Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Feed your dog food that meets WSAVA guidelines. They aren't all expensive.
WSAVA is sponcon. Your vet is sponsored by a dog food brand, too. While the science aspects may be okay, the branding part should NOT be overlooked.
Anonymous wrote:Feed your dog food that meets WSAVA guidelines. They aren't all expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Feed your dog food that meets WSAVA guidelines. They aren't all expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Appalled. You need to prioritize your dog.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 60lb dog, picky. He’s currently putting himself on a hunger strike. I made the mistake of giving him some human food now he will paw me at dinnertime looking for scraps.
I try switching foods around, right now he’s loving dehydrated food but it’s unbelievable expensive. Even can food is expensive. How do people pay for this? Do they just mix cheap food with the good stuff? Yo think Ai wanted a second dog.
If you feed your dog cheap food they won't be healthy and you will pay in the end for medical bills
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 60lb dog, picky. He’s currently putting himself on a hunger strike. I made the mistake of giving him some human food now he will paw me at dinnertime looking for scraps.
I try switching foods around, right now he’s loving dehydrated food but it’s unbelievable expensive. Even can food is expensive. How do people pay for this? Do they just mix cheap food with the good stuff? Yo think Ai wanted a second dog.
If you feed your dog cheap food they won't be healthy and you will pay in the end for medical bills
Anonymous wrote:I have a 60lb dog, picky. He’s currently putting himself on a hunger strike. I made the mistake of giving him some human food now he will paw me at dinnertime looking for scraps.
I try switching foods around, right now he’s loving dehydrated food but it’s unbelievable expensive. Even can food is expensive. How do people pay for this? Do they just mix cheap food with the good stuff? Yo think Ai wanted a second dog.
Anonymous wrote:PP had good advice on resetting, but if your dog is literally not eating after five days, call your vet.
When my dog was dying, he refused dog food except for the most “high value” (and chicken nuggets).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do cheaper things like veggies, tofu, quinoa, chickpeas, beans. But we also have a smaller dog.
What? This is healthy?