Does Your Dog's Diet Require Supplementation?

By Owen Jones


It is as vital for your dog to eat a healthy, balanced diet as it is for you. Decent dog foods, normally the more expensive ones, are formulated to provide your dog with everything it needs in its food, but feeding the same stuff every day may lead to deficiencies of some vitamins and nutrients.

It is worth looking at the ingredients on the wrapping of your dog food and comparing it to what your dog ought to be eating. This takes a little elementary maths but is not difficult. Look on the Internet to find out what a dog such as yours should be getting for its size, weight, age and level of activity and write it down in a column.

Then, read off what is in the dog food, multiply that by the amount you give your dog and write that in a different column opposite the names of the vitamins you have already copied down. The ingredients will probably be per 100 grams, so if you feed your dog 500 grams a day, you multiply the numbers by five.

How do the two lists compare? If you dog is getting all it requires and more, then all well and good, but otherwise you will have to augment your dog's diet with the deficit.

Let's say that your dog's existing diet is a little short of vitamins A and D. Look up these vitamins on the Internet by typing into Google: 'foods that contain vitamin A and D'.

You might have to enter the vitamins in one at a time, but you will find a list of foodstuffs that will supply vitamins A and D. In this case, an egg will be the easiest manner of offering the extra vitamins.

Serve it boiled or just stir it into his food. Dogs love eggs so that will not be a problem Then you have to find out how many eggs you need to give a week.

You will find that you are able to supply almost any vitamins and nutrients you need to give in the various fruits, vegetables, grains and nuts available in the market.

Dogs would obtain a wide variety of these from the stomach contents of its prey in the wild, so if you have to provide them, liquidize them in a food processor and stir them into the dog's standard food. Raw is best, but the grains may have to be steeped in water over night.

There are some very common foodstuffs that are poisonous to dogs, so you will need to cross-check this before attempting DIY food supplementation. Foodstuffs such as raisins, grapes and chocolate are examples of things that are poisonous to dogs, but there are a couple of others too. Print a list off the Internet and pin it up on the inside of the door of the pet food cupboard.

If this sounds like too much work, you could simply discuss the matter with your vet and he or she will be able to recommend an easier answer to your worries.




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