dogs

All About Dogs Section


 

All About Dogs Navigation


|

Dogs Guide Home Page
Tell A Friend about us
Chihuahua Dogs |
Mlm Big Dogs |
Dogs For Sale Joplin Missouri |
Show Dogs |
Pictures Of Dogs |
Dogs Pictures |
Potty Training Dogs |
Dogs In Heat |
Hot Dogs |
Revolution And Dogs |
Health Dogs |
Bad Dogs |
Smartest Dogs |
Puppy Dogs |
Virtual Dogs And Rock Stars |

List of dogs Articles

All About Dogs Best seller

Dog Obedience Trainig
Buy it Now!



Best All About Dogs products

Dog Food Secrets
Buy it Now!

 

Healthy Food For Dogs: Homemade Recipes
Buy it Now!

 

Dove Cresswells Dog Training Online
Buy it Now!

 

How I Trained My Dog In One Evening
Buy it Now!

 

Dog Training Mastery - An Owner's Manual
Buy it Now!

 

D.i.y. Dog Training At Home
Buy it Now!

 

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on dogs
Email:
First Name:



Main All About Dogs sponsors


 

Latest All About Dogs link added

Ethiccash.com, Provider of great Adsense sitesINSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on All About Dogs!



101 Dog Tricks: Step by Step Activities to Engage, Challenge, and Bond with Your Dog
-By: Kyra Sundance, Chalcy
-Price: $12.02 (New)
$11.89 (Used)

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
-By: Mark Haddon
-Price: $4.25 (New)
$0.69 (Used)

A Dog Named Christmas
-By: Greg Kincaid
-Price: $8.74 (New)
$8.15 (Used)

Walter el perro pedorrero: Walter the Farting Dog, Spanish-Language Edition
-By: William Kotzwinkle, Glenn Murray
-Price: $5.00 (New)
$1.51 (Used)

Old Dogs: Are the Best Dogs
-By: Gene Weingarten
-Price: $11.94 (New)
$12.79 (Used)

You Are a Dog: Life Through the Eyes of Man's Best Friend
-By: Terry Bain
-Price: $4.95 (New)
$5.93 (Used)

Cesar's Way: The Natural, Everyday Guide to Understanding and Correcting Common Dog Problems
-By: Cesar Millan, Melissa Jo Peltier
-Price: $7.48 (New)
$7.12 (Used)

 

Welcome to dogs

 

All About Dogs Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on All About Dogs. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Dog Supplements May Not Be Necessary After All

from:

If you use a good quality meat-meal based food you usually do not have to supplement your dog's ration. In fact, it is very easy to throw the formulation of some of the specialty foods out
of kilter if you play with supplements. Unfortunately, adding a little bit of this and a little bit of that is a cultural mentality handed down from the time when pet foods weren't complete
and needed supplementation. Breeders often advocate supplements and many send their clients home with long lists of additives - vitamins, minerals, dairy products, oils and other
lotions and potions. Many breeders will turn an absolutely deaf ear to entreaties from veterinarians or canine nutritionists who suggest a good basic ration and a minimum of supplementation.

Supplement supporters aren't usually thinking along behavioral lines and, since they themselves rarely have difficulty house-training their dogs, don't realize that not everyone is so knowledgeable and over-supplementation can easily produce loose stools and make good control difficult for the dog. Coat conditioners, for instance, can easily be withheld from the diet until the puppy is house-trained. The puppy doesn't need them if he or she is eating a good quality food, and (in most breeds) the puppy coat has to grow out naturally anyway. Oils and people foods, especially those high in fat (like steak trimmings) easily "oil up" the intestines and in many cases cause stools to "slide out" quite unexpectedly.

If your breeder or pet store operator gives you a list of supplements and binds you under pain of mortal sin to use them, start asking some questions. Ask whether these supplements are necessary if you use a high-quality specialty food. Ask how these supplements will affect your house-training progress. Ask if it is absolutely necessary to add the supplements right away or if this can wait until house-training is accomplished. For instance, although the jury is definitely out on the relationship between mega doses of vitamin C and hip dysplasia (a congenital ailment that plagues many larger breeds), many breeders are routinely recommending giving the vitamin. Whether or not the vitamin helps ward off hip dysplasia, we do know that it can have a diarrheic effect on many dogs, complicating the house-training process.

Dairy products are also dangerous additives and produce runny stools in some dogs. People food should be avoided as a matter of good behavioral policy, lest the dog turn to begging at the table, but it should be especially taboo during house-training. Dog treats that are full of preservatives or dyes (often to keep a "meat center" bright red) can also throw many dogs' innards for a loop and complicate cleanliness. Good general advice is to stay away from supplements during the house-training process and use only minimal or no additives later on, but do use a quality daily ration.


Other All About Dogs related Articles

Dietary Management For Your Dog's Chronic Liver Disease
Do Dogs Have Emotions
Dog Supplements May Not Be Necessary After All
Dogs In Animal Shelters
Death Of Your Dog Know What To Expect

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE

This space can be enabled / disabled from your admin panel!

 

All About Dogs News

No relevant info was found on this topic.