bones splinter, cutting the throat, esophagus, stomach.. and expensive vet bill if the dog even survives at all. I'm talking from experience.. never give your dogs bones, even ones in a pressure cooker, just the raw meat off of it.
bones splinter, cutting the throat, esophagus, stomach.. and expensive vet bill if the dog even survives at all. I'm talking from experience.. never give your dogs bones, just the raw meat off of it.
@redneon1956 Think for a bit. Would the ancestors of of the dog, or any dog-like creature (HECK, ANY CARNIVORE) survive if bones were that dangerous. Of course, bones WILL splinter if you cook them, Don't cook! Feed raw only
@BillHicks420 : I agree with you. Animals in the wild don't eat cooked foods. They eat raw foods. It's only natural for dogs and cats to eat raw meat. They also drink water when they get thirsty.
Dogs and cats have been domesticated for thousands of years. They have eaten file residue of man's diet, which, since the inception of fire, has been cooked. In the past 15 years, a number of purported natural diets for dogs and cats have grown in popularity. Although the Biologically Appropriate Raw Food (BARF) diet is cited most often, many variations exist. Basically, the diet is composed of raw meat, bones, vegetables and, sometimes, grains.
@MsLabMom Although feral dogs have been known to eat grain (and human waste), it is not the most biologically appropriate food for them, nor is it absorbed efficiently by their system. Their biology is completely similar to the North american timber wolf, which are their original ancestors. This wolf eat meats only. The dog NEEDS meat only, but can survive on vegetables too... (By meat i obviously mean bones too). Basically, prey model is more appropriate than BARF
I feed my GSD, Trudy, raw meat. Raw food is the most biologically appropriate diet for dogs. She gets 80% meat, 10% bone, 5% liver, and 5% other organs. 50% of her diet is red meat, the other 50% consists of white meat and fish. Dogs do not need any plant matter in their diet and do better without it. Feedin a prey model raw diet to your dog is the best thing you can do for them.
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
I don't feed my dogs any kind of bones, due to the chokeing hazzard. Dogs tend to "wolf" food down. That, and a sharp section could tear open a dogs stomach and digestive tract.
I want you to make a $5,000 wager against me that it is impossible for bone splinters to puncture and/or get stuck even temporarily in any part of a dog's digestive track, from the throat to the rear end.
Then I want you to make another $5,000 wager against me that it is impossible for a dog to choke on a bone it thought it could swallow whole.
If there have never been any cases, worldwide, of the incidents above, you win the amounts suggested. What do you say? Feel lucky?
I feed them the finest boneless endangered tiger meat and children's tears.
And one of my best friend's yellow lab died from a bone splinter caught in their lower intestine, from being given a bone just like the one in that video. Pretty horrible way to go if you ask me (oh wait, it's impossible). That's why a lot of people pressure cook bones to soften them up before giving them to pets.
Lurn too reed. The dog did not die from eating a pressure cooked bone, it died from being given a bone "just like the one in that video". I mean, really... read an entire comment first, then let it process, then respond.
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
I'm not being a bum, but when I was around 7, I had a pet puppy, my mum fed him some raw food and then the next few days it was the same raw food diet, and then that puppy started biting me (severe bites), and he had to be put down :(
you put a puppy down because he was teething, which ALL puppies do???? I have so much hate towards those who euthanize their dogs for pathetic reasons like yours.
I feed my dog raw food too, ever since I read the book " Raw Meaty Bones" by Tom Lonsdale, it shines the light on what we MUST feed our pets and uncovers the conspiracies of the pet food industry.
Dogs need fish... fish is an excellent supply of Omega 3's and 6's.. not to mention it's a very balanced food. I feed sardines twice a week. My dog gobbles them up.. as a matter of fact, it's the only food he actually gets excited for.
@BittenToast, you're a goddamn idiot. Puppies teethe and you never should have had a dog if you didn't know this and couldn't provide training..
jeffgard 5 months ago
@redneon1956 of course you don't give dogs cooked bones... But you're wrong about raw bones.
jeffgard 5 months ago
powerful puppy! really pretty. my vet says bones are great, as long as we don't cook them. isn't the cartilage important for the dog to eat?
MrAnthony78666 7 months ago
bones splinter, cutting the throat, esophagus, stomach.. and expensive vet bill if the dog even survives at all. I'm talking from experience.. never give your dogs bones, even ones in a pressure cooker, just the raw meat off of it.
redneon1956 7 months ago
bones splinter, cutting the throat, esophagus, stomach.. and expensive vet bill if the dog even survives at all. I'm talking from experience.. never give your dogs bones, just the raw meat off of it.
redneon1956 7 months ago
@redneon1956 Think for a bit. Would the ancestors of of the dog, or any dog-like creature (HECK, ANY CARNIVORE) survive if bones were that dangerous. Of course, bones WILL splinter if you cook them, Don't cook! Feed raw only
BillHicks420 4 months ago
@BillHicks420 : I agree with you. Animals in the wild don't eat cooked foods. They eat raw foods. It's only natural for dogs and cats to eat raw meat. They also drink water when they get thirsty.
LaoSoftware 4 months ago
Dogs and cats have been domesticated for thousands of years. They have eaten file residue of man's diet, which, since the inception of fire, has been cooked. In the past 15 years, a number of purported natural diets for dogs and cats have grown in popularity. Although the Biologically Appropriate Raw Food (BARF) diet is cited most often, many variations exist. Basically, the diet is composed of raw meat, bones, vegetables and, sometimes, grains.
MsLabMom 1 year ago
@MsLabMom Although feral dogs have been known to eat grain (and human waste), it is not the most biologically appropriate food for them, nor is it absorbed efficiently by their system. Their biology is completely similar to the North american timber wolf, which are their original ancestors. This wolf eat meats only. The dog NEEDS meat only, but can survive on vegetables too... (By meat i obviously mean bones too). Basically, prey model is more appropriate than BARF
BillHicks420 4 months ago
Is that a bear or a dog? friggin' huge
ayesha080 1 year ago
I feed my GSD, Trudy, raw meat. Raw food is the most biologically appropriate diet for dogs. She gets 80% meat, 10% bone, 5% liver, and 5% other organs. 50% of her diet is red meat, the other 50% consists of white meat and fish. Dogs do not need any plant matter in their diet and do better without it. Feedin a prey model raw diet to your dog is the best thing you can do for them.
Kristin3030 1 year ago 3
This comment has received too many negative votes show
I don't feed my dogs any kind of bones, due to the chokeing hazzard. Dogs tend to "wolf" food down. That, and a sharp section could tear open a dogs stomach and digestive tract.
Noooo thank you. Bone-meal is fine though.
Drpepper687 2 years ago
Comment removed
Slingdash 1 year ago
@Slingdash
I want you to make a $5,000 wager against me that it is impossible for bone splinters to puncture and/or get stuck even temporarily in any part of a dog's digestive track, from the throat to the rear end.
Then I want you to make another $5,000 wager against me that it is impossible for a dog to choke on a bone it thought it could swallow whole.
If there have never been any cases, worldwide, of the incidents above, you win the amounts suggested. What do you say? Feel lucky?
Drpepper687 1 year ago
Comment removed
Slingdash 1 year ago
@Slingdash
I feed them the finest boneless endangered tiger meat and children's tears.
And one of my best friend's yellow lab died from a bone splinter caught in their lower intestine, from being given a bone just like the one in that video. Pretty horrible way to go if you ask me (oh wait, it's impossible). That's why a lot of people pressure cook bones to soften them up before giving them to pets.
Drpepper687 1 year ago
Comment removed
Slingdash 1 year ago
@Slingdash
Lurn too reed. The dog did not die from eating a pressure cooked bone, it died from being given a bone "just like the one in that video". I mean, really... read an entire comment first, then let it process, then respond.
Pressure cooking softens bones by the way.
Drpepper687 1 year ago
lol i bet that dog wished he had hands
AngryLlamaz 2 years ago
when feeding them raw fish should you take the bones out first because they´re very tiny
deljugo 3 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
I'm not being a bum, but when I was around 7, I had a pet puppy, my mum fed him some raw food and then the next few days it was the same raw food diet, and then that puppy started biting me (severe bites), and he had to be put down :(
BittenToast 3 years ago
what kind of dog you have?
jerickvmx 3 years ago
you put a puppy down because he was teething, which ALL puppies do???? I have so much hate towards those who euthanize their dogs for pathetic reasons like yours.
dogsarebetter 2 years ago 14
I feed my dog raw food too, ever since I read the book " Raw Meaty Bones" by Tom Lonsdale, it shines the light on what we MUST feed our pets and uncovers the conspiracies of the pet food industry.
sashakrey 3 years ago
Me too! Dr. Lonsdale is my favorite author on the matter.
savannahcatz 3 years ago
My dogs also eat raw fish
lovethijs 3 years ago 3
do you think a dog would eat fish?
MachitoMaldito 4 years ago
Yes. Our dog eats whole, raw, fish. :)
wyvern10 4 years ago
my dog won't go near it... its probably really good for him too...
MachitoMaldito 3 years ago
Wolves in Alaska have been filmed fishing for Salmon right next to the bears!
savannahcatz 3 years ago 5
Dogs need fish... fish is an excellent supply of Omega 3's and 6's.. not to mention it's a very balanced food. I feed sardines twice a week. My dog gobbles them up.. as a matter of fact, it's the only food he actually gets excited for.
irritableromance 3 years ago
Careful with that bone. If it's a load baring bone, the teeth can break on it.
Better use a knuckle bone. The butcher has those.
a1mint 4 years ago
thats a raw chicken leg. Beef knuckles are what you've got to watch out for.
dogsarebetter 3 years ago
heh what's the recipes for it?
aburny 4 years ago