If
you are still buying commercial animal food for your beloved pets, please stop.
How’s
that for an opening statement? But, it truly is how I feel and is based on some
very interesting personal history I might add. I do not feed any of my pets anything
from a factory (even when I ate it myself) and prefer to make their food at
home.
Years
ago, back when I worked as a Food Hygiene Inspector I saw exactly what was sent
to the rendering plant for dog and cat food in particular. I was also quite aware
of all the short cuts the rest of the condemned material might take to cross
paths with it too.
That’s
not saying all pet food is condemned food, however, what bothers me far more is
the fact that we have come to believe our pets need to eat food that is made on
an assembly line.
Even
when we ourselves are, or should be, more aware, concerned, taking steps
(hopefully) to remove this type of rubbish from our own food chain. Right now
you might be thinking – so what, we don’t eat the pets?
No,
but we do pay their bills! And we do care for them, so why not take steps to
make their food a little better quality as well as our own and keep them healthy longer. It’s so easy to
feed a dog or a cat.
I
always think in terms of protein. A cat has a short digestive tract – food goes
through fairly quickly – they can often eat more protein and particularly
thrive on fish. But, when their favourite fish is mixed with cooked vegetables,
rice, beans and so forth – they love it.
Dogs
will eat what you give them (or at least mine will) so I make extra when
cooking our own meals to feed to them. I just pay attention throughout the week
to their needs as well.
For
instance, everyone gets an egg or two a week (the cat loves eggs!). Alternate
fish, beans, meat etc. as a protein source, balance it out with vegetables
(both raw and cooked) and some grains. I also throw in seaweeds, oils and any
other goodies they might need.
You
must also look at their activity levels, age and development stages – for
instance a young puppy (we have a 6 month old) has different energy
requirements then an older less/more active dog (we also have a hyper Whippet).
Feeding
a pet early in the day is also wise as they seem to be more settled at night
when you do (and so do we). However, getting the right amount of food is
important too. Perhaps two smaller meals are better then one larger dinner for
some pets.
What
I like about making my own pet food is that I get to stay in touch with my
animals, monitor them, see what their needs are and not just throw food at them
and not think about it.
I am
actively involved in their health and well-being, through their diet as well as
their care. Personally, I think it makes for far healthier animals, better
interaction and happier, better adjusted households when we are all connected
by something as fundamental as our food.
Feeding
our pets is not science – it’s common sense.
April
Healthy pup! |
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