Dog Nutrition Summit Panel
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- Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
- In this panel discussion Dr. Judy Morgan is joined by Dr. Ian Billinghurst, Dr. Nick Thompson, and Dr. Barbara Royal to kickoff the summit as they share what to expect from the Dog Nutrition Summit and openly discuss all things related to dog nutrition!
Thank you for the introduction to the summit. I thoroughly enjoyed it. I am a professional dog trainer of 30 years from Miami Florida. I am living in Arkansas now and I'm still training dogs and educating people about raw food. I got the doctors feed your dog a bone and I am reading that it's very interesting and I'm so grateful to all of you for what you're doing I appreciate you all and we'll look forward to watching the rest of the summit have a good night
Glad you enjoyed it!
Already super impressed! Thank you. And the comment just made in regards to educating Vets I know many people have tried and most vets won’t enter into that conversation because they simply don’t know how to! 🥴
Love this so much! Learned a lot. I've been feeding a homemade diet for over 2yrs ( My dog is 3). She was doing horribly on kibble that her vet recommended and I found Dr. Judy Morgan's webinar from years ago and started cooking for her. My biggest takeaway is feeding my dog at random times once a day! I am guilty of feeding twice at scheduled times. I so appreciate all the info!
Awesome! Thanks for tuning in!
I've had such a hard time finding nutritional information for my dogs and I was thrilled to learn about the summit. I'm so excited to watch the lectures. I especially am enjoying the gentlemen's points!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for such a wonderful video...I appreciate the fact that I can watch this video in closed caption. I learned so much and looking forward to learn more to help my dog with his allergies.
Thank you for your kind words :)
I am definitely adopting the BAD acronym- will remind me of the absolute treat of these four vets enjoying the mash up.
Thanks again for joining!
I love Barbara Royal!! Well you all are fantastic, loving the info so far...
We love her too. They are all doing an awesome job!
Agree that once a day feeding has a lot going for it, but in the past dogs that hunted would have gorged occasionally too, if they were fortunate enough to capture large prey like a deer, or lucky enough to find a carcass to scavenge. I feed once daily most times, especially if I've been training with treats during the day. Occasionally, I do give him two meals, and once he's stopped growing, I'll also start fasting him once in a while, or maybe giving him nothing more than a bowl of bone broth for a day.
So much info...thank you so good & fun to watch
Thanks for tuning in!
Yes Dr. Judy talked about pancreatis and that cooking fat causes oxidation and not good. thats why i removed all fats from my dogs home cooked (semi raw) food.
Very informative, right? They are all brilliant. Thank you for tuning in!
Kibble is fast food for animals
McKibble? 🤣
@@onlyinparadise4613 that's brainy - McKibble 😄
@@PetSummits Hurry and trademark that before the big pet food companies do it! 🤓
Thank you for all the information, lots of tips I will try. The lamb broth did Dr. Nick T. say boil 4 to 8 hours?
Think he said 48hrs
@@Caroles43 thx, I wasn't sure because of the accent. Pretty long time, lol, but their worth it.
Know that you may always post a query on the Pet Parents Page on Facebook, as the group members always provide support and ideas. Here's the link facebook.com/groups/petsummits
If I feed 100 percent raw, would I need to feed supplements???
Know that you may always post a query on the Pet Parents Page on Facebook, as the group members always provide support and ideas. Here's the link facebook.com/groups/petsummits
GREAT PARTY!!!
Indeed.
I missed the part on pancreatitis diet.
Hi, we hope this question was addressed by the panel earlier. However, if not, don't miss the live Q&A session later with Dr. Judy Morgan at 6 PM EDT (US).
What's your take on Stella & Chewy?
Hi, we hope this question was addressed by the panel earlier. However, if not, don't miss the live Q&A session later with Dr. Judy Morgan at 6 PM EDT (US).
They are a good company. I wish they would have stayed with just raw and not the raw coated kibble though
The pet food industry treats us like toddlers, with flashy colours and shapes, shiny packaging and pretty pictures
Yes they do
I fed my dog raw for 5 years. She is a 10 1/2 Golden Retriever and became ill and our vet saw tumors in her spleen. She had a Splenectomy and can no longer eat Raw I was told because of the bacteria in the raw meat. What can I feed her other than kibble. She seems so unsatisfied.
Hi, we hope this question was addressed by the panel earlier. However, if not, don't miss the live Q&A session later with Dr. Judy Morgan at 6 PM EDT (US).
Personally, I allowed and encouraged all my splenectomy patients to be fed raw. There is no need to change. Keto cancer diets are fed raw.
What if you can't afford organic meat for a raw diet
My income is $12,000 a year and I can't afford organic anything. My dog gets grocery store meat like I eat and I cook it. Cooked whole food diet is healthy for dogs too.
Don’t beat yourself up, if your family aren’t eating organic and the budget is tight do the best you can do. Always check supermarket reductions and be shameless asking for a better reduction on any counter or butcher shop. Make a habit of food for free - you may not want roadkill but you can ask friends and neighbours for their cooked bones from human dinners to make bone broth. Christmas turkeys are great for this, add a slug of apple cider vinegar to get the most out of the bones. I freeze 3 or 4 flattened turkey carcasses from neighbours and spend a couple of weeks making broth. You can add herbs, bouquet garni or spices too. BBQ season is great too. I also do freezer clear outs - I prefer it when it’s for a house move or just spring cleaning but broken down freezer too. And eggs. Poor quality meat and bone is better than hyperprocessed in my book so keep learning and do what you can within the budget you have. And remember the burden of vet consult costs now and down the line when you feed kibble.
Dr. Gary Richter and I talk about that in his presentation. We all do the best we can. Look for sales. Buy in bulk. Ask friends who are hunters. Check local farms if you are near any. Organic is not the be-all, end-all.
@@gbdchannel2252 easy peasy to rinse any sauces off under the tap. Freezer clear outs can yield all sorts of highly processed meats which I discard, but have never yet failed to get a reasonable haul of goodies for the dogs.
Know that you may always post a query on the Pet Parents Page on Facebook, as the group members always provide support and ideas. Here's the link facebook.com/groups/petsummits
Can you start feeding raw bones to older dogs who have lost a lot of teeth?
Hi, we hope this question was addressed by the panel earlier. However, if not, don't miss the live Q&A session later with Dr. Judy Morgan at 6 PM EDT (US).
I had an old dog with no teeth and he loved chewing on a marrow bone or ox tail. He could manage to pull off bits of meat with no teeth!
I'd say yes, but give them the softest bones you can find. Probably good to get a vet to check that those remaining teeth aren't loose and can cope. Also depends on which teeth are missing. Dogs use their front teeth to rip and tear and the back set to shear and grind.
Dude. Your education is not in agriculture, so stop talking about regenerative agriculture. Food production is about scale and efficiency. Feeding 6-8 billion people a meat heavy diet is not possible, especially when only considering regenerative methods. Organic farming will feed even less people. So this means, feeding people, dogs and cats a meat heavy diet is not cost effective, and will worsen global warming. Also dogs are omnivores. They evolved with us, to eat what we eat. I hope the research proves this in the near future, but the trick to healthier dogs that live longer is in providing them a reduced calorie diet which is made up of quality food ingredients from varied sources (i.e. don't feed them the same stuff everyday and raw is not always better). This means kibble can be part of a healthy dog diet, in strict moderation. Too much meat is probably unhealthy for dogs, just like it is in humans. Keep in mind that as it's been used, the concept of biologically appropriate diet for dogs is flawed, meaningless and irrelevant when discussing the complexities of dog nutrition. Wolves and coyotes don't eat steak dinners every day. Feeding domesticated wolves (dogs) a raw meat diet ignores what actually happens in the real world, especially the genetic changes that comes from domestication. When considering a biologically appropriate diet, we need to consider the underlying genetics for the species, evolutionary effects, practical economics, and the health impacts of certain nutrients (again, in humans, eating a meat heavy diet, especially processed meats, reduces life span).
Lay off the smoke