So confused about the best food!


  • @DebraDownSouth:

    HOLY COW!! ::$72 for 25lbs…;;; You could feed top quality raw or cooked for that. Whew. Nope, my limit is $40 for 25. Beyond that I just will not consider.

    Now you see why I said I'd try Honest Kitchen this winter - suddenly that doesn't seem so expensive anymore. Even Taste of the Wild has gone up here - $52 for 30lbs… 😞 I feed 4 b's and don't have freezer space for raw...


  • @renaultf1:

    Now you see why I said I'd try Honest Kitchen this winter - suddenly that doesn't seem so expensive anymore. Even Taste of the Wild has gone up here - $52 for 30lbs… 😞 I feed 4 b's and don't have freezer space for raw...

    If you're coming to the National this year, save some room in your car. There are some places not too far from the show site where you can get Origen cheaper than that.

    As an aside Evangers is sponsoring our National this year.


  • The prices of many of the top quality dog food has gone up tremendously within the last year. The health food store near me has lower prices than the dog food store-Complete PetMart to buy the high quality food especially the smaller bags. It usually has good sales also. The pet food store never has the smaller bags on sale.

    Jennifer


  • @Nemo:

    If you're coming to the National this year, save some room in your car. There are some places not too far from the show site where you can get Origen cheaper than that.

    As an aside Evangers is sponsoring our National this year.

    Unfortunately I won't be able to make the National this year - between a trip to France, trips to Canada, and some upcoming dog shows…I'm just about out of vacation time...:(


  • I used NRG dehydrated for awhile. My dog liked it but it was kind of time consuming to make, or maybe I am just fussy. My dogs are on TimberWolf right now and are loving it. It's a very good food. I do not know a whole lot about Origen?


  • Hi, to add to your confusion: we use http://www.dogloversgold.eu/usa/ for our 2 sisters.
    They love it, and they look great (everyone else, including the vet says too!)
    KJ


  • As someone else said, if you have a 4 or 5 star food and your dogs like it and it agrees with them, stick with it!
    We fed Innova for years, then added EVO mixed with it. After Nicky's pancreatitis, and a new basenji who got huge (and discovered he is very hypothyroid, now on meds) we went with a lower fat food, low calorie too. I have tried several brands, am mixing Wellness with Nutro-ultra and the boys love it, Nicky prefers the Nutro alone. All seem to feel good, poop is good, coat good, all are losing weight. There are better foods, but this is good and agrees with all three so we wills tick with this, as long as they like it and it likes them!


  • I have recently done some personal research since we just got our new puppy. My three top choices are Evo Red Meat, Orijen, and Fromms. My criteria was grain free, higher protein, digestibility of that protein, digestibility of the entire food, fat levels, fiber content, and DHA. DHA has been noted to be important in eye and brain development.

    Evo Red Meat was our final choice for our puppy because we have had success with it in the past, it is highly digestible as a complete dog food as well as highly digestible where protein is concerned. Evo contains a lower level of fiber and a higher level of fat which is in our view important to a puppies growth. Please note, you can have a dog food that is high in protein but if the percentage of digestibility is low and the dog cannot utilize a higher amount of the protein then it goes to waste. So you could have a lower protein level and higher digestibility of it and have a good food also.

    I did talk to all three manufacturers on the phone. Fromms is family run. Orijen is based in Canada and appears to sell strictly through independent retailers. Evo was bought out in 2010 by proctor and gamble but is claimed to be operated by the original people so nothing has changed in their manufacturing process. Evo is now more readily available at least in my area.

    During my research I also contacted Wellness Core, and I was advised by the customer service of that company that their dog foods were not suitable for puppies. When I asked why, I was told their foods do not contain DHA and that they will be coming out with a line of food for puppies in the near future.

    While I am sure there are many great foods out there, we think the three we mentioned above are the best choices for us. We have already seen very good positive response, in growth, behavior, coat, energy, and digestion.


  • I wonder how many people put as much research into the food they put on their own tables? Dogs evolved as scavengers, and will do surprisingly well on relatively crappy diets. A friend had a cross bred mutt that lived to be 19 years old, healthy as can be for most of his life (deaf as a post the last couple of years) and he ate the el cheapo stuff she got from the farm store, plus table scraps, his whole life.

    Commercial dog food began as an invented product, and good advertising has made us believe we need it. Certainly people appreciate the convenience and have come to believe…...because of advertising.....that you need some sort of degree in nutrition to feed a dog (but not a child, apparently) Sure, it is great to get the "best" food (if you can figure out what that is), but many dog food brands are under the same parent multinational and even if you find a good, small, independent brand, keep an eye on it, as companies get swallowed up so quickly these days, formulas change (but not the name) and all of a sudden your favourite brand is no longer what you thought it was.

    In reality, most dog food manufacturers use the cheapest ingredients they can get away with. There is nothing "fresh" or "natural" about commercial kibbles, with the processing that they go through. Without the "premix" they won't even support life. An ingredients list is great, but you need to know what actually qualifies as the ingredient stated. It may not be what you think. Most pet foods aren't made from anything you would want to put on your own table!

    Full disclosure......I use a commercial food for convenience. Because I am vegetarian, table scraps are not going to cut it for me. I use NRG dehydrated, because I prefer something that doesn't use a pre mix. My dogs have done well on it, but before I bothered doing my research I had a couple of healthy Basenjis that lived to 16 on food I wouldn't use now.


  • Oakleys tried taste of the wild and had stool issues, at that point he ha to go on Iams low residue for gastrointestinal sensitivity…due to the poor ingredient list (although he did have great stools) I made the decision to switch back to a high quality food. I currently feed Fromms..in a variety of flavors and he does decent...I've contemplated switching to a high quality lower fat food to help prptect his eyes after his diagnosis of corneal dystrophy...but haven't decided or done research into what food that would be...

    It's such a mixed bag, every dog is truly different, everyone has different expectations of what they want a particular food to do for their dogs


  • I do not know which Taste of the Wild dry food you were using but the Bison formula also has Lamb and Chicken in it. For me, their foods have too many different meat products in them. How does one know which one is causing a problem? I quit feeding it a few years ago.

    I have a dog on the Intestinal food because of esophagus problems. I tried all different foods when he was an older puppy because I thought it was allergies. He has done well on it. I would only put a dog on it if a health problem has been accurately diagnosed.

    Jennifer


  • Spencer was content with Evo until I had to switch him to a low protein diet. He hates them all. He won't get near Hill's k/d, so I mix a little Wellness Senior with his cooked food (usually chicken, fish or egg, veggies and rice or potato) and consider myself lucky if he doesn't pick out the kibble. Most of the time he will lick the dry bits clean and spit them on the floor. If I try and sneak too many of them in, he won't touch anything in the bowl. He gets lots of vitamins, omegas and other supplements, but I still worry that he isn't getting the right nutritional balance. Somedays, it's all I can do to get him to eat ANYTHING, and I have had to resort to chicken and veggie pizza, fish tacos or spaghetti on occasion to keep him from starving. Sigh.


  • Spencer is lucky you are so inventive! Chicken and veggie pizza sounds delish!


  • OK, busted! I like the chicken pizza, fish tacos and spaghetti and muttballs, too. 🙂

    But there are nights when I wish he would just eat his kibble out of a bowl like other dogs.


  • so we were using kirkland for a while and decided after reading here to try some dif foods !
    she would hardly eat her food we always had to hop it up with stuff 🙂

    about 3 months ago we went and picked up Orijen and taste of the wild to compare to the kirkland (this was pre recall)

    decided to let Hana tell us what she liked the most so we did some one kibble in each hand let her sniff it and then backed up ten feet let her come up and decide with our hands about 6 inches apart which hand she prodded 🙂
    out of 11 tries she picked the orijen each time over the taste of the wild we even swapped hands etc..

    while expensive we seem to be able to feed her less and she is doing well on it 🙂
    she of course is getting a little picky already again waiting for that fresh chicken etc.. in her meals 🙂 but happy with the Orijen

    after the recall makes me nervous the taste of the wild was on the list !

    their was one other food the pet store brought in that she liked along with the orijen ? forgot the name of it but going to go back and check that out also ?

    OH we picked up both the fish and the meat varieties of each and she did not seem to like either of the fish ones ? only the red meat varieties


  • As you probably already know the Orijen is much higher in protein than the Taste of the wild. We mentioned before we stuck with Evo for our new puppy even though they were sold to P&G. Since the formula and manufacturing plant or process has not changed, we felt it was a safe bet.

    Even so we still investigated other foods. The top three on our list for dry dog food is Evo, Orijen, and Fromms. Evo has better availability than Orijen does. Evo and Orijen are higher in protein than Fromms. All three mentioned contain Dha which we felt was important to us and our puppy.


  • I will say that from personal experience- Oakleys sensative and picky to foods and while High protein seems to trigger loose stools he did well on te Orijen…I still choose Fromms because it is lower protein and because they're family owned and operated and have never been part of a recall. Recently I emailed them because I bought Oakley a bag of food and coincidentally he was sick the same day, I emailed them and thy assured me thy had no recalls and furthermore, they would investigate the batch number to quell my fears... Turned out not to be the food but they were so helpful and transparent that it made me feel I was dealing with an honest company..plus Oakleys coat is as shiny and soft as ever ( he has been blessed with a great short coat anyways). Occasionally I'll rotate in a small bag of the Orijen in the winter but for us its Fromms all the way


  • The people at Fromms are good people. We have spoken with them as well as people at both the other companies mentioned.

    From our experience we know that when you feed a higher protein food, one of the side effects of over feeding can be loose stools. Exercise and hot weather can also cause loose stools.

    When it comes to food, the protein level is only one factor to be concerned with. The digestibility of the protein as well as the digestibility of the whole food are important. For puppies, you need to consider fat levels as well. Fiber and Dha are two other factors for consideration as well,

    So even though the protein in a Fromms food might be lower, if the digestibility of that protein has a higher percentage ratio then it can be just as effective a food as one with much high protein levels and less percentage of digestibility ratio.


  • Does anyone know where I can get Fromm's in either the west coast of Canada or the pacific northwest area of Washington state? I am batting zero trying to find it in the Vancouver lower mainland area.


  • I get Oakleys through doggiefood.com and they do free shipping over 49.99 anywhere in the US…I don't know about Canada though? I get mine quickly ALWAYS, with good expirations and they always respect I don't want packing peanuts in my order...and they substitute the shippin material with no issues! Not to mention it saves me from driving to have to get his food which even the closest location isnt convenient. I really do love Fromms!!

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