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The preceding pages have outlined some of the simple principles that will guide us while preparing and making wholesome homemade pet food for dogs and cats. However, if you only fed homemade pet food as described thus far, then you would not provide all that your dog or cat requires nutritionally. As with any commercial or homemade pet food there are certain nutrients which are missing and need to be replaced and/or added in the form of nutritional supplements.
The single most important supplement, when feeding a wholesome raw meat diet, is calcium. I repeat, the single most important supplement is calcium. You must add calcium to the diet, but using human calcium supplements is not suggested since they often do not provide enough calcium nor any of the necessary supportive nutrients. So please keep reading to learn more about calcium, the importance of calcium in homemade pet food and in fact, later, I will even teach you how to make your own calcium supplement (if you want to do it).
calcium
Now when it comes to calcium, in the past, I used to always tell people about the calcium that our pets would obtain while eating a bird, mouse, rabbit and so on because while eating the prey, our pets would also eat some of the bones. But the bones are no longer in most of the meat we feed. Therefore, in the past, myself and many others would suggest adding bonemeal as a source of calcium for your pets. The supplemental bonemeal was meant to simulate the bones our pets would eat naturally in the wild.
Using bonemeal as a calcium supplement is how things used to be done, but no more.
While bone does provide calcium, bones also provide too much phosphorus which we want to actually avoid (the reason for wanting to avoid phosphorus is explained below — just keep reading). So if bones are not the ideal source for calcium, then where did the majority of the calcium our pets obtained come from?
The answer, which might shock you, is from the blood of their prey. Blood is very high in calcium.
While there is still some blood in the raw meat you buy from your butcher or grocery store, the amount of blood is not as high as found in fresh prey especially since the blood is drained from the meats we buy.
As a result, we definitely want to ensure our pets get additional calcium through the use of a good calcium supplement. The importance of a calcium supplement cannot be stressed enough and further information about calcium is explained in the coming pages. Now, I know what you are thinking — you are wanting to know right now, if calcium is so important, then please tell me now what sort of calcium supplement I should provide my pets?
So to satisfy your curiosity, the calcium supplement I now use is finely ground egg shells because it is high in calcium and contains almost no phosphorus. Okay, now I know you are wondering what's the deal with phosphorus? Why do you keep mentioning phosphorus?
Let's take four steps backwards for a moment now and talk a little more about the history of calcium supplementation for our pets. Let's start from the beginning and work our way forward so that you better understand why good calcium supplementation is extremely important for our pets.
When I first started feeding a wholesome raw meat diet in 1993, bonemeal was used. Why? Because at that time, that's all that was available. Although bonemeal was not the ideal source for calcium, it was the only source.
Even though bonemeal contains calcium, bonemeal is not a good source of calcium but why?
It's important to note that when I talk about bonemeal, I am not referring to the bonemeal you find at your favourite garden center (unless you want your pet to flower). Bonemeal used for gardening purposes would be poisonous to your pet. When I talk about bonemeal, I am talking about nutritional grade bonemeal which is for human consumption and which is found at your local health food store.
Over the years, as homemade pet food started to get more popular, advances have been made in terms of supplements for our pets. Bonemeal, slowly but surely, was no longer viewed as a suitable or acceptable form of calcium supplementation for pets and it's the same reason that make bones not a suitable calcium supplement for pets.
There are numerous reasons why bonemeal and bones are not suitable as a calcium supplement for your pets:
Plumbum
plumbers
But wait, here's the most important reason why you should not use or consider bones and/or bonemeal as a good calcium supplement for our pets and this is where phosphorus, as mentioned above, becomes a factor and where the mathematics start to happen!
Okay, so that's a look at bones and why bones are not used or recommended as a calcium supplement.
I know, I know what you are asking — but what about the bones? What about those who feed or say bones are a good source of calcium?
Well, it is true that some do provide bones in the belief that the bones provide enough calcium. However, bones are still providing phosphorus. Are the people who feed bones as the source of calcium wrong or right? Quite frankly, it's hard to say one way or the other with 100% certainty. But for me, providing bones as the only calcium source does not make sense. In fact, if you watch a lion eat a zebra or a wolf eat a deer, they don't eat the bones. They leave the bones and just eat the meat. Now, if you had a pet a hyena, then yes, by all means feed bones. Hyenas eat what the lions leave behind, the bones. In fact, hyenas eat bones so much that their stools are solid white!
Anyway, while nobody knows for sure exactly how much calcium our pets need, there are two things that are relatively absolutely certain:
Please remember what was mentioned earlier that blood, not bones, provided our pets with a ton of calcium and yes, blood also contains phosphorus. But the blood our pets ate while eating fresh prey was Mother Nature's way of providing our pets with calcium.
Unfortunately, many people get fooled by the fact that bones provide calcium. This is true, bones do provide calcium but we must look beyond just the calcium. We have to ask... Are bones a good source of calcium? When we ask this question, we realize the phosphorus content in bones means that bones are not a good source of calcium, even though they do contain calcium.
Are bones a good source of calcium?
Instead of thinking of bones as calcium source, I think of bones as a mineral source. Bones provide plenty of minerals to our pets but at the same time, bones can also provide the body with too many heavy metals especially lead, mercury, etc.
I would like to quickly mention that you should never feed cooked bones to your dog or cat because they can splinter. If the bone splinters, it can get stuck in the throat, stomach, intestinal tract, etc requiring emergency surgery. Fresh bones have not been exposed to oxygen for too long and thus are, relatively speaking, soft and supple. But old bones can splinter due to oxidation.
I personally prefer to feed chicken necks occasionally because they can be easily crushed without us having to worry about them getting stuck or splintering — even if the chicken necks are slightly older and slightly oxidized. I talk more about feeding bones in the new sections of my book.
Okay, so what's the alternative to bonemeal and/or bones as the best calcium supplement for our pets?
I use and recommend finely ground egg shells.
Why? Why use finely ground egg shells?
WOW
Let's take a deep breath for a second — because not only are we talking about pet nutrition at the moment, but we are talking about mathematics in the form of ratios! If you were like me and asleep during class, then this whole ratio thing might have confused you a little. If this is the case, then let me summarize by saying the following:
Please note, all of the above information is for pets eating a wholesome raw meat diet only. Since the raw meat diet stimulates the highly acidic digestie system of a carnivore — and since calcium requires acid to be extracted from the food so the body can absorb it, only those pets eating a raw meat diet should have a calcium supplement added to their diet. Pets eating cooked meat and/or commercial pet food will not make enough acid thus causing the calcium to be stored, often in the joints leading to arthritis, etc.
So that was interesting. You've just learned about the single most important supplement — calcium. You also just read that you can make your own calcium supplement. So for all of those Martha Stewart fans, put on your apron, it's time to get cracking!
Source: Pets Need Wholesome Food Also @ pet-grub.com
Pets Need Wholesome Food Also
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