Anonymous wrote:How did the owners give you a dog without telling you what the dog should eat? Why did you agree to dogsit and allow the owners to drop the dog off without getting information about its food? Why did they even pick you to watch the dog?
Anonymous wrote:Wtf do you people think dogs ate before there was "dog food"?
Seriously?
I bet you are the same people who swear by rice cereal...
My dog never, ever ate dog food. Most American dog foods are horrible anyway with soy and processed meat parts. Yuck.
We fed our dogs turkey, chicken, steak and "people" food. Also occasionally as a treat cheddar cheese in limited amounts. But, I would check with the owners if the dog has dairy issues.
Anonymous wrote:Wtf do you people think dogs ate before there was "dog food"?
Seriously?
I bet you are the same people who swear by rice cereal...
My dog never, ever ate dog food. Most American dog foods are horrible anyway with soy and processed meat parts. Yuck.
We fed our dogs turkey, chicken, steak and "people" food. Also occasionally as a treat cheddar cheese in limited amounts. But, I would check with the owners if the dog has dairy issues.
Anonymous wrote:Our dog eats a fair amount of human food (husband spills a lot; dog is the vacuum cleaner). He's fine, knock wood. Some people are very strict about what their dogs eat, some dogs have very sensitive tummies. For most dogs, some human food will be fine.
Funny story: we once brought home two loaves of bread from Cheesetique in Shirlington (we were there late, and they were giving away the day's loaves).
We went to work the next day, came home to find no more loaves. One of the loaves we subsequently found buried in the couch, where our doggie likes to bury his bones. We can only imagine that he must have chowed down on the other loaf.
The dog was so sad when we took the buried loaf out of the couch and threw it away. He roamed around the apartment looking utterly bereft. (He also seemed to be perfectly fine, gastro-intestinally.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our dog eats a fair amount of human food (husband spills a lot; dog is the vacuum cleaner). He's fine, knock wood. Some people are very strict about what their dogs eat, some dogs have very sensitive tummies. For most dogs, some human food will be fine.
Funny story: we once brought home two loaves of bread from Cheesetique in Shirlington (we were there late, and they were giving away the day's loaves).
We went to work the next day, came home to find no more loaves. One of the loaves we subsequently found buried in the couch, where our doggie likes to bury his bones. We can only imagine that he must have chowed down on the other loaf.
The dog was so sad when we took the buried loaf out of the couch and threw it away. He roamed around the apartment looking utterly bereft. (He also seemed to be perfectly fine, gastro-intestinally.)
I'm sorry Poster, but your dog is going to die sooner than if you stuck to dog food.
Anonymous wrote:Our dog eats a fair amount of human food (husband spills a lot; dog is the vacuum cleaner). He's fine, knock wood. Some people are very strict about what their dogs eat, some dogs have very sensitive tummies. For most dogs, some human food will be fine.
Funny story: we once brought home two loaves of bread from Cheesetique in Shirlington (we were there late, and they were giving away the day's loaves).
We went to work the next day, came home to find no more loaves. One of the loaves we subsequently found buried in the couch, where our doggie likes to bury his bones. We can only imagine that he must have chowed down on the other loaf.
The dog was so sad when we took the buried loaf out of the couch and threw it away. He roamed around the apartment looking utterly bereft. (He also seemed to be perfectly fine, gastro-intestinally.)