Jump to content

Cooked Vs Raw Meat


 Share

Recommended Posts

Also - I hear that raw meat is OK - if it's left outside for a day or two? Is thast right? Is there some properties in FRESH meat that may be the problem?

....I'll stop with all the queations now and give someone fabulous mind a chance to answer :thumbsup:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest grashopper

Hi ElectraWoman,

Your vet is not completely right. We humans don't always cook our mince to kill off bacteria, in Germany where I come from it is quite customary to eat raw mince on a breadroll, plus heaps of pepper, salt and onions. I myself couldn't eat that, but I have witnessed heaps of people loving it - and not getting sick of it. It's definitely a matter of handling the meat in the right manner. Mince is meant to be used on the day it was made into mince and always be kept cold.

My pups get the frozen roo mince plus grain mix, veges, minerals etc. and bones of course (recipe from the vet's all natural boss).

Cheers,

Ines

Link to comment
Share on other sites

maxi, store the dogs raw meat/food in the exactly same way you would store your own food so the nutritional value in the food is kept at its best.

I am reading "Give your dog a bone" by Dr Billinghurst and I would recommend it to anyone who is unsure whether to feed a RAW or Cooked or commercial dog food.

I actually got it for the recipes and exactly how to feed the BARF diet but I am amazed at the amount of info in it regarding all things like storing the dogs food etc etc.

I have borrowed my copy from the library. :thumbsup:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Maxi,

I feed Piper a raw meat diet. Like others have said, I think the area where some of us 'fall down' is when we are enter into feeding raw without perhaps ensuring we know exactly what we are doing :thumbsup: I took the time to read through the BARF books and scour the internet prior to starting with the diet so that I knew exactly what I was dealing with and to prepare myself - after all we change to raw to provide our dogs with a healthier diet than they previously had.

This is where I throw a bit of a spanner in the works, I actually decided to follow a raw food diet devised by Juliette De Bairacli Levy - her book is entitled 'The complete herbal handbook for the dog and cat'. I'm not saying that this diet is the right one for you, but the more choices you have the better really so it may be worth reading.

Anyway, back to your buried bone question - again as others have already said, dogs are designed to eat raw meat and therefore their digestive tract is equiped with the applicable enzymes etc. to allow them to digest bones and raw meat. Even if meat is 'high' (a bit smelly - as I'm sure those bones might be :champagne: ) the dog is equiped to eat it without becoming ill. That said, I do always look after Piper's meat in much the same way as I would look after my own.....

I'm new to Australia, so I was delighted to see that so many of you are following raw meat diets with your dogs.

Hope this makes sense and helps :laugh:

Louise

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just to gross everyone out - when I was a kid I loved eating raw steak and raw mince with lots of salt - I grew out of that one!!! but I must say that I was never sick from it ever. we have health standards in regards to meat bought from commercial butchers and red meat is meant to be safe.

just store it as you would meat for yourself and have the same levels of hygiene with their eating bowls etc.

we've also just recently gone down the BARF road with our dogs as nina has some kind of irritable bowel problem and can't eat the canned or dry food (or she has blood in her poo and is very miserable). Following the Billinghurst book advice has made it easier using the recipies. they love all the bones and she is finally doing solid poos. (who would have thought that I would ever discuss such a thing!!)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is where I throw a bit of a spanner in the works, I actually decided to follow a raw food diet devised by Juliette De Bairacli Levy - her book is entitled 'The complete herbal handbook for the dog and cat'. I'm not saying that this diet is the right one for you, but the more choices you have the better really so it may be worth reading.

I've got this book too, haven't read it for a while, must re read again soon. How closely do you follow this book? I thought it a bit hard to do what was suggested. Goats milk for breakfast, burying the meat etc. How have you adapted it for more "modern" times? Would love to know.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Rebanne, yes, some areas of the diet have to be updated to suit our modern lifestyles. Burying Piper's meat under branches of a tree is certainly one of the things I do not do :thumbsup:

The other main thing that I have had to adapt is her breakfast cereals being mixed with goats milk or buttermilk - both of which were too hard to locate in the UK. Instead I use a mixture of cows milk and water. Other than that I would say I follow the guidelines in the book - including during the week, one meat free day where she is fed fish and brown rice and one fasting day - most dogs seem to naturally fast themselves from time to time and this goes back to when they were in the wild, where they would not eat every day. I am new to Australia, so I have yet to find out what is available in the health food shops, however, in the UK all of the herbs such as parsley, rosemary, dandelion, nettles etc. are readily available so I trust it will be the same here.

I was introduced to this diet by my father in law who gave me a 1960 edition of the book by Juliette when my last dog was seriously ill. When the vet advised us that it was a 'matter of time' I began to follow and administer the herbal remedies. She lived a full life for a further year and the vet (who is quite supportive of raw diets etc.) was amazed and said that she should have died 10 months earlier. That was enough for me to make up my mind that this diet was the right one for me and Piper so prior to her coming home I got myself organised and started the diet 24 hours later.

This diet is quite dissimilar to the BARF, however, it is an alternative and whichever diet an individual choses the most important thing is to ensure that we have a good understanding and knowledge of what we are feeding and why :laugh:

Louise

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This diet is quite dissimilar to the BARF, however, it is an alternative and whichever diet an individual choses the most important thing is to ensure that we have a good understanding and knowledge of what we are feeding and why :wave:

Louise

Totally agree Louise. I will re read the book, it's been a couple of years since I last read it but I didn't think it was for me :wave:

I have a Piper too, but mines a boy :laugh:

post-22-1107142740.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...