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Second Chance Ranch.
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Raw Meat and Bones A Dangerous Fad Diet.
Veterinary Articles, Research, Scientific Studies
Testimonies
Frequently Asked Questions
Is
Raw Meat Safe?
The issue of feeding raw meat as
part (or the entirety) of a domestic dog's diet, has proven to be very
dangerous. What started out as an unresearched and unsubstantiated diet
that qualified veterinarians dismissed as a "fad", has now become a real
threat for the well meaning dog lovers who are striving to give their
dog's the best.
click here
to hear what just a few vets have to say. Additionally, dogs who are
not on a raw meat diet are still at risk because of parasites and
bacteria spread through feces at commonly shared parks.
Veterinarians across the United
States have grave concerns about raw meat and bones in a dog’s diet.
History and current statistics show us that both wild and domestic dogs
who eat raw meat and bones can and do become very ill for a number of
reasons.
There has been a significant
increase in a variety of illnesses due to a raw meat diet. Some dogs
become ill right away and others have severe pancreatic, kidney, heart
and brain illnesses due to a long-term raw meat diet. Most dogs that
die from a raw meat / bones diet do not show signs of illness until a
few days before it kills them. This is true with Pancreatitis and with
the raw chicken or turkey necks and backs that injure the stomach and
intestinal area.
Advocates of a raw meat/bone
diet make a giant leap from a low quality kibble to raw meat and bones,
skipping over a more common sense solution. A home-made diet with cooked
meat. Any initial results they might see with a raw meat diet are a
result of an "absence" of one or more ingredients of the kibble - NOT
the "presence"
of raw meat. I am very much in favor of home-made diets made with cooked
meat and grains, raw veggies and fruits, as long as you have researched
your dog's current health status and breeding history if possible.
I considered a raw diet for my
dog and decided to challenge the idea by thoroughly investigating
everyone’s claims (on both sides of the fence). It has evolved into an
11 year independent study. The most compelling evidence are the growing
number of dogs I have known to actually die from a raw turkey or chicken
back/neck tearing apart their stomach. Intestinal parasites from the
raw meat causing a slow death or severe illness. Female dogs on a raw
meat diet are more commonly dying while giving birth to a litter.
Throughout my research, I have
interviewed and collected data from several top veterinary universities
and nutrition experts with degrees in science and biology. Not one of
these credited experts could honestly say that a raw meat and/or bone
diet for domestic dogs was anywhere near the realm of safe. In
addition, I have not found a holistic practitioner or raw meat advocate
that can provide evidence that raw meat actually benefits the dog. For
example, I’m often told "my dog has a beautiful coat". Raw meat is high
in fat - this could also be accomplished with olive oil added to their
diet, without the risk of illnesses associated with raw meat. New
studies are coming out frequently - all opposed to raw meat and bone
diets.
Advocates of a raw meat diet
feel that it’s "bringing your dog back to a more natural style of
living". None of the people who are promoting a b.a.r.f. diet (that I
have encountered) have actually had contact with a wild dog. Dr.
Billinghurst admittedly has never done any studies on wolves or wild
dogs. I have. I have a wolf sanctuary, and the truth is that wild-born
wolves taken into captivity are typically malnutritioned. Most people
*assume* that because wild dogs don't have the opportunity to cook their
food, that nature has set up the perfect diet for them. This is simply
not true. We know from their carcasses that they die of splintered fowl
bones and have very bad dentalia (dental problems).
As for the statement that raw
meat is a biologically correct food, Humans have survived healthfully on
cooked foods for thousands of years. It is more than safe to say that
diseases such as Cancer are not caused by cooking your meat.
There are a variety of raw meat
menus being offered. You can also find several home-made raw meat diets
on websites. It’s possible that some of these menus or products are
better/safer than others. However, I have been told by experienced
veterinarians and nutritionists that they all have in common - they are
extremely unbalanced and also put your dog at risk of contracting
dangerous bacteria and parasites. This is not my own opinion, but that
of the top veterinary universities and true nutritional experts. Anyone
to deny there is risk, is fooling themselves!
What Are the Known Benefits of a
Raw Meat Diet?
There are no studies showing any
benefit that raw meat is directly responsible for. Dr. Billinghurst has
been asked several times, publicly, to provide an documentation or
studies on his "theory" or proof he has any knowledge of wolves and wild
dogs, yet fails to produce such evidence. As well, holistic
practitioners that recommend raw meat have been unable to provide any
type of evidence. Especially one so great that you should risk the
health of your dog.
On the other hand, as more
people experiment with raw meat diets, veterinarians are seeing frequent
cases of pancreatitis, ulcers, malnutrition, injuries due to the raw
bones, systemic bacterial poisoning and other conditions. I continue to
receive frequent emails from people who once swore by barf, and have now
left the discussion group with very sick dogs.
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Can a Dog Overcome Illnesses on
a Raw Meat Diet?
No! When an improvement in a
previous condition is seen after feeding raw meat to a dog, it is more
likely due to the absence of some offending agent in the food they were
eating before.
Some people see what they
perceive to be immediate results from the barf diet...a shiny coat, or
some type of condition has cleared up. Raw meat has a high fat content
that will sometimes give a dog a shiny coat (at least initially). While
coat texture can be a sign of good health, it's not a reliable measure
of a dog's health.
The truth is that it's NOT the
element of *raw* meat that improves a dog's health. They would see the
same results with cooked meat. Often times it's simply the absence of
one or more ingredient(s) in the kibble they were feeding. When you go
from a low quality kibble to barf, you're basically hopping out of the
pot and into the fire.
In other words, you could have
taken your dog off their current food and put them on another commercial
food, or possibly a vet-supervised homemade diet with small amounts of
cooked meat, and seen an improvement in the condition - without the
dangers of raw meat. Veterinary Universities believe (and I agree) that
better nutrition and veterinary care is extending the average dog's
lifespan past what is normal, which is why we see chronic cases such as
diabetes or cancer. Overbreeding has resulted in an increase of
dysplasia, allergies and skin conditions. These are effected by diet,
but caused by genetics (poor genealogy from overbreeding and puppy
mills).
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Why Do Veterinarians Recommend
It Then?
Very few do recommend raw meat
diets. I find it disturbing that the ones I have spoken to who do
endorse the idea of feeding raw meat and bones did not have any
medically sound reason for doing so, nor could they dispute the data I
presented. They just retreat to the position that "dogs in the wild eat
it", without acknowledging that wild dogs are malnutritioned and have
shortened life spans from their diet.
One veterinarian who has seen an
increase in illnesses due to feeding raw meat reported to me that he
treated a 6 month-old puppy who had been on the raw meat diet from a
book, "Give Your Dog a Bone". The owners had been diligent in strictly
following the book's instructions for their dog's diet. This dog had a
severe case of Eosiniphilic Panosteitis (Panos), which is not caused
directly by diet, but can be greatly effected by it. The poor puppy was
so lame he could barely support his own weight. This is not an isolated
case - I have also received email from numerous dog owners whose dogs
are having projectile bloody diarrhea and severe bacterial poisoning
while on Dr. Billinghurst's raw meat diet. It is just an example of
health problems I believe will become increasingly common as dogs on
these diets suffer poor health. There are a number of disorders a dog
could have where human food of almost any kind (raw meat and dairy, in
particular) could seriously harm them, Pancreatits being one example.
Click here for more examples;
Testimonies
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Who is Advocating Raw Meat for
Dogs?
The raw meat 'theory' has been
made popular by a few vets-turned authors such as Ian Billinghurst and
Dr. Pitcairn. From there, many other holistic vets who put their trust
into these authors have exuberantly promoted the concept. These authors
have created a significant paranoia - to the point where people are
afraid to cook their food or purchase any commercial food products.
Interestingly, most people following this diet only apply the logic to
their dog's diet and continue eating cooked foods themselves.
They are contradicting what the
great majority of veterinarians and qualified animal nutritionists have
determined to be true. I have not met anyone who could provide
scientific data to support these claims.
The owners of B.A.R.F. (Bones
and Raw Food) websites and Internet discussion lists are (to my
knowledge) dog owners and breeders, not veterinarians. They provide
questionable testimony and are not qualified to be prescribing diets for
your dog, or advising on alternative medicine in any way. A qualified,
respected veterinarian would not do this over the internet.
These "followers" of
Billinghurst, Pitcairn, Schultz and other authors are so dependant on
the books that they casually refer to it as their "bible." The barf
lists on the Internet are very much "cult-like." You will be warned if
you even mention my website, and banned if you agree with it. They will
not tolerate ANY opinion other than their own and are extremely hostile
toward anything that challenges their belief system. Barfers have
retaliated to my website/article by attempting to discredit me with
accusations of being affiliated to a commercial dog company. So for the
record, I do not sell dog commercial dog food. I am not selling
anything.
There are a few Internet
discussion groups against the feeding of B.A.R.F - however, they have
had to go "underground" because the members of B.A.R.F lists will join
and make it impossible to have a discussion without arguments and
attack. Barfers have even gone as far as to start discussion lists
posing as "anti-barf" groups, only to lure in people who are looking for
more information, and to attack those who speak out against B.A.R.F.
It's absurd!
Sadly, many of the discussions
on the barf message boards are about how ill the dogs are from raw
meat/bones. People who are new to feeding B.A.R.F. are told that
symptoms such as bloody diarrhea, choking on raw bones, and other health
problems are perfectly normal, as their dogs are "purging" toxins. I
receive numerous emails from people who have left these lists due to
their dogs becoming very ill or actually dieing from the barf or other
raw meat diets.
The makers of raw meat diets
sold in pet stores that I have met are not vets, and do not have a
science/microbiology background nor experience in the practice of
veterinary medicine. They have been salesman, groomers, or simply dog
owners. Their information seems to be wholly derived from those books
written concerning the raw meat diets without examining the subject in a
critical way. And, there are others that act as nutrition
consultants... bearing in mind that "Nutrition Specialist" is a
meaningless title with no certification required. I don't say this to
insult anyone, but it is something that consumers should be aware of.
Unfortunately, the raw meat diet
manufacturers and authors of books providing home-made diet recipes base
their opinions on the concept of what they assume is the "wild dog
diet". They seem to disregard the hard scientifically proven facts and
statistics about the typical health of a wild dog due to it's diet, and
injury and deaths to both wild and domestic dogs directly related to
consumption of raw meat and bones.
Furthermore, many authors of raw
meat diets or makers of such a diet present ludicrous unsupportable
claims as fact, such as these:
(1) raw chicken and turkey bones
will not splinter (in fact, they are the most common bone to kill a
dog).
(3) pasteurized products
contribute to arthritis.
(4) mixing proteins causes gas
in carnivores (dogs are omnivores, as are humans) as well as an acid
condition that may lead to disease.
(4) grapefruit seed extract
and/or fruit sugars will kill any dangerous bacteria in raw meat.
(5) beta carotene and vitamin A
prevent cancer. None of these claims has been demonstrated to be true,
nor are they widely accepted as even possibly true.
I was appalled when approached
by a few of the raw meat manufacturers/distributors with the enticement
that "you can become a millionaire selling this stuff". This is not to
say that each and every person advocating this fad has money as their
prime motivation, but it certainly seems rule, not the exception. There
is nothing inherently wrong with making a profit, but it is wrong to
make a profit selling dangerous products and ideas at the expense of our
animal friends to unsuspecting, well-meaning dog-lovers.
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How to Investigate Further
I urge you to step back and take a critical look at the facts before
changing your animal's diet; investigate everything you read, including
what I have written. Anyone can write a book or an article. Ask the
retailer to show you documented proof of their claims on the alleged
health benefits of raw meat. Or call a veterinary university and let
them provide you with scientific facts and case studies.
Barfers accuse commercial dog
food companies of selling inappropriate products for our dogs just to
make a buck. Holistic products on the market are far more expensive and
most are not even tested for use on/in animals. Dr. Billinghurst is
charging a ridiculous amount of money for his seminar and books. One
particular raw meat product found in pet stores is actually using
byproducts intended for large cats (cougars or lions) at the zoo. I
would mention their name, but they threatened to sue me if I exposed
them. There is no conspiracy. There are good food manufacturers and
there are ones who are out for money. I have found far more corrupt
people in the B.A.R.F business than in commercial kibble.
THE
TRUTH ABOUT FEEDING RAW MEAT
False: Chicken and turkey bones are soft and
wholly digestible. Especially baby back and necks.
Truth: History and present records show that this is completely untrue.
Thousands of dogs have died or been severely injured, over the years,
from consuming raw fowl bones. Farm dogs and Coyotes are consistently
treated for bone fragments and splintering in their stomachs or throats
after having killed live chickens, hens and turkeys - yes, even baby
fowl. Another way small fowl bones have painfully harmed dogs is they
become jammed or lodged between teeth or through the palate. I receive
email frequently from ex-barfers whose dogs have been harmed or killed
from being fed raw chicken and turkey bones. Even Dr. Billinghurst, in
his rebuttal to my website, admits there is risk. In his latest book he
has a disclaimer that raw bones may be hazardous. Duh! Too bad he didn't
mention it in his book when he recommended that you feed your dog raw
bones!
False: Bones won't splinter on a full
stomach.
Completely untrue! Many
times jagged chunks of bone do their damage in the throat. Dogs have
died from choking on bones. And, regarding the stomach, bones do not
pass as quickly as the food. Digested food does not protect the lining
of the stomach from sharp objects. Wolves eat fur, cartilage and muscle
meat along with the bones which helps prevent injury from fragments.
I'm not recommending you feed your dog bones in this manner, but it
should be noted that your dog doesn't have this advantage on the barf
diet.
Click here to read testimonies about dogs harmed by raw bones".
False: Cooking the meat destroys the
quality of enzymes and predigests the meat.
Truth:
The benefit of meat for dogs is protein not enzyme. Secondly, cooking
the meat makes it much more digestible as raw meat has indigestible
collagen proteins. In the wild, mother dogs eat the meat from a kill
and regurgitate for their pups - serving predigested meat. In addition,
raw meat is very high in fat. Thousands of dogs die every year from
Pancreatitis, and some are disabled by this disorder after being fed a
raw meat diet for a short time. Not only is raw meat high in fat, but
the pancreas is made to produce enzymes. Supplementing with too many
live enzymes can cause the pancreas to shut down. If your dog has
Pancreatitis and you aren't aware of it – a high fat diet of raw meat
could kill them.
False: Freezing kills all parasites and
bacteria.
Truth:
Freezing kills some but not all parasites and does not kill most
bacteria. The most dangerous parasite in raw meat is toxoplasmosis. It
can kill your dog. I know of two recent cases where dogs died from this
parasite after eating raw meat. Dr. Michael Harrington, a Veterinary
Neurologist reported that he treated a dog with thousands of parasites
from a raw meat diet, which turned to worms in his brain. An MRI
showed the dog's brain looked like Swiss cheese. The parasites are
usually much more dangerous than the bacteria. Cats and people are also
susceptible to this parasite. Pregnant women are told not to change
kitty litter when pregnant because toxoplasmosis can effect the baby.
Cats who carry toxoplasmosis from eating birds and rodents, while
pregnant, often birth deformed kittens.
False: Grapefruit seed extract kills all
dangerous bacteria.
Truth: This is completely un-scientific and unproven. Furthermore, some
bacteria thrive in the acid environment of the stomach. Grapefruit Seed
extract is irritating to the dog's stomach lining and the taste is
bitter.
False: Adding calcium through bone meal or
bones balances the phosphorous/calcium ratio.
Truth: The phosphorous/calcium ratio in a
dog's diet is one of the most critical for optimum health. It's
difficult to provide an accurate balance in home-made diets. It's an
uneducated, "amateur" idea to add bone meal because it contains both
phosphorous and calcium, which negates any balance. There is also the
threat of Mad Cow Disease in some locations. You would be better off
giving them a Tums tablet or a serving of Broccoli. A few of the
disorders caused by feeding raw meat are; Nutritional Secondary
Hyperparahtyroidism (parathy gland) and kidney failure due to the
inability of the kidney to remove high amounts of phosphorous from the
body. When kidneys fail due to over abundance of phosphorous, the body
compensates by robbing jaw bone for calcium to balance these circulating
blood levels. This is also known as Rubber Jaw. There are also a
number of osteopathic disorders.
False: Acidophilus and
FructoOligoSaccharides will also kill dangerous bacteria.
Truth: Sound impressive? Acidophilus is a "friendly" bacteria that aids
in digestion. It is not a bactericide. Fructo = fruit, oligo = few or
decreased, saccharides = sugar. These sugars are added to provide a
food source for the acidophilus.
False: Pasteurization leads to arthritis.
The makers of raw meat diets often suggest a meal plan that contains
whole, raw dairy.
Truth:
Dogs in the wild (which is the basis of the raw meat argument) do not
eat dairy. They eat eggs – eggs are meat not dairy. Dogs have a very
low tolerance for dairy because of the lactose. They do not produce
lactase (which digests the lactose) after being weaned from their
mother’s milk.
False: Dogs drink the milk from lactating
goats that have been killed.
Truth: Not many goats live in regions where
large wild wolves do - unless the wolf is stealing from a farmer. The
number of incidents where a wild wolf would have killed a female,
lactating goat, are so few that this is not a standard ingredient of the
wild dog's diet - nor should it be the domestic dog's.
False: Dogs are carnivores
Truth: Dogs are omnivores. They eat both
vegetation and meat, of which vegetation is the higher percentage.
Domestic dogs do not have the same skull shape or number of teeth that
wolves do. You could say they are carnivorous. Cats are true
carnivores, however, that doesn't mean that raw meat is safe for them
either. There are very obvious differences between cougars, lions,
tigers and your housecat.
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Why Wild Dogs Are Not a Good
Role Model for the Domestic Dog's Diet
It sounds like a good idea to
give your dog fresh, raw meat because "that's what the wild dogs eat".
This is an understandable misconception, but here are a couple of facts
to consider
(1) Domestic dogs do not have
the same digestive enzymes as a wild dog. Our domestic dogs are removed
from wolf relations by thousands of years. Dogs have been in captivity
(of Man) for at least 2000 years, and surviving healthfully on cooked
foods for as long as humans have. Until commercial dog food came about
approximately 100 years ago, dogs in captivity ate the common food of
the people. Those fed raw meat scraps often became ill back then also.
This is why experienced veterinarians do not recommend it. Most breeds
we have today are really of no relation to wolves since they were
created by man's intervention through breeding over thousands of years.
You just don't see packs of poodles, great Danes or golden retrievers in
the wild. The average lifespan of a domestic dog is much longer than
that of a dog in the wild. (see "can a dog overcome illness from a raw
meat diet", below)
(2) The theory is to feed our
dogs like wild dogs/wolves. However, the BARF and raw meat diets being
proposed have little in common with what a wild dog/wolf eats. If you
want to feed your dog like a wolf, then start shopping for worms, roots,
swamp grass, rodents and fowl. Or garbage of neighboring humans. Sure,
they eat vegetation including fruit and graze on grasses, but you're not
likely to see them sitting down to a bowl of oatmeal and yogurt in the
morning or a serving of fresh broccoli with their just killed mole.
Some retail frozen raw meat products are really nothing but byproducts,
and others include a menu of dairy products or are heavily supplemented
with items that are believed to be healthful for humans, but not
researched to determine the benefit to a dog.
One consistent ingredient in the
many varied BARF or raw meat diets is the supplementation of dairy
products. Dogs are lactose intolerant and do not produce lactase after
6-8 weeks of age. Furthermore, bovine and goat milk is nothing like
canine milk. Wolves don’t eat dairy (bear in mind that eggs are not
dairy, they are meat) although they would if it were available. Which
brings up another point - wolves are scavengers. They are not the best
judge of what's good for them and neither is your dog. They'll eat cat
poop and antifreeze if you let them.
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Statistics from Wolf Studies
Read
what Mike Ferreira, a 20-year veteran of wolf and wolfdog studies has to
say.
I myself, have done extensive
studies on wolves and wolfdogs over the years. I actually own a
wolfdog, myself. Chinook is a high content Timber Wolf. Wild dogs
often suffer from liver, kidney, an pancreatic problems from the raw
meat in their diet. The bones they eat are covered with cartilages and
fur - a wolf skat (feces) looks like a hairy stick. The barf diet
recommends raw, meaty chicken bones and it has killed and injured
thousands of dogs. It is a WELL known fact amongst vets that dogs who
eat raw bones often have dental problems ... it wears the teeth down
flat, and they splinter in the jaws and gums (also throat and stomach).
The barf diet that is so-called
"evolutionarily correct" does not seem to coincide with the reality of
evolution. Pomeranians, corgis, labs, jack russells (for example) and
most of the other breeds we have today did not evolutionize from wolves
over thousands of years. They are man-made breeds that have come about
from our intervention with genetics. Domestic dogs are similar to
wolves but there are many genetic differences --- wolves have a
different dental structure (size and angle of teeth) and completely
different skull measurements. From the nose to the top of their head,
it’s flat with no indentation....the area by the ears is much wider than
a domestic dog. Wolves mature physically at a completely different
rate.
The following quotes from
Jennifer Sheldon’s "Wild Dogs, The Natural History of Nondomestic
Canidae" show that many wolves and wild dogs do die of intestinal
parasites which are contracted from eating raw meat. Of course, this is
not the primary reason wolves die, but it does happen.
Regarding the red wolf (extinct
in the wild, except for small reintroduced populations); "Their decline
is thought to be due to a complex of factors including aggressive
long-term control programs... and high mortality from susceptibility to
parasites." (Parker, 1988; Paradiso and Nowak, 1971, 1972, Carley,
1979; Ferrell, et al., 1980)
"Parasites exact a heavy toll.
Of 27 wild-caught wolves tested, all 27 had heartworm (Riley and
McBride, 1972). Intestinal parasites, distemper, and mange are also
widespread (Riley and McBride, 1972; Paradiso and Nowak, 1972). The
high parasite burden carried by all red wolves may indicate that they
were occupying marginally suitable habitat. The majority of animals
captured during the intensive capture efforts of 1972 were less than 4
years old (Carley, 1979), indicating a very high mortality rate for
older individuals. Paradiso and Nowak (1972) noted that there appeared
to be very low levels of pup survivorship on the Texas gulf cost in the
late 1960s, with most pups dying before 6 months of age. Potential
lifespan, if comparable to that of free-ranging coyotes, should have
been as much as 12 years."
Regarding the diet of red
wolves, "…small animals such as rabbits, raccoons, and nutria, are their
primary prey. The consume fish, insects, carrion, and plant material as
well (Paradiso and Nowak, 1972; Carley, 1979; Riley and McBride, 1972;
Shaw, 1975). Only occasionally do they prey upon ungulates.
Regarding the grey wolf;
"Disease, parasites
(intestinal), starvation take their toll as well"
Regarding the maned wolf;
"In free-ranging individuals,
parasites (particularly nematodes, which may destroy the kidneys),
cystinuria (a potentially fatal inherited metabolic disorder), and
human-caused deaths seem to be the most important factors
contributing to mortality (Meritt, 1972; Dietz, 1984)." NOTE: the
meat aspect of their diet was an important contributing factor to
mortality!!
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The Wild Dog Diet
Wild dogs are omnivores, not
carnivores. It seems a small distinction, but really is not trivial.
This means that they do not live on meat alone, but also feast on
vegetation. Cats, by contrast, are true carnivores. Second, the meat
they do eat is consumed as soon as it is caught and is obviously not a
frozen product. Wild dogs have evolved somewhat of a resistance to the
dangerous bacteria and parasitic infections to which they are exposed,
which our domestic dogs have not. It is a documented fact through zoos
and wolf experts such as Jennifer Sheldon, quoted above, that even wild
dogs die and/or become ill from consuming raw meat. Not necessarily
every time they eat it, but often enough for it to be of grave concern
for your dog. We also know from the wild dogs taken into captivity that
they are often found malnourished and unhealthy.
There is well documented
evidence in the carcasses of wild dogs, and a well-known fact among
veterinary doctors and scientists, that wild dogs DO choke on the bones
of fowl or have them splinter in the stomach - even baby backs and necks
(Washington State University, located in a rural area verifies this
statement). Cooking a bone may make it more likely to splinter,
however, raw bones sometimes do splinter in the throat and stomach. A
more likely event is that the raw bone will be broken into small, jagged
pieces which can tear the lining of the throat and stomach or become
lodged in the palate.
In general, wolf and wild dog
studies show that muscle meat is not always the primary source of food
and that lamb and chicken are not often among the meats. Most wild dogs
hunt small prey, like rabbit, birds or rodents, providing a relatively
small amount of actual meat. Even bones are sometimes left behind. The
first thing they do with prey is tear open the belly and eat the
pre-digested greens, then the organs, then a combination of muscle meat,
bones and fur. It is also important to remember that only large pack
dogs like the gray or red wolves hunt large ungulates (i.e., deer,
antelope). One dog could not possibly take down a 250 pound animal with
their mouth while it's running at 20-30 miles per hour. They share the
feast with the whole pack. The females then return to their pups and
regurgitate pre-digested meat for them (contradicting Dr. Pitcarin and
Billinghurst's theory that predigested meat is not healthy or normal for
dogs to eat).
One of the greater dangers than
even the bacteria and parasites, is the fact that a raw meat diet is
extremely unbalanced. And a diet supplemented with raw meat is near
impossible to keep balanced. Our pet dogs are privileged to be
protected from the nutritional deficiencies that wild dogs face.
Thank you
for taking the time to read this information. I wish you and your pets
healthy and happy lives!
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Following are a few of the
institutions from which I obtained statistics and facts. Please go to
Studies and More Information for articles,
books and research information.
Robert Vansaun, DVM, PHD*
Professor, Oregon State University
Magruder Hall 105
College of Veterinary Medicine
Corvallis OR 97331
541-737-7667 (phone)
541-737-0502 (fax)
*other titles;
President of the American Academy of Veterinary Nutrition
Diplomat, ACT (American college of Theriogenolists)
Diplomat, American College of Veterinary Nutrition
Jim Lincoln, DVM
Director of Veterinary Teaching Hospital
Washington State University
Veterinary Clinical Sciences
PO Box 646610
Pullman, Washington 99164-6610
509-335-0711
Julie Churchill, DVM
Clinical Specialist, Nutrition
College of Veterinarian Medicine
University of Minnesota
1365 Gortner Ave
St. Paul Minn 55108
612-625-9758
612-624-0751
Jennifer W. Sheldon
Wild Dogs, The Natural History of the Nondomestic Canidae
Academic Press, Inc., 1992
Ann Martin
Food Pets Die For
Protect Your Pet...More Shocking Facts
NewSage Press, Inc.
University of California, Davis
Veterinary School of Medicine - 530-752-1011
San Francisco Zoo - 415-753-7080
Woodland Park Zoo (Seattle, WA) - 206-684-4800
Washington State Veterinary Association - 425-454-8381
Questions
or Comments Regarding Second Chance Ranch?
Email
katie@mybluedog.com |