German Shepherds Forum banner

Orijen -

4K views 22 replies 13 participants last post by  Mocha 
#1 ·
Hey guys, I originally wanted to go Raw with my dogs, but I don't feel that I'm educated on the matter to really start it quite yet (in other words I want a better understanding on what/when/and how to feed things raw).

SO instead I think I want to switch to Orijen. From what I've read/understand is that Orijen is relatively as good as you can get if not going raw.

I still have two 30lb bags of Blue buffalo, and on the last bag will start the transition.

Just looking on feed back on the different 'flavors' like the Fish and Red, and how others' dogs did on it?

I tried my first GSD puppy on it at eight weeks and she didn't seem to ever adjust to it so I stopped, but I'm hoping it will be more successful with my male, and her now that she is older with a stronger stomach.
 
#2 ·
IT all depends on the dog. A lot do well and others never adjust. Try it and if you adjust, great. If not I have some other suggestions to consider or you could just go to raw.
 
#3 ·
My pup is 15 weeks old today and I just switched him off of Orijen for financial reasons.

I absolutely loved how he looked and pooped on it, though, and he loved it, too. I had him on the large breed puppy food.

Then my 4 year old ate about 10 pounds of it and I didn't have it budgetted to buy another bag right away. -_-
 
#4 ·
I think quite a few of the problems people have with Orijen comes from over-feeding. There are certainly dogs that just don't do well on it, for whatever reason, but I believe that in many cases it is a simple matter of feeding too much.

Orijen is a high calorie, nutrient dense food, so if you overfeed by even what may seem a small amount it can result in loose stools. The feeding amounts given on the bag are actually a bit high for many dogs, especially if you look at the amounts for a highly active dog. My 2 year old girl, who is about 65-70 lbs., quite high energy and very active only eats about 2 cups a day of any of the formulas. I have been feeding the Adult formula recently simply because it's the least expensive, but she has also done great on the Six Fish and Regional Red. I add various toppers to her meals, but even if I gave her just the kibble I would give her the same amount.

She has been on one formula of Orijen or another (except for the puppy formulas, we never used that one) since she was about 5 months of age and has always done quite well. Even as a puppy, the most I ever had to feed in a day was about 2 3/4 cups.
 
#6 ·
My pup had loose stools on it, but she was not overweight.

It's worth a try though, it's a very high quality kibble, but don't be too scared of raw. You can also buy prepared raw diets to help get you started with raw and then change it out to whole raw as you feel more confident.

I would actually recommend starting raw this way anyway, since it lets your dog's tummy adjust to the raw without having to worry about digesting bones for a few weeks. I found when I first changed to raw, she wasn't digesting bones as well, but now it's no problem.
 
#11 ·
Niko did awesome on orijen regional red, he only ate 1 cup a day plus 1/4 cup honest kitchen, I'm giving Gunner orijen six fish now with THK too and he's doing amazing on it, just be sure not to over feed so no one gets the runs.
 
#12 ·
Both of mine are on Orijen - Adult for Halo and 6 Fish for Keefer. He's been on a variety of different foods over his lifetime (he turned 8 in August), but Halo has been mostly on Orijen. She was on LBP until a little less than a year old, and then I switched her to the Adult. I tried Earthborn Holistics for several bags, and her coat started to feel dry, so she went back on Orijen.

I'd love to find something less expensive, but mine seem do best on Orijen - good stools, soft coats, no itching, so I always end up back again. I buy it at Chewy.com, which is much cheaper than I can get it locally, and there's no shipping cost.
 
#14 ·
Six Fish, Regional Red, and the Adult Dog formulas are all All Life Stages foods. Any of them would be perfectly fine to feed to a puppy of any age... Well, once they are old enough to be on kibble food anyway.

The next pup I bring home will be transitioned right away from what the breeder fed to a rotation of Orijen ALS formulas (Six Fish, Regional Red and Adult Dog).
 
#19 ·
I tried Orijen red and Stosh had loose stools, never seemed to like it much- he's never been a big eater. I tired a taste test of Nature's Variety, Orijen and Taste of the Wild and he picked TOTW. He's still on it, loves it and is doing really well. All depends on the dog. As much as I wanted him to do well on Orijen it just wasn't for him
 
#22 ·
I was going to do the Wilderness but I read on another forum that it isn't good for puppies ... I haven't verified this on my own however.

I believe their argument was the protein content was too high?
No, it wouldn't be the protein. Many of the meat based, high protein foods are unacceptably high in calcium. Too much calcium can promote rapid growth which can lead to poor structural development, ie rapidly growing bones that are relatively weak rather than strong. Slower growth is generally healthier. I believe most of the Orijen products are safe for large & giant breed pups which is an important consideration when choosing kibble for a pup, especially the high protein kibbles.
 
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top