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  1. #1
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    making your own dog food

    my 3 dogs have done well on kirkland dog food at 60c a pound.
    i just got an english setter beauty and the breeder recommended iams.
    i looked at the label. the ingredients sucked.

    then i started reading.
    the higher end dog foods have better protein, but cost $2 a pound or more.

    i can get chicken breasts for $1/lb and flanksteak or chuck for $2 /lb. why not make homemade rice or potato with chicken or steak and add vitamins?

    or use a medium grade dog food for the essential nutrients and add more and better meat?

    Hayduke Aug 7,1996 GS-Aug 26 2010

  2. #2
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    Back in the old days (50's) the folks that had my kennel used to boil horse meat for protein and mix in the grain. They said it was good but a pain in the ass to do. The people at FROMM'S foods figured out how to kibble dog chow and there ya go, its in a bag and keeps for weeks. Call a dog food company and try and get a kennel price, it makes a difference.

  3. #3
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    i had not heard of fromms.i looked it up. good ingredients. you dont even want to know the price with shipping. 2.50/lb.and that is for the basic chicken.

    so better to buy chicken breasts for $1/lb and add the cheaper ingredients. with 3/4 rice, that would be 60c/lb or less
    Last edited by haydukelives; 03-26-2010 at 07:36 PM. Reason: addition of detail

    Hayduke Aug 7,1996 GS-Aug 26 2010

  4. #4
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    I have never paid shipping on dog food. I've been buying from Nutrasource for a couple of years min 25 bags a time ,the best they have I think I pay in the neighborhood of about a $1.00 per pound. You may need to recruit a couple of friends with dogs. Performance or Super Performance will do for a setter type dog. Good luck

  5. #5
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    carrots, blueberries, celery, sweet potatoes, brown rice, broccoli, egg, apples, bananas, yogurt, turnips, and raw meat (chicken, venison, lamb, rabbit) will help make your better 1/2 healthy, handsome and happy.

    Of course, it is not necessary to use all of these all the time.
    "My policies are based not on some economics theory, but on things I and millions like me were brought up with: an honest day's work for an honest day's pay; live within your means; put by a nest egg for a rainy day; pay your bills on time; support the police." M. Thatcher (RIP)
    "...
    Judges smoke it, even the lawyer too...So you've got to legalize it..." Peter Tosh

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
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    Quote Originally Posted by schindlerpiste View Post
    carrots, blueberries, celery, sweet potatoes, brown rice, broccoli, egg, apples, bananas, yogurt, turnips, and raw meat (chicken, venison, lamb, rabbit) will help make your better 1/2 healthy, handsome and happy.

    Of course, it is not necessary to use all of these all the time.
    Excellent "recipe"--we do the same. Our dogs are incredibly healthy, act like young pups, roll around in the snow, play constantly...and they're 15 and 16 years old. We've always cooked their food for them--and the love it and us.
    It's cheaper than that granulated dry stuff you buy...and they are much healthier for it.
    People are always amazed when we say how old they are--because they don't act like it.
    Oh and btw, we're both vegetarians...but dogs are carnivores, so we give them what makes THEM healthy

  7. #7
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    My brother in law owns a fru-fru kennel where they make all of the food from scratch. I can probably get my hands on their tried and true recipe. Send me a PM if you're interested.
    "Don't tease me about my hobbies, I don't tease you about being an asshole"

  8. #8
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    I am especially interested in what essential vitamins etc that must be added to the meat and potato base.

    bushman,that is a great price.

    schindler/drjoyous .....do you add anything like vitamins/fish oil/etc or is your recipe sufficiently varied to supply all needs?

    Hayduke Aug 7,1996 GS-Aug 26 2010

  9. #9
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    an old GF had this siberian husky that was WAY finicky about eating and we made dog food mostly to entice the dog into eating ... table scraps , oatmeal ,rice ,ground beef or whatever

    we cooked it up in a big pot on the stove and then froze it in muffin pans to make muffin sized pucks of dog food which were then stored in the freezer

    nuking a hockey puck in a cereal bowl with a cup of water made some tantalizing gravy which when mixed with a cup of dog food was irresistible to the princess of siberia

  10. #10
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    a good book
    [ame="http://www.amazon.com/Give-Your-Dog-Bone-Commonsense/dp/0646160281"]Amazon.com: Give Your Dog a Bone: The Practical Commonsense Way to Feed Dogs for a Healthy Life (9780646160283): Ian Billinghurst: Books[/ame]
    We use a good kibble eagle pack and suppliment w/ bannas applesauce and yogurt in am
    night kibble with raw meat and http://www.sojos.com/food.html
    salmon skin mushroom tips brocalli stalks etc.
    "When the child was a child it waited patiently for the first snow and it still does"- Van "The Man" Morrison
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  11. #11
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    I love my dogs. Love them. One is 12 and is still crushing and the other is almost 7 and is my hunting dog who works harder than almost any dog I know...we've been through a lot together and they are literally my family.

    That said, I cannot even begin to imagine taking the time to cook for them! I mean, I'm impressed that folks do this sort of thing for their dogs but both mine have been on Iams since day one (the bird dog gets Blackstone during duck season because he can't keep fat on otherwise) and they're both super healthy. Bella, the 12 y/o, has never been to the vet, save shots and one porcupine. Paco has more energy than even he knows what to do with. I guess I'm just asking, "why?"
    "All God does is watch us and kill us when we get boring. We must never, ever be boring."

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by The Reverend Floater View Post
    I love my dogs. Love them. One is 12 and is still crushing and the other is almost 7 and is my hunting dog who works harder than almost any dog I know...we've been through a lot together and they are literally my family.

    That said, I cannot even begin to imagine taking the time to cook for them! I mean, I'm impressed that folks do this sort of thing for their dogs but both mine have been on Iams since day one (the bird dog gets Blackstone during duck season because he can't keep fat on otherwise) and they're both super healthy. Bella, the 12 y/o, has never been to the vet, save shots and one porcupine. Paco has more energy than even he knows what to do with. I guess I'm just asking, "why?"
    the breeder recommeded iam's, and looking at the ingredients got me started on this.
    http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/dog-fo...tion-dog-food/
    iam's premium is chicken meal and corn. not even as good as kirkland.


    last night i bought 3 whole chickens, 20 #, for $13. and 20# of potatoes.

    it took very little time or effort to make 40# of dog food base fit for humans,(and dinner for me too)not full of waste product and chemicals. at half the price of iams.

    i plan to add vegetables as schindler et al recommended.

    im just not sure about other things to add.....like minerals and vitamins. my guess is that i human vitamin a day would exceed what is in commercial dog food


    also fromms looks good as recommended by bushman,but i cant find his excellent pricing

    Hayduke Aug 7,1996 GS-Aug 26 2010

  13. #13
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    as for vitamins.....vitamin E is your best bet. a glucosamine additive is great as well. as far a cheap good dog food...try "distance dog food". I currently am a musher for the owner of the company and have fed all major brands of high quality food (annameet, caribou creek, redpaw, blackwood, momentum, eagle pack). Distance is rated as a 32/25 and costs half as much as any of the above brands. many of the top iditarod finishers this year used it. after mushing for 10 years now distance offers the best quality for the buck. I have worked for mushers who make their own food. chicken, beef, lamb and fish are used for the bulk meat. rice is used for the bulk filler. add beet pulp, egg powder, glucosamine, bone meal, brewers yeast, and some olive oil. although many have thier own vege based reciepes, I'd only recommend homemade concoctions that mimic the top ingredients in the above mentioned brands. good luck!!

  14. #14
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    Sojo's is the shit!
    "My policies are based not on some economics theory, but on things I and millions like me were brought up with: an honest day's work for an honest day's pay; live within your means; put by a nest egg for a rainy day; pay your bills on time; support the police." M. Thatcher (RIP)
    "...
    Judges smoke it, even the lawyer too...So you've got to legalize it..." Peter Tosh

  15. #15
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    sojos.....8lbs for $78.no thanks

    Hayduke Aug 7,1996 GS-Aug 26 2010

  16. #16
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    Costco dog food is the shit. It compares to any premium brand dog food. Look at the ingredients list. And besides, ground up animal parts that humans don't eat aren't really bad for dogs, corn meal is.
    No longer stuck.

  17. #17
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    Iams is NOT a quality dog food anymore. You are buying a food that is a much lesser grade than Kirklands and paying the premium price because of the name--Think Dewalt cordless tools vs. Ryobi....The dewalt is ok, but for the price they are charging, ryobi kicks there asses
    Our world is full of surrender at the first sign of adversity, do not give up when the challenge meets you, meet the challenge. Through perseverance comes the rewards, the rewards that make life so enjoyable.

    Seize the day, trusting little in the future.

    if you want something, go after it. if you want to screw someone over, look DEEP in your heart and realize Karma is a bitch

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  18. #18
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    i have been reading "feed your dog raw meaty bones"by tom lonsdale. i could share it.

    Hayduke Aug 7,1996 GS-Aug 26 2010

  19. #19
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    get a slow cooker. put in meat (chicken works well, as does turkey), brown rice, veggies (pumpkin, other squash, sweet potato and greens), water, cook on low 3-4 hours. separate meat, mix all veggies together. Use to supplement quality dry food.
    Quando paramucho mi amore de felice carathon.
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  20. #20
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    quality dry food
    ground turkey
    rice
    brewer's yeast
    safflower oil
    egg

    cook turkey/rice about 2-3x/week & mix w/rest daily = healthy/happy dog. not too expensive either.

  21. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by 54-46 View Post
    quality dry food
    ground turkey
    rice
    brewer's yeast
    safflower oil
    egg

    cook turkey/rice about 2-3x/week & mix w/rest daily = healthy/happy dog. not too expensive either.
    That is pretty much where i am headed.
    bought whole chickens for 67c/lb though. and grilled them. then i can eat too.

    if you are starting with dry dog food, why add more rice? just asking. why not just add meat.

    Hayduke Aug 7,1996 GS-Aug 26 2010

  22. #22
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    Why grains?


    Additionally, the Kirkland food (and iams and others) have Beet Pulp as a filler, which is controversial.

  23. #23
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    We feed our beast Innova kibble plus one homemade meal a day. The ingredients are pretty much whatever we have on hand for ourselves meat and veggie-wise plus salmon skin once or twice a week.

    When we started cooking for him, I got the following list of supplements from a breeder in case we decided to go 100% homemade:

    Kelp and alfalfa (fine powdered)
    Vitamin C (powder)
    Essential Fatty Acids - Cod liver oil, Salmon oil OMEGA 3, and Flaxseed oil
    Glucosamine (powder)
    Vitamin E

  24. #24
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    interesting
    why kelp and alfalfa?
    fish oil and E i have seen often listed
    vit C......dont dogs make their own?

    any pros and cons of "raw meaty bones"?

    Hayduke Aug 7,1996 GS-Aug 26 2010

  25. #25
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    ^^^ Actually, i don't know. It was just a list of the supplements that they mixed into their homemade food. I did a little googling at the time, and recall that nothing on that list was bad for a dog (or person), but don't remember what the supposed benefits are.

    We give him a raw bone every once in a while too. Makes him crazy (in a good way)

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