
WHAT CAN WE DO TO GET OUR DOGS TO EAT?
Dear Jubilee,
We have discovered that our dogs really love V-8, and
we can get them to eat their kibble by covering it with V8. But a friend
said we should not do this. What can we do to get our dogs to eat?
Confused in Wichita
Dear Wichita,
Many canned human foods
are way too high in sodium. You need to be careful about adding V-8 or any
canned human food as a diet additive. As it is sold, V-8 nearly COMPLETES
the daily requirement of an 130-pound adult for sodium.
If your dogs are fussy eaters,
try adding:
- A raw egg, shell and all.
Just break it open, scrunch it up and mix it with the food.
- Ground or pulverized (food
processor) raw veggies or lightly cooked raw veggies or even bottled baby food
(low sodium). If you choose veggies, leafy greens are better than carrots and
sweet potatoes, which are high glycemic (high in sugars).
- Home-made broths from soups
and stews can jazz up a meal for the uninterested.
- The raw juices that dripped
from the meat you made for dinner are also good for them. Just be sure that
there is very little fat in the juices: either skim it off or put it into the
freezer for awhile so that the fat congeals on top and then you can just lift
it off.
- Yoghurt and cottage cheese
are always good, recommend the low fat varieties.
- If you are really ambitious,
grind up some beef heart and add some raw to their meal. Or make a mince of
any ground meat by cooking it in a frying pan until every grain of meat is
individually cooked (doesn't take long).
- Some like canned pumpkin,
the kind you make pumpkin pie with but not the kind that is already pre-mixed
for a pie.
- Berries: I have yet to meet
the dog that does not like fresh berries. And they really like the berries
that are a little over-ripe but not mildewed.
- You can also pulverize fruit
(like apples or pears or peaches, etc.) in a blender
- Avocado (especially if
over-ripe): dogs like the fruit of the avocado, but DO NOT feed them the skin
or the seed.
- Canned Jack Mackerel and
canned sardines, liquid and all, provide EFAs that dogs need, and dogs like
the smelly fish (you might not, but boy, will they think dinner is special)!
Canned salmon is also good: you can get the chub salmon much cheaper than the
red or pink, and it provides both EFAs and calcium.
- Healthy leftovers: these can
be added to your dog's meal. Just use common sense and steer away from things
with a lot of salt or sugars or cooked fat. But leftover veggies, fruits, and
meats can all be diced/chopped up or pulverized in a food processor and used
to entice the picky eaters.
- All of these things can be
mushed up or are already spreadable so that they cling to every piece of
kibble.
WARNING ABOUT COOKED FAT:
don't treat your dogs to the cooked fat from steaks or other meats -- these are
apt to lead to pancreatitis and other potentially life-threatening internal
problems. Raw fat is good for them, but like many good things, not in high
quantities.
Jubilee