Budget Meals For Dogs
Recipes For Budget Meals For Your Dog WATER Always have plenty of fresh water available.
MEAT (Beef, chicken, kangaroo, mutton, rabbit and some offal) raw or blanched - diced or minced.
Always thoroughly cook suspect meat (worms), or keep frozen for at least 72hrs.
RICE / PASTA Dog rice in bulk is available from stock feeders.
VEGETABLES Allow one / or more extra person(s) at your table and add to pets meal.
VITAMINS and MINERALS Meat alone has no vitamins / minerals.
LIVE ENZYMES Available from veterinary surgeons, Pet shops and stock feeders.
RAW EGGS Improves the coat, A good source of protein, whole or just the yolk.
DOG BISCUITS Sprinkled over each meal adds texture and concentrates, vitamins and minerals (more for larger breeds).
RAW BONES Onceor twice a week! As a meal replacement (no other food is necessary).
PROCEDURE: Combine with the MEAT of your choice: Equal amount of RICE.
Add DOUBLE the amount of vegetables.
Mix in 1-2 whole EGGS or yolk only.
Mix in LIVE ENZYMES to requirement.
Add VITAMINS if required! STIR WELL, and Sprinkle a small handful of DOG BISCUITS on top.
If you start with too much meat you will end up with a meal big enough to feed the whole neighborhood's dogs! The meat may be cooked or blanched or raw.
If meat is cooked you need twice as much compared to if it is RAW.
CONTENTS NEEDED IN YOUR DOG'S MEALS PROTEIN (meat) CARBOHYDRATES (dog rice) - Optional.
MINERALS (Calcium, Potassium, Iron, Magnesium) raw bones FATS (oils, bones, meat) FIBRE (vegetables) VITAMINS (vegetables) These are all contained in commercial puppy foods at the correct levels it requires.
Meat alone does not contain enough for any dog let alone a growing puppy.
If you wish to prepare the food yourself (and you have the time) beware, because even if you include all the necessary ingredients it may not be palatable to the pup.
(Unlike commercial foods.
) We recommend that most dogs get the biggest part of their daily meal in the morning and another smaller meal at night.
That way they have energy throughout the most active time of day and have a chance to burn off any excess energy without gaining weight.
The second smaller meal is to satisfy hunger and replace lost calories e.
g.
: highly active dogs, Sporting and working dogs.
In the case of early starts for working dogs this may need to be reversed so as to avoid cramping muscles and fatigue.
A complete analysis of your dogs diet can be found at http://here-is-your.
info/dog-training
MEAT (Beef, chicken, kangaroo, mutton, rabbit and some offal) raw or blanched - diced or minced.
Always thoroughly cook suspect meat (worms), or keep frozen for at least 72hrs.
RICE / PASTA Dog rice in bulk is available from stock feeders.
VEGETABLES Allow one / or more extra person(s) at your table and add to pets meal.
VITAMINS and MINERALS Meat alone has no vitamins / minerals.
LIVE ENZYMES Available from veterinary surgeons, Pet shops and stock feeders.
RAW EGGS Improves the coat, A good source of protein, whole or just the yolk.
DOG BISCUITS Sprinkled over each meal adds texture and concentrates, vitamins and minerals (more for larger breeds).
RAW BONES Onceor twice a week! As a meal replacement (no other food is necessary).
PROCEDURE: Combine with the MEAT of your choice: Equal amount of RICE.
Add DOUBLE the amount of vegetables.
Mix in 1-2 whole EGGS or yolk only.
Mix in LIVE ENZYMES to requirement.
Add VITAMINS if required! STIR WELL, and Sprinkle a small handful of DOG BISCUITS on top.
If you start with too much meat you will end up with a meal big enough to feed the whole neighborhood's dogs! The meat may be cooked or blanched or raw.
If meat is cooked you need twice as much compared to if it is RAW.
CONTENTS NEEDED IN YOUR DOG'S MEALS PROTEIN (meat) CARBOHYDRATES (dog rice) - Optional.
MINERALS (Calcium, Potassium, Iron, Magnesium) raw bones FATS (oils, bones, meat) FIBRE (vegetables) VITAMINS (vegetables) These are all contained in commercial puppy foods at the correct levels it requires.
Meat alone does not contain enough for any dog let alone a growing puppy.
If you wish to prepare the food yourself (and you have the time) beware, because even if you include all the necessary ingredients it may not be palatable to the pup.
(Unlike commercial foods.
) We recommend that most dogs get the biggest part of their daily meal in the morning and another smaller meal at night.
That way they have energy throughout the most active time of day and have a chance to burn off any excess energy without gaining weight.
The second smaller meal is to satisfy hunger and replace lost calories e.
g.
: highly active dogs, Sporting and working dogs.
In the case of early starts for working dogs this may need to be reversed so as to avoid cramping muscles and fatigue.
A complete analysis of your dogs diet can be found at http://here-is-your.
info/dog-training
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