The Truth
About Cats and Dogs Today,
many studies are being conducted on the connection
between our ancestral and contemporary diets. As it
turns out, most of us have deviated far from what
our ancestors ate. In this respect, the same goes
for cats and dogs. Just like us, most of our pets
are not eating the diets that are meant for them.
So, it is possible that we are unknowingly
sabotaging our pets’ health?
If you want to know the truth about cats and dogs,
read on.
Dogs . . .
This may not come as a surprise, but dogs are
historically scavengers and are primarily meat
eaters. In fact, a natural diet included bones,
chunks of carcass, fish guts, animal guts and heads,
rotten greens and fruits, and eventually discarded
human food. Sounds appetizing, doesn’t it? That explains why
your dog will eat any and everything in your garbage
can if given the chance. In fact, the major
contributing factor in the domestication of dogs was
their attraction—way back to the beginning of
civilized mankind—to whatever food was available at
human garbage dumps. Eventually, the tamer wolves
that were the least threatened by human beings, over
tens of thousands of years, became our companions
and evolved into doghood.
Dogs truly function better as carnivores and should
have plenty of meat protein, which provides the
building blocks of good health. While a small to
moderate amount of carbohydrates can play a
secondary role in a dog’s diet, Dr. Jane suggests
feeding only highly digestible carbohydrates such as
brown rice. Excessive and/or poorly digestible
carbohydrates as in cereal based dog foods with only
hints of meat are not recommended. |
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Cats ...
If you have watched a National Geographic episode
and witnessed how large cats eat in the wild, you
know everything you need to know about a cat’s most
basic needs. All cats chase and devour different
kinds of prey, which supplies them with abundant
protein, fat, some pre-digested flora or grasses and
moisture contained in the meats.
Though cats became domestic much the same way dogs
did and have also been subjected to omnivorous
diets, they’ve managed to retain their original need
for protein even more than dogs.
This explains their relatively short intestine,
requirement for specific animal protein constituents
such as taurine and their inexorable craving to jump
on moving prey. The hunter is still in them. Cats
unequivocally require meat in their diets and we as
owners shouldn’t compromise this need. |