">
Showing posts with label dog food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dog food. Show all posts

Monday, March 1, 2010

To discuss Dog Food Nation Part II: Montezuma's Carpet Revenge

I was just about to retire* for the night (* Retire sounds so much cooler than "going to bed) late last week, with Capricorn already fast asleep and both Leo and Bailey snuggled in on the bed.

I had already walked the dogs, washed my face, brushed my teeth and changed into my Muppet pajamasnightwear, ready for some sleep.

I turned off the light. I let Bailey get his customary position behind the crook of my knees. I closed my eyes.

*Pfffflttaat*

What the ...

* Pffffflluuuttttooooggghhhh*

Like the protagonist in 'Twas the Night Before Christmas, I threw open the covers and the sash and all that jazz, turned on the light and tried to figure out what was going on. Capricorn was asleep. Bailey was curled up like a dried leaf. That leaves...

Col. Mustard in the drawing room with the candlestick!

Errrr... Leo!

Before I could get visual confirmation, I got olfactory confirmation. Something stank up in this mother. Like if Ursula from Little Mermaid beached herself and rotted.

I peered under the bed. Leo scampered out, leaving behind such stunningly obvious evidence you wouldn't need CSI: Las Vegas to take an hour to solve this crime (CSI: Montana, maybe). Quickly, I grabbed Leo and raced him outside, where, in the night's blustery, frigid weather, he had a contest with Mother Nature on who could break the most wind.

Then, back inside, I had to scrub the carpet, while Capricorn in her half-awake daze tried to figure out what was going on.

For the rest of the weekend, we've been laughing like 5th graders every time we make a whoopee cushion sound and say Leo's belly must be hurting again.

Leo's Montezuma's Carpet Revenge was a signal for change (and for more Febreze).

Two weeks ago, I wrote about how LoveMaegan helped inspire us to give our dogs better food. We had fed them Pedigree, which we now realize has all types of mediocre ingredients. We switched to Evo, which has ingredients that practically would make a Thanksgiving feast: Turkey, Chicken, Blueberries, Tomatoes, Apples, and more.

But it also turns out that some dogs, namely ours, can't handle the richness of it. Even though we mixed their food with the old stuff, we basically had a couple weeks worth of Taco Bell's bathroom. Not that it's Evo's fault- dog food is very finicky that way.

So on Saturday, I returned the giant bag of Evo to the pet store, thankful that I had kept the receipt, and that Evo's company has a satisfaction guarantee. In its place, I got a product that had been number 2 on my list, and in the top 10 of many reputable dog food reviews: Solid Gold.

It's a little less protein rich, which should help. And its first ingredient (dog foods should always have a meat for the first ingredient) is bison, which will come in handy if we ever traverse the Oregon Trail and run out of bullets.

We'll see how this goes. I'd prefer it if I didn't hear any more canine flatulence. And I'm also taking Bailey to the vet Tuesday for dental work, because on a scale of 1 to Crystal Bowersox,* he's the American Idol frontrunner. (* P.S. Love her singing. So there's that.).

He has to go under anesthesia and might even have to get teeth pulled, which could render all this new dry dog food irrelevant if I have to spoon feed him like an elderly man.

That sums up my life- spoon feeding my elderly man/chiweenie.

If you're interested in how your dog's food holds up, check out dogfoodanalysis.com. If you don't have a dog, might I interest you in a flatulent, rectally explosive chihuahua?

Monday, February 15, 2010

To discuss Dog Food Nation

Rather than inundate you with another sappy/romantic/depressing/sexygoodtime Valentine's Day post, I'll let the other, more capable bloggers take care of that.

Instead, let's take a look at a far more important topic: Motherf****** dog nutrition.

Why was I worried about this on a lover's weekend? Let me recap (apologies for the length). Quick note: None of the following is meant to give anyone a guilt trip about what you feed your dog. Feed them whatever you want. Except kittens. That would be double-sad.

I took Bailey (my chiweenie, for new readers), to the vet last week for his booster shots, which, if you think about it, are kind of a sham because you have no idea what they are injecting. They could be injecting H1N1 for all I know and charging me $90. At that point, the vet pointed out Bailey's teeth look how Keith Richards feels. Rotting. Discolored. Diseased.* (* Clarification: Bailey's disease is probably gingivitis; Richards is probably chlamydia).

As this is one of the rare times in a vet visit in which the owner can physically see that yes, there's a problem and yes, it makes sense to fix it, I've made a follow-up appointment for Bailey to get dental work. Do they do doggie veneers? I can make him a Bailey Seacrest.

That all coincided with Capricorn coming across a blog post on one of her favorite fashion bloggers, LoveMaegan, whose pug had 13 (!) teeth pulled recently (feel better Bebop). She also saw a related, older post Maegan had about the lack of nutrition in most commercial dog food (it's akin to reading Fast Food Nation, basically, without the Super Size Me movie spinoff)

That led to Capricorn and I thinking about what we feed Bailey and Leo (also a chihuahua, unless you ask Capricorn, who believes Leo is a dog version of Jesus Christ, as he is sinless).

Like most people, we beat our dogs senseless want the best for our dogs, but have a limited budget. So, for many months we have fed the dogs Pedigree dry food. According to the package, Pedigree Adult Complete Nutrition offers essential vitamins, is flavorful, offers all types of quality ingredients, gives dogs the ability to do it all night long, and prevents forest fires. And Pedigree also got Comet from Full House as a spokesdog, judging by the package. For about $27 for a 40-pound bag, it's a deal, too. I'd practically eat it for that price (it's a recession, after all).

Have you ever had someone who owns a dog talk to you about what you're feeding your dog in that condescending manner? "Oh... so you're feeding them (fill in the blank basic store brand)? I feed MY dog only the best- fresh chicken, organic vegetables, recently beheaded cows..."

Usually I see this coming ahead of time, and I just say I can't remember what brand it is, but that I'm about to get a better brand soon because otherwise I must hate my dog. Pedigree Adult Complete Nutrition"Ha ha, right-o, jolly good!" they reply (in these scenarios, the people sound British in my head). But I never did switch, because I figured I wasn't feeding the dogs Ol' Roy like I'm Cousin Eddie from Christmas Vacation. How bad could it be? Bailey hadn't yet appeared emaciated and in need of sponsorship for just 10 cents a day, and Leo never filed any complaints in the complaint box located next to the food dish.

For the first time, I decided to take a look at the ingredients on the Pedigree bag. It was kind of like seeing how they make hot dogs- once you know, you're not sure you could feed one to somebody again. Here are some of the top ingredients in Pedigree:

Ground Whole Corn, Meat And Bone Meal, Ground Whole Wheat, Corn Gluten Meal, Animal Fat (preserved With BHA and Citric Acid), Wheat Mill Run, Chicken By-product Meal.

So as not to gross everyone out, I won't detail here what "meat and bone meal" is, but let's just say it's not a euphemism for oral sex. And, from what I learned during extensive research (when I research something, I research the shit out of it), dogs can't process corn, so having corn as some of the primary ingredients is as silly as a subprime mortgage. Chicken by-product may be good enough for my chicken nuggets (I kid), but common sense is that doesn't sound too great, either. Hmm. (Learn all about this stuff at dogfoodchat.com and dogfoodanalysis.com, where pretty much every brand you could get at Wal-mart receives the worst score possible. It was so eye opening my eyelids are a scarf now).

That's when Capricorn and I decided we're going to be "those" dog owners. The kind that feed their dogs the good stuff, except we aren't going to be pretentious about it. We just want our dogs to live until they are 113 (in human years, or 729 in dog years).

Armed with a list and a Google-plex amount of knowledge, I went to a small pet store chain to check out a few specific brands. You can't find the really good stuff at big chains like PetSmart, PetCo or the like, evidently, because they are the devil, according to the manufacturers.

It so happened a representative from one of the dog food brands was there giving samples and chatted me up/tried to coerce me. After a good talk about the benefits of found-in-nature food sources and having meat be the primary source of protein in a dog's diet, she told me how one of her dogs eats her other dog's feces. I'm not sure if that's what she meant by found-in-nature food.

So I left that store, having only bought some all-natural, berry-tasting doggie snacks that tastedsmelled edible. I went to a locally-owned pet shop, and found a 28-pound bag of the top stuff on my list, Innova Evo.

Beside being a highly-rated brand, here are some of the top ingredients:

Turkey, chicken, turkey meal, chicken meal, potatoes, herring meal, chicken fat, natural flavors, egg, apples, tomatoes

That's basically better than I eat. WTH. It's got so much protein The Situation might eat it before he does his Gym-Tanning-Laundry.

Downside: It costs about twice as much as Pedigree. But then I remembered that the serving size is about half as much, since there's much less filler, so the cost will eventually even out. And, as another bonus, it's name is Evo, which sounds awesome and makes me think of the name of some Fast & Furious character-to-come.

Now we're down to the final part: Taste-test. You can't just switch your dog from non-organic to organic food in one move. That would be like you eating nothing but pizza and McDonalds, and then becoming a vegan overnight. So we mixed in some of the Pedigree with the Evo, and added a little rice on top.

The result:
Bailey and Leo ate around all the Pedigree like peas on a child's plate. Who knows if all of this will pay off in dogs that are healthier and happier, but I have to think this will work out. That is, unless Bailey and Leo reallllllyyy prefer the old diet of detached chicken heads and feet.

Am I crazy for trying all this out? Have you ever thought about your pet's diet? Is there a reason Bailey and Leo eat better than I do now?
Related Posts Widget for Blogs by LinkWithin