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Being an Australian and having read the books of both Tom Lonsdale and Ian Billinghurst, I disagree with both these vets in some areas. These vets disagree themselves on whether a dog is an omnivore or carnivore. In fact, Tom Lonsdale has publicly degraded Ian Billinghurst.
My research might be incorrect but I believe bones usually contain higher protein content than meat.
Have your IS suffered GDV, Mel? If not, your comments might not be completely relevant for Flame.
The PetzLife is a wonderful product for cleaning dogs teeth. Please do not disregard this. I have told many owners of elderly dogs about this product and they are so grateful.
The omnivore carnivore argument seems to be on the physiology, that dogs jaws only move in an up/down movement, whereas omnivores can move up/down side to side. Dogs have been shown to be able to process some starches, but I would suggest that these are complex unprocessed carbohydrates (fiber) and not over cooked and highly processed carbs which are causing so many problems for humans, let alone a species whose diet is vastly carnivore.
One of my old dogs did have GDV and he did much better on Nature Diet in the end than the prescription diet the vet provided Nature Diet is lightly cooked meat, some veg and rice which contains bone meal. He was one of the first dogs to be fed Nature Diet in the UK in the days when ND was a very small company based in Surrey. It was very gentle on his digestive system.. It was because of this dog that I started looking into raw feeding and decided to stick with it once I had made the switch.
My view was and always has been, that I go on the results of what I put inside my dogs, and put inside myself and adjust accordingly depending on what the outcome (literally) is.
I have read the arguments between Lonsdale and Billinghurst. There are things to be said for both sides. Ideally my dogs would go out and catch their own food and eat what they caught, that would be the most natural way and probably the healthiest way. One of the fittest and healthiest dogs I ever met live to 21 years, lived on a local farm, caught and ate his own food, and never once entered a veterinary surgery. He died peacefully at home. Unfortunately, where I live now, this is not possible for my dogs and just not practical for most dog owners. I do believe dogs are more adaptable than Lonsdale suggests, hence the reason why they have evolved from being wolves.
I also do not believe that high protein/low protein really comes into it. Its the quality of those proteins which count. If they are highly processed, and altered by the processes, then long term, that cannot be good for man nor beast of any description.
Those Roo tails sound really good, providing he's not showing any signs of pain, sicking up remains the following morning and what comes out the other end is looking good. The thing to be concerned about is that he is digesting them ok :-)
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