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Red Hot Cardinal Fan
Posts: 4122
  
| I'm looking around to switch my dogs to a different dog food, but there are so many options out there with varying reviews. What does everyone feed that is a good quality feed? I have them on ProPlan Sensitive Stomach as my bulldog has had some stomach issues in the past. Which this food helped those specific problems, but now she has terrible gas that she didn't have before. I mean it's bad... Lol. I know this is fairly common with the breed, but she didn't have it this bad before switching so I think the feed is contributing some to it.
Anyone care to share what they feed, or those who are more knowledgable about feeds care to weigh in? | |
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 It's not my fault I'm perfect
Posts: 13739
        Location: Where the long tails flow, ND | I feed A Taste of The Wild and have been super happy with it. My lab had dry skin when she was a puppy until I discovered Taste of the Wild, that was 6 years ago | |
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 Expert
Posts: 2457
      
| We have had super luck with savor shredded lamb formula from purina Pro Plan. It has hard chunks and soft dehydrated chunks too.
We have a BC that had issues with super sensitive skin, picky eating, and keeping weight on her since she is very active and made on the more athletic side (hard keeper type). She looks glossy, has put weight/fat along her back, and eats really really well now.
With Bully breeds, you may have to buy very specific types. My co-worker feeds cooked chicken to his 3 yo Bulldog to avoid her issues .... they don't buy "dog food" at all. | |
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 582
    Location: Wherever They Send Me | I feed my 1 year old "4 Health," she is a pound puppy (Golden Ret mix...we think). I chose the grain free version, because it has more flavors so I can switch when I get to the end of a bag. She isnt picky and pretty much eats anything.
I fed my German Shepherd Annamaet...he was a special dog. As in,.. had HORRIBLE allergies (rye grass, russian thistle, willow trees, a dust mite, a house hold dander and...wait for it..human dander). Annamaet had a beef formula, I tried to steer clear of chicken.
I also gave him dehydrated dog food from Honest Kitchen. I really like the Honest Kitchen and he seemed to also (he was VERY picky)...it is human grade so when the zombies come you can eat it too!! They also have alot of options: grain free, beef, chicken, lamb, vegetarian, etc. | |
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 Banjo and Baby
Posts: 7259
      Location: South of Canada and North of Mexico | I have fed many of the higher end foods, by far im most impressed with Fromm, Nutri-Source and Soild Gold. Fromm is made in WI and Nutri-Source in MN, neither have ever had recalls. Check out www.dogfoodadvisor.com | |
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 Total Germophobe
Posts: 6443
       Location: Montana | We really like Purina One True Instinct, Beneful, and Nutro Natural Choice. However, our dog had a skin issue that we are able to control through feed. His gas is completely obnoxious, but it doesn't seem to matter what you feed him, its always terrible. An acquaintance of our's had good luck with I think Blue Buffalo (not sure on the brand) but it was a salmon food that worked on her boxer, however it made our dog's gas worse (we have a Boston terrier). So not sure what to tell you! | |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 1117
  Location: MI | We also feed Taste of the Wild - our Doberman LOVES it & looks great. I like that it's grain free, very good ingredients, made in USA, etc. He had bad gas on the salmon version but does great on the waterfowl. | |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 1117
  Location: MI | This is a great resource - you can look up each brand & it gives a detailed review & score http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/dog-food-reviews/taste-of-the-wild-dog-food-dry/
Edited by KDS 2016-01-04 6:09 PM
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 Stinky Cat Owner
Posts: 4097
     Location: Oregon | Life's Abundance for about 10 years now. | |
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Expert
Posts: 1280
      Location: Texas | 4 Health grain free beef & potato (they have several other flavors). Get it at TSC, great reviews, very reasonably priced. | |
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I Am a Snake Killer
Posts: 1927
       Location: Golden Gulf Coast of Texas | tracies - 2016-01-04 7:53 PM
4 Health grain free beef & potato (they have several other flavors). Get it at TSC, great reviews, very reasonably priced.
I feed this too! Our Catahoula had skin issues and gas! This solved both issues! | |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 920
    
| We feed Dr. Tim's. I don't feed near as much of it. I used to feed iams, I have also fed taste of the wild. I order from chewy.com. It's rated pretty good on dogfoodadvisor. | |
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 I Prefer to Live in Fantasy Land
Posts: 64864
                    Location: In the Hills of Texas | IngredientsSalmon, brewer's rice, canola meal, oat meal, animal fat preserved with mixed tocopherols (form of Vitamin E ), fish meal (natural source of glucosamine ), salmon meal, barley, brewer's dried yeast, animal digest, salt, potassium chloride, L Lysine monohydrochloride, Vitamin E supplement, zinc sulfate, ferrous sulfate, L ascorbyl 2 polyphosphate (source of Vitamin C ), manganese sulfate, niacin, Vitamin A supplement, calcium pantothenate, thiamine mononitrate, copper sulfate, riboflavin supplement, Vitamin B 12 supplement, garlic oil, pyridoxine hydrochloride, folic acid, Vitamin D 3 supplement, calcium iodate, biotin, menadione sodium bisulfite complex (source of Vitamin K activity ), and sodium selenite The above is the ingredients for the Pro Plan Sensitive Stomach...No way will I feed animal digest or animal fats..Excuse me, Myth?July 1, 2013 17Purina says that it is a myth that the pet food ingredient Animal Digest is considered substandard. Here's some facts about this pet food ingredient, then you decide if you agree with Purina. Read More » The FDA FourApril 21, 2011 4FDA testing found four pet food/pet treat ingredients to be associated with pentobarbital in dog food; "Meat and Bone Meal, Beef and Bone Meal, Animal Fat, and Animal Digest". What pet foods/treats use one (or more) of the four risk ingredients? Here's a partial (but very long) list of the pet foods that contain the FDA Four. | |
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 I Prefer to Live in Fantasy Land
Posts: 64864
                    Location: In the Hills of Texas | Ingredient to Avoid! Animal Digest October 1st, 2007 by Dan
Since the pet food recalls I’d like to believe we’ve all grown a little more aware of what we’re feeding our beloved pets. In this blog I’d like to call your attention to an ingredient that is so common in many lower quality foods and dog treats. Animal Digest is often included in many commercial treats and bottom of the barrel dog foods. Be prepared to be grossed out when I explain to you what this product really is! According to AAFCO (The term AAFCO stands for the Association of American Feed Control Officials; they provide regulatory guidelines for the manufacturing of pet foods) standards, Animal Digest is “Animal Digest – material which results from chemical and/or enzymatic hydrolysis of clean and un-decomposed animal tissue. The animal tissues used shall be exclusive of hair, horns, teeth, hooves and feathers, except in such trace amounts as might occur unavoidably in good factory practice and shall be suitable for animal feed.” Yuck! Another expert has described Animal Digest as “a cooked-down broth which can be made from unspecified parts of unspecified animals.” The animals can be collected from almost any source. There is no control set in place over quality or contamination. Any kind of animal can be included: “4-D animals” (dead, diseased, disabled, or dying before slaughter), goats, pigs,sheep, horses, rats, euthanized at animal shelters, restaurant and supermarket waste, road kill, etc. That is about as gross as it gets. Please read your bags carefully and choose treats with ingredients that you can pronounce and understand. | |
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 My Heart Be Happy
Posts: 9159
      Location: Arkansas | lindseylou2290 - 2016-01-04 11:11 AM
We have had super luck with savor shredded lamb formula from purina Pro Plan. It has hard chunks and soft dehydrated chunks too.
We have a BC that had issues with super sensitive skin, picky eating, and keeping weight on her since she is very active and made on the more athletic side (hard keeper type). She looks glossy, has put weight/fat along her back, and eats really really well now.
With Bully breeds, you may have to buy very specific types. My co-worker feeds cooked chicken to his 3 yo Bulldog to avoid her issues .... they don't buy "dog food" at all.
I just switched my Siberian Husky to the shredded chicken and rice from Purina PP. It hasn't been long enough to see the effects, but he sure does like it better than the last food. He tends towards the lean side so I'm hoping it'll give him a little weight. Also have him on the wet PP too. | |
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 Expert
Posts: 2457
      
| Chandler's Mom - 2016-01-04 8:51 PM
lindseylou2290 - 2016-01-04 11:11 AM
We have had super luck with savor shredded lamb formula from purina Pro Plan. It has hard chunks and soft dehydrated chunks too.
We have a BC that had issues with super sensitive skin, picky eating, and keeping weight on her since she is very active and made on the more athletic side (hard keeper type). She looks glossy, has put weight/fat along her back, and eats really really well now.
With Bully breeds, you may have to buy very specific types. My co-worker feeds cooked chicken to his 3 yo Bulldog to avoid her issues .... they don't buy "dog food" at all.
I just switched my Siberian Husky to the shredded chicken and rice from Purina PP. It hasn't been long enough to see the effects, but he sure does like it better than the last food. He tends towards the lean side so I'm hoping it'll give him a little weight. Also have him on the wet PP too.
Good luck! I know we had a super positive outcome with our adult female on it. She looks 100% different, for the better.
Interestingly, we picked up a BC pup back in October. I put her on science diet puppy food. She preferentially kept eating the PP over the SD; she would leave the SD in her bowl and pull the bag of PP out of the closet to munch on. I made her eat a whole 50 lb bag of the SD puppy and slowly switched her to the PP over about 3 weeks. If you look up ingredients, the SD puppy food has the same mineral content as the PP savor shredded lamb, the only difference is the total protein and fat amounts - which are higher in the PP. The puppy looks fantastic and is growing really well on it too. She also is super active and we've started her herding/trialing training with no issues thus far that we would attribute to food.
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 564
   Location: Texas | My dog has had a sensitive stomach since she was a puppy and she is 12 now. Anything with chicken would make her vomit. I switched her to lamb & rice and that's all she's gotten since. I feed Blue Buffalo. | |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 550
  
| A local feed store has started selling Victor brand. I looked at the ingredient list, and it seemed like a decent food. My dog likes it, and it's cheaper than anything I've found of similar quality. | |
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 Experienced Mouse Trapper
Posts: 3106
   Location: North Dakota | I like the members mark exceed (from sams club) either lamb or chicken and rice-my dog vomits on almost everything else! | |
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 Accident Prone
Posts: 22277
          Location: 100 miles from Nowhere, AR | Out of the things I've tried that are available locally, my dogs have done best on Taste of the Wild. I just tried Diamond's grain free, and had to double what I was feeding because my German shepherd lost weight.
I used to feed what is now Member's Mark Exceed, and had great luck with it. It started as a locally made, locally sourced feed, manufactured by Arkat. A family dispute caused the factory to be sold with the business, brands and recipes to Dad's pet food. First, they quit making horse and fish feed, then they quit sourcing the previous quality ingredients, then stopped distributing locally when they got the Wal mart/Sam's contract, then shut the factory down that has always made that food. That was a huge blow to the local economy. Sorry for the tangent, it just left a really bad taste in my mouth. So to speak. | |
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