Pet Food - What's in That
Stuff Anyway?
Because we love our pets we are always trying to do what is
the best for them much like we would do for our own children or
ourselves. Let's face our pets are our family members. But when
it comes to choosing the best food for our pets the choices can
get pretty confusing.
There is premium pet food, natural pet food, holistic pet
food and raw diet pet foods. Then of course we have all the
namebrand commercial pet foods, all lying for our attention and
screaming that their product is the best you can buy for your
animal. The quality of the food an animal consumes is
extremely important.
A truly healthy diet will help fend off many chronic
diseases in animals acquire through their lifetime. But finding
the right food for your pet's diet can be a daunting task.
First of all we have to learn to decipher the
labels.
When it comes to our own diets were often told to constantly
read the labels to avoid saturated fats, foods that are high in
cholesterol and high in sodium. And most of us do read labels
in an effort to eat healthier. Unfortunately the way
the labeling is used in the pet food industry can be more than
a little misleading. For your pet one of the main
ingredients that you always want to check is the amount of
protein in the food.
Now this sounds simple enough just look at the amount of
protein listed on the label and decide if that amount is good
for your pet or not right? Unfortunately no, there are two
other factors that must be considered one is the biological
value of that protein and a digestible value of the
protein.
But manufacturers are only required to list the amount of "
crude protein "and not in its digestive and biological
percentages. Then there is the old standby, "meat
byproducts." What the heck are meat byproducts
anyway?
Unfortunately this term can refer to anything from bird
feathers to other animals that have been ground up and added to
the feed. Some companies be clever and use the term "meal"
instead of meat byproducts.
I am sure you have seen labels that list lamb
meal, chicken meal or some other type of meal, essentially this
all means the same junk filler. Some of the most expensive
commercial pet feeds contain products or byproducts that were
deemed unfit for human consumption.
Things like moldy or rancid grains, discarded brewers yeast
and rice and animal fats which have been deemed unsafe for
humans. So when considering food for your pet ask yourself a
simple question, what I eat it?
If the answer to that question is no then it's likely that
your pet should not be consuming it either. The ideal diet for
any pet is much the same as it is for any human, natural foods
along with a quality vitamin and mineral supplements.
Je Dunn has been in the newspaper business for 25 years and
has been an online writer since 2001. Some of je's latest
projects include Pet Life Preservers and Dog Life Vest thinking safety for
your pets.
Because we love our pets we are
always trying to do what is the best for them much like we
would do for our own children or ourselves. Let's face our pets
are our family members.
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