The Complete Dog

Wellness Dog Food Section


 

Wellness Dog Food Navigation


|

The Complete Dog Home Page
Dog Videos
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Dad Dog Food |
Cat Dog Eating Food |
Northwest Natural Dog Food |
Free Coupons For Dog Food |
Wheat Free Dog Food |
Calories Dog Food |
Eagle Brand Dog Food |
Pet Products Dog Food |
Black Diamond Dog Food |
Barf Dog Food |
Cat Dog Food Manufacturer Wholesale |
Eagle Brand Dog Food |
Puppy Dog Food |
Dog Food Ratings |
Cat Dog Eating Food |

List of dog-food Articles

Wellness Dog Food Best seller

Dog Obedience Trainig
Buy it Now!



Best Wellness Dog Food products

Dog Food Secrets
Buy it Now!

 

Healthy Food For Dogs: Homemade Recipes
Buy it Now!

 

Dove Cresswells Dog Training Online
Buy it Now!

 

How I Trained My Dog In One Evening
Buy it Now!

 

Dog Training Mastery - An Owner's Manual
Buy it Now!

 

D.i.y. Dog Training At Home
Buy it Now!

 

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Main Wellness Dog Food sponsors


 



 

Welcome to The Complete Dog

 

Wellness Dog Food Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Wellness Dog Food. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

The Growing Puppy

from: The Complete Dog



After the puppy has been weaned, he can start the process of learning how to handle and digest different types of new foods. During the next 12 to 18 months of his life, he'll continue to learn how to cope with the variety of new foods he eats. For the first six to eight months puppy will be both growing and using nutrients and energy at an incredible rate. If a food is fed containing ingredients to which a puppy isn't used to or nutrients that are difficult to digest, he may be unable to obtain sufficient nutrients and energy to sustain his rapid growth. In such cases the puppies are usually stunted.

In addition, foods containing too many ingredients the puppy hasn't yet learned to digest can cause another problem called "hurry diarrhea". When a dog owner gets in too big a hurry to feed adult dog food to a puppy, excessive amounts of indigestible materials are usually introduced into the puppy's digestive tract. These materials irritate the sensitive intestine of the inexperienced puppy and produce a diarrhea.

Formulating a suitable diet for a puppy is one of the most important steps in the early stages of a dog's life. The only source of nourishment a rapidly growing puppy receives comes exclusively from what his owner provides him. His health and growth will be a reflection of how well the owner is doing his job. If you provide your pet with poor materials during this building period your puppy will be destined to carry inferior parts for the rest of its life.

A growing puppy needs twice as much energy and nutrients as an adult dog. Simply feeding him twice as much as an adult dog's food isn't enough, however. The energy and nutrients must be in a form that is digestible by the puppy's inexperienced and sensitive digestive tract. However, as the puppy grows older, the diet can include foods that are more and more difficult for a dog to digest.

Continue to feed your growing puppy the same food that was used to wean him, but gradually add additional foods to train the puppy's inexperienced digestive system. Just as the food fed to an adult is not suitable for a puppy, the food fed to a puppy is not suitable for an adult dog.

By the time the puppy has reached maturity, his digestive system should be thoroughly trained to handle all of the foods it will be fed during his adult life. Generally, canned and soft-moist foods contain ingredients of higher digestibility than dry foods. Canned foods are usually more suitable to feed to growing puppies than soft-moist foods. There are exceptions, however, and a few dry foods containing easily digestible nutrients are much better for feeding fast growing puppies than numerous canned foods containing poorly digestible nutrients.




 

Wellness Dog Food News

No relevant info was found on this topic.