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For thousands of years dogs roamed the ancient world. They made their homes on the Savannahs of Africa, the plains of India and the forests of Eurasia and the Americas. Packs of dogs swirled through every type of terrain in every climate. They ate what they could wherever they could. Food came from three sources – prey, scavenged and grazed items. Prey would be mainly herbivores – rabbits, deer, sheep or antelope. Scavenged food would be leftovers from the big carnivores; lions, bears and puma for example; dogs acting here as natural tidiers for the leftovers of messy carnivores. Coprophagia (eating faeces) would also offer nutritional scope. Grazed food would include nuts and apples, berries and other wild fruits in season. Grazing would only be a small part of the diet, but would be a significant proportion, especially in summer.
Dogs would hunt in packs. Prey would be devoured with nothing remaining of the carcase after the meal. The soft organs or ‘viscera’ were the first thing to be eaten. Herbivores (rabbits and deer) have a large gut continually full of chewed and partially digested vegetable matter. Cereals were present, but only as a small proportion. This would be eaten next. The muscle (meat) and bones would then be eaten. Bones, skin and hair would be the final course – nature’s way of cleaning the teeth after a large meal.
Man has fed dogs for about forty thousand years; dogs help with the hunt and man rewards them with some of the leftovers the dogs are only too happy to eat. Life is easier for both species with this arrangement; man gets a useful hunting companion, dog gets a pack mate who feeds them a broad ranging diet without them having to do as much work to catch it. All very cosy until man got busy with things like agriculture, then developing society then industrialisation and latterly caught up in the consumer society. When this happened, man kept a dog as a pet. He no longer hunted and so had less raw meat to share with his trusted friend.
Food producers in the USA, with lots of poor quality meat, gristle, viscera and cereal by-products that they could not hide in sausages, came up with a novel idea to sell it – put it in tins and call it ‘dog food’. For the first time in history, people could buy food specifically for their dog. The idea caught on. Soon people forgot that they just used to feed their dogs raw meat and bones and all the scraps – a broad range of foods minimally processed to maintain the food’s value.
Today we find ourselves bombarded by pet food advertisements for this tinned brand or that dry brand or this sausage preparation or that super-chew. There is so much processed food to choose from we don’t know where to turn! When I was at College, one of my old lecturers said ‘If there is more than one answer to a problem, then they’re probably all wrong’. Is this true with pet food? I think we’ve forgotten about the basics in our our drive for convenience. Admittedly, we all try to buy the best for our wonderful dogs, but have you ever asked yourself these questions: a) If this food is as wonderful as they say it is, why don’t they use it in people – for astronauts or prisoners, for example? And b) Would I eat this stuff?
So why do we feed it to our dogs? Convenience, in a word – convenience. But how convenient is it if your animal develops a persistent itch or eczema, dental problems or smelly breath, inhalant allergy/atopy, colitis, food hypersensitivity, lethargy, dull and scurfy coat, kidney disease or rheumatoid arthritis?
Dogs, in my opinion, should eat, as far as possible, a raw diet; raw meat, liquidised raw fruit and veg and raw bones. It is simple to feed and, logically, it is what dogs were, and are still are, designed to eat. Here’s how it works:
The best book on the subject is ‘Give Your Dog a Bone’ (ISBN 0 646 16028 1) by Ian Billinghurst an Australian vet with 20 years practice experience. It can be found on the Internet or from some mail order houses in the UK. If you can’t find it, let me know and I can send you a copy. This sheet is basically a concise simplification of some of his thoughts.
Certain authorities are concerned with feeding dogs raw food. They claim, without any good evidence that this can lead to the infection of dogs with pathogens that can pass to people. I believe that dogs are able to cope with a certain level of contamination of their food that cooking would otherwise kill. I believe they can eat such food and not be more of a threat to human health than a dog fed on a commercial diet. Indeed, if a dog is fed regularly on a raw food diet, I believe they will be healthier and better able to cope with bugs transmissible to people. If you have any concerns, or have very young or very old or immunodeficient people in your household, then your best advice would be to talk with your vet or other health professional.