Hi everyone,
In the next couple of weeks I'm taking in a 3 year old German Shepherd that hasn't had a good life, most of her life she's been underfed and confined to a chain. I noticed that her body hasn't grown a lot (she still looks like a puppy still, big paws and big head but small body)
I was wondering if putting her on an all raw diet make her grow? I would also like some information and advise on what raw meats she should eat to get her at her best. How much it costs roughly a week.
Thank you very much, I look forward to reading everyone's advise!
A lot of us on here would advocate a raw diet, but, it needs to be a "BALANCED" diet and since you are new to this, I'd suggest a commercially prepared raw diet. Some people think you can just give the dog some chicken wings and that's it......but it is not. The diet needs muscle meat, organs and bones.
Rotating raw or kibble proteins will give the dog the best nutrition!
I listed a feed calculator and some prices to give you an idea of how much it will cost. It may be a litter cheaper if you find a location close to you.
I'm curious about this comment/advice. What method would you suggest to wean the dog slowly off the kibble to a raw diet? From what I have read over the past, raw and kibble digest at different rates and it might not be optimal to mix the two for any one meal...rather feed a kibble meal and then a raw meal at different feeding times. I'm probably missing the obvious in your suggestions, so I apologize in advance if that is the situation.
The dog looks alright -- lean , coat looks to be not bad . Looks to have good strong bones and ligaments.
Size looks normal .
The dog will not get bigger as far as how tall it is .
Feeding excessive will only put on weight , fat , and that is not good.
Feeding well , will gain some muscle, tone, immune health , add to longevity , prevent inflammatory problems.
If you do raw , which I support, it does have to be done correctly. Not difficult .
the gut has a microbiome environment which establishes itself to process the foods that it is familiar with -- so when changing food or switching to raw the digestive system has to be prepared or groomed .
this takes a bit of time.
The more diverse the dog's diet has been the better prepared it is to be competent in handling all foods.
Mine all have "cast iron" stomachs because their variety is so great , and that includes kitchen stuff like hardened pasta that I put out for compost .
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