in animal experiments.

Ethoxyquin

An antioxidant.  Developed by Monsanto as a stabilizer for rubber, it has also been used as a pesticide for fruit and a color preservative for spices, and later for animal feed.  It has been linked to thyroid, kidney, reproductive and immune related illnesses as well as cancer.

Fish Meal

The clean, rendered, dried ground tissue of undecomposed whole fish or fish cuttings, either or both, with or without the extraction of part of the oil.

The type or source isn’t specified, nor is the quality of the fish used.  According to US Coast Guard regulations, all fish meal not destined for human consumption must be conserved with Ethoxyquin.  If the dog food you are feeding your dog contains fish meal, you can bet it also contains Ethoxyquin.  A double whammy of bad news for your dog.

The list goes on.  If you are going to feed your dog commercial food, carefully read the ingredients.  If you don’t know what an ingredient is, look it up.  Don’t assume that the manufacturer wouldn’t put something in the food that has no nutritional value or would otherwise harm your pet.  Unfortunately, most commercial pet food manufacturers are more concerned with their bottom line than they are with the health and well-being of your dog.  You are your dog’s caregiver and caretaker.  He gives you unconditional love.  In return, give him the healthiest, most nutritionally balanced food you can.

Xylatol is Not Dog Food

Posted February 23rd, 2010 by admin

I was surfing the web and I came across this article, which I found very interesting. It’s on a site called Live a More Natural Life. It has all sorts of good info. You might want to give it a look.
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Dog Food Ingredients to Avoid

Posted February 22nd, 2010 by admin

When you are looking for the best dog foods for your pet, the first thing you want to look at is the ingredients in the food. OK, then what? Which ingredients are good and which ones aren’t so good? Some ingredients are benign, providing no nutritional value, but not doing your dog any harm. Others, however, are dodgy to say the least. Let’s take a look at some of the worst characters in this rogue’s gallery of ingredients to avoid. The definitions are from AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control Officials). The comments below the definitions are mine. Read more »

Why the “Dog Food Ratings” Site

Posted February 19th, 2010 by admin

I’m really, really angry.  I probably shouldn’t be writing when I’m upset, but sometimes anger is a good thing, and I think this is one of those times.  I started this site for two reasons:  I work with a woman who nearly lost her dog in the tainted Menu dog food fiasco, and she has a friend who did lose her dog because he ate the tainted food and wasn’t strong enough to survive.  I don’t want to see anyone go through that needless pain and if this site can save even one dog, then I will have succeeded. Read more »