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#1
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Interesting article in the Metro news today
http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/Work/article/219265
Pet food: A fickle beast, but worth looking into JON TATTRIE METRO CANADA April 27, 2009 5:08 a.m. Be the first to comment Print article Text size Meg Smart once made her own dog food. Consisting of old leather boots, wood chips and motor oil, the professor of small animal nutrition at the University of Saskatchewan didn’t feed it to her pets, but she could have. Canadians standards for pet food are slack enough that the boots’ nitrogen, wood chips’ fibre and carbohydrates and motor oils’ fat are legally suitable for pet food. Smart, who co-wrote Not Fit For a Dog: The Truth About Manufactured Dog and Cat Food, is quick to point out most brands of pet food don’t rely on boots and motor oil, but her concern as that a lack of regulation means owners don’t know where the ingredients come from. “It’s not so much the standard of the food, but that … you can source one lot of dog food (from) 20 different sources of ingredients. The quality control is hard to control,” she explains. Smart is also concerned that owners are getting hoodwinked by big companies. “When they talk about premium and super-premium, there’s very little difference between the ingredients. They might have added a few herbs,” she says. “People shouldn’t be conned into feeling they need to buy the ‘holistic’ or ‘super premium’ for their pets. The other dog foods will probably do just as well.” She studied veterinary prescription diets during a year sabbatical and found very little science to support their claims. One company’s specialized “kitten diets” sold via vets is identical to the company’s over-the-counter diets. “The veterinary profession, probably unwittingly, has gone into bed with the industry,” the professor says, noting the pet food industry supports symposiums, education and research at the colleges. “It’s, ‘You scratch my back, I’ll scratch your back, too.’ “The industry says you can’t feed a homemade diet to your pets, that they’re not balanced and complete. We dispel the myth about ‘balanced and complete.’” Smart has three dogs and four cats and buys food locally. “I know where they source their ingredients from,” she explains. She tries to buy food with ingredients sourced within 100 miles, which can be tricky in the Prairies. The idea is to maintain confidence in the food, a lesson bitterly learned by many pet owners in 2007, when contaminated Menu Food products killed a number of animals. “I would buy nothing but Canadian-made products,” Smart says. More about : Paws and Claws
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ What is man without beasts? If all the beasts were gone, men would die from great loneliness of spirit. For whatever happens to the beasts, soon happens to man. All things are connected. ~~Chief Seattle (Duwamish tribe)~~ |
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#2
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Great article, thanks for sharing
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Cat maid to: Puddles, female Himalayan (16 yrs) Jasper, male Ragdoll ?? (approx 9 yrs) Sweet Pea, female silver tabby DSH (approx 7 yrs) Rose semi feral, a cpietra rescue, female tabby (approx 6 yrs) Snowball RIP (1991-2005) In a cat's eye, all things belong to cats.-English Proverb “While we are free to choose our actions, we are not free to choose the consequences of our actions.” Stephen R. Covey |
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#3
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I totally recommend reading this book (and wish all vets had to read it as part of their ongoing education). Very eye-opening. It's actually written by 3 vets: along with Smart, there's Dr. Michael Fox and Dr. Elizabeth Hodgkins.
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"To close your eyes will not ease another's pain." ~ Chinese Proverb “We must not refuse to see with our eyes what they must endure with their bodies.” ~ Gretchen Wyler |
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#4
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Since she is a professor of animal nutrition at the University of Saskatchewan why do they still bring in reps from Medi-Cal and Hill's to convince the students to promote their products when they become veterinarians?
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#5
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I don't think it's up to her. These companies give universities big grants and in exchange, they get to pimp their wares. Kinda like having Coke sponsoring the highschool football team - Coke pays for the team's uniforms and gear, and then get to plaster their logo all over everything.
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"To close your eyes will not ease another's pain." ~ Chinese Proverb “We must not refuse to see with our eyes what they must endure with their bodies.” ~ Gretchen Wyler |
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#6
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Quote:
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#7
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I know what you're saying about the big buck donations. But her students must know her feelings about the pet food so you would think that most of them, when they become vets, would understand that we don't want the stuff pushed on us either.
Last edited by Ford; May 20th, 2009 at 08:07 AM. |
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#8
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A couple of years ago Ethel was doing a college course on animal welfare and part of it included nutrition, the course instructor was promoting the usual foods available at the Vet's. Ethel asked her on the QT, what she fed her dogs............."Merrick"
.....so go figure
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