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Nutrition

Why we do what we do ... for dogs

Our dogs mean the world to us. All of our dogs show us again and again that life is better with them along for the journey. Dogs are always by our side, giving their all in any situation, whether it is a quiet moment that requires listening to us or racing after the tennis ball we have thrown for the umpteenth time. They ask so little of us and give us so much. We are spreading the word that we can all give our pets, our best friends, a better, healthier life; all it requires is the knowledge and desire to learn and make a few simple changes. We will assist you in finding the best, most appropriate food for your dog's unique health and lifestyle.

​CANTON
Retail & Puppy Daycare Location

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166 Albany Turnpike (Route 44)
Canton, CT 06019

dogologyct@gmail.com

*NEW* AVON
​Retail Location

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70 East Main Street (Route 44)
​Avon, CT 06001

​dogologyavon@gmail.com

Food for your dog

  • Air Dried and Dehydrated
  • Canned
  • Kibble
  • Frozen Raw
  • Chews  & Treats

We want to share this article from Dogs Naturally  magazine that explains the 10 scary truths about feeding your pet. The following  clear and simple information about the pet food industry and it's products is information anyone with pets must know. We at Dogology want to show you better more healthful ways to feed your pets. Doesn't your best friend deserve the best?

Dog Food: 10 Scary Truths 

by Jan Rasmusen 

40% of dogs are obese. 46% of dogs and 39% of cats now die of cancer. Heart, kidney and liver disease are epidemic. Save your dog a lot of suffering, and save yourself a fortune in vet bills, by learning the truth about your dog’s diet. Here are 10 important things you may not know about what your dog is eating:

1. Commercial dog food is “fast food.”
Heavily-processed fast foods (burgers, fries, tacos, etc.) as a big diet component can cause major health problems in people. How can fast foods be good for dogs? Only dog food manufacturers think this nonsense makes sense. Dogs and people share roughly 75% the same genetic makeup, and we have similar nutritional needs. What we’re doing to our own health with processed foods, we’re also doing to our dogs. And it’s happening faster.

2. People food is good for dogs. 
Despite what you’ve heard from friends, vets and pet food manufacturers, wholesome ”people food” is good for dogs.  People food is only bad for dog food makers. The same fresh, nutritious foods people eat can offer your dog the nutrition he needs and save you a mountain of vet bills.  It just takes a little education to learn the small differences between human and canine nutritional needs. (Hint: no onions, grapes or raisins. Rinse off rich spices and sauces. Go easy on carbs and avoid wheat and corn.)

3. Don’t presume the food your vet sells is a superior product. 
Veterinarians, like medical doctors, learn relatively little about nutrition in school. Much of what they do learn comes directly from pet food company vets, sales reps, articles, studies, and seminars. If your vet hasn’t studied and experimented on his or her own with raw or homemade diets, it’s unlikely that he or she  knows bad food from good, and may be acting on outdated information or superstition. And if vets profit from selling one brand, and not another, they have a conflict of interest that may influence their opinions. (Some may even be prohibited by a manufacturer from selling more than one brand.)

4. The quality of processed commercial foods is suspect.
Dog food may legally contain “4-D” meat: meat from dead, dying, diseased and disabled animals. Add a little road kill, mill floor sweepings labeled as grain, and corn contaminated with high levels of pesticide (yes, really) and you have a recipe for ill health. The cheaper the food, the cheaper the ingredients, the worse the nutrition. Read the labels!

5. Kibble does not clean teeth.
Almost all dogs age three and over have dental diseases. Most of these dogs eat kibble. That should tell you something.  Although a small study once suggested that kibble might clean teeth better than canned food, better doesn’t mean effectively. Hoping to avoid brushing our dog’s teeth, we too willingly grasp at kibble’s unsubstantiated health benefits. But pretending that kibble or hard treats will keep teeth clean will only lead to huge vet bills, lost teeth and much canine suffering.

6. “Complete and balanced” does not mean “optimum.” 
“Complete and balanced” means that a food meets minimal theoretical health requirements for the average dog. Food boasting that it conducted Feeding Trials often just test only the lead product in a line of foods.  Trials, too, are for only a small number of dogs for a short period of time. Over time, nutrient and enzyme deficiencies are inevitable. Of course, complete and balanced is better than not complete and balanced, but again, better does not mean good.

7. Feeding the same food day after day limits nutrition. 
Imagine eating corn, rancid fat and chicken wings (without meat) every meal of your life, with the same mix of cheap vitamins and minerals added. Nutritionists urge people to eat a variety of foods, both for improved nutrition and also to prevent allergies. Dogs need variety, too. But variety can cause gastrointestinal upset in dogs, right?  In the short run, yes. Nutritionally-deprived animals have sick guts. In fact, intestinal upset when switching foods is a sign your dog needs more variety. Once good nutrition has healed a dog’s digestive system, the dog can eat different foods every meal — just as people do. Just switch foods gradually over several weeks while your dog’s gut heals.

8. Kibble is not better than canned. 
Whereas canned food is preserved by the process of canning, most kibble is preserved artificially. (Ever contemplate how much preservative must be required to retard spoilage of food left out all day?) Kibble begins as a dry cooked meal whereas canned food is canned fresh.  Kibble is exposed to more heat than canned (destroying nutrients). Worse yet, kibble is linked to kidney and bladder problems in cats, and to bloat, a deadly problem especially for large, broad-chested dogs. It’s also dehydrating. Of course, canned isn’t perfect either. Fresh is best, raw or cooked. Next best is frozen prepared food and then dehydrated and freeze dried foods, all available at better pet stores.

9. Some common foods can be hazardous to canine health. 
Cooked bones and rawhide chews can cause major health problems requiring emergency surgery. Wheat-based treats can bring on allergies. Onions, grapes, raisins, chocolate, the article sweetener Xylitol and other common foods can be toxic for dogs and must be avoided.

10. Corn kills. 
Most kibble is loaded with corn, a cheap filler. Unfortunately, the corn isn’t the luscious kind you and I eat. It’s feed corn (like cattle eat), or cheap feed corn remnants. Even corn meal dust counts as corn. The corn may even have been condemned for human consumption, there being no upper level of pesticide contamination for pet foods. If that weren’t bad enough, corn (which gives us both high fructose corn syrup and corn oil) is fattening. Any wonder so many dogs are obese and suffer from diabetes?

For more information, check out the two chapters in Jan Rasmusen’s book, Scared Poopless: The Straight Scoop on Dog Care. (Read an excerpt about dog food myths.) And check out Dog and Cat Food Labels: Marketing Tricks That Cost You Money and Dog Food: What to Feed and Why. 
Jan Rasmusen is the national award-winning author of Scared Poopless: The Straight Scoop on Dog Care and consumer advocate for dog lovers. Don't miss the in-depth articles (especially on vaccination) at her Truth4dogs blog or follow K9Author on Twitter. 

Why we do what we do ... for Cats

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Cats are there for us, silently watching over us or popping out in the hallway to happily swat at our bare toes. Cats make our lives better. If you love cats, you know what we mean. Their warm purring head rubbing against your leg when you arrive home is a welcome back like no other. Cats have complex personalities and often leave us guessing as to their ever-changing moods, but nutrition-wise cats are simple. Cats are obligate carnivores, meaning they require real meat to thrive. Cats are commonly fed the most highly processed contaminated foods available when their nutritional needs are quite the opposite. We will help you find the best, species appropriate diet for your cat. 
Cats are an important part of our Dogology family. Cats need the best food, the cleanest and purest food, we can give them, Many of the contemporary diseases that plague cats can be avoided or, at the least, delayed by feeding the correct species appropriate diet. We can help your cats live their ultimate life too -- come in and talk to us today.

Food for your Cat
Air Dried and Dehydrated
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Canned
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Kibble
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Raw Frozen
Treats

CatInfo.org - Lisa A. Pierson, DVM

We share this amazing resource with all our cat customers. The clear and useful website, www.CatInfo.org   is written by Lisa Pierson, DVM.  This is our most recommended cat resource at Dogology because we believe in preventative nutrition and feeding cats the food they are designed to eat.
CatInfo contains everything you need to know to treat your feline friend to a healthy, long, fulfilled life. This excerpt from CatInfo sums up why feeding a species appropriate diet to cats is vitally important.

"My Cat is Doing Just "Fine" on Dry Food!" - is something Dr. Pierson hears everyday from cat owners, below is her response:

Every living creature is “fine” until outward signs of a disease process are exhibited. That may sound like a very obvious and basic statement but if you think about it……

Every cat on the Feline Diabetes Message Board was “fine” until their owners started to recognize the signs of diabetes.

Every cat with a blocked urinary tract was “fine” until they started to strain to urinate and either died from a ruptured bladder or had to be rushed to the hospital for emergency catheterization.

Every cat with an inflamed bladder (cystitis) was “fine” until they ended up in pain, passing blood in their urine, and missing their litter box.

Every cat was ‘fine’ until the feeding of species-inappropriate, hyperallergenic ingredients caught up with him and he started to show signs of food intolerance/IBD (inflammatory bowel disease).

Every cat was "fine" until that kidney or bladder stone got big enough to cause clinical signs.

Every cancer patient was “fine” until their tumor grew large enough or spread far enough so that clinical signs were observed by the patient.

The point is that diseases 'brew' long before being noticed by the living being.

This is why the statement “but my cat is healthy/fine on dry food” means very little to me because I believe in preventative nutrition - not locking the barn door after the horse is gone.  I don’t want to end up saying “oops……I guess he is not so fine now!!" when a patient presents to me with a medical problem that could have been avoided if he would have been feed a species-appropriate diet to begin with.

Of course, in order to be on board with the 'preventative nutrition' argument, a person has to understand the following facts:

1) Carbohydrates wreak havoc on cats' blood sugar/insulin balance.

2) All urinary tract systems are much healthier with an appropriate amount of water flowing through them.

3) Cats inherently have a low thirst drive and need to consume water *with* their food.  (A cat's normal prey is ~70 - 75% water.)

4) Cats are strict carnivores which means they are designed to get their protein from meat – not plants.



Choosing a Raw Diet for your Cat

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Dogology Tip - Dogology knows that raw is the ideal diet for cats. Your cat is an obligate carnivore—an animal whose body relies on readily available nutrients found naturally in meat. Today’s domestic cat evolved from an ancestral wildcat and hasn't changed much through evolution. In the wild, cat's prey would be rodents, small birds, young rabbits and even a selection of bugs—a diet rich in meat, organs and fat, and very few if any carbohydrates.

This is what raw-feeding pet owners see in 
their raw-fed pets:
  • Shiny, healthy skin and coat
  • Clean teeth and fresh breath
  • Healthy weight loss 
  • Healthy weight maintenance
  • Improved digestion
  • Fewer allergies
  • Smaller, less smelly stools
  • More energy
  • Increased mobility in older animals

​Our Preferred Raw for Cats

​Our Preferred Dehydrated and Freeze Dried Foods for Cats

Choosing Canned Foods

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Dogology Tip - At Dogology we know that the moisture content in canned foods mimics the vital moisture in cat's true prey diet. Canned foods are a wonderful diet or addition to diets for animals needing more moisture, increased palatability and extra digestibility, this includes kittens, cats, finicky pets and geriatric pets.  It is a myth that canned foods "rot teeth". Starches and sugars left on teeth after eating dry kibble are the greatest culprit in feline tooth decay. Provide fresh raw meaty bones or other natural chews after a meal to help scrape teeth clean, or brush your pet's teeth regularly.

Our Preferred Canned Food for Cats

Choosing Dry Food for Cats

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Dogology Tip - There is only one reason for kibble for cats: our convenience. Cats are often left unattended for very long hours and kibble is highly preserved to be safely left out for hours on end. Highly processed and preserved foods are extremely hard for cats to digest, but can be made available for a hungry cat to nibble on when nothing else is available. Cats should never eat a diet of only dry food. This kibble-only diet, devoid of water, is unhealthy because cats aren't natural water drinkers. Cats get the moisture they need from their correct diet of raw or canned food which mimics the 75% moisture content of their natural prey, the mouse.

​Our Preferred Dry Food for Cats

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Dogology®

166 Albany Turnpike
Canton, CT 06019
​(860) 352-2352
*NEW*
​Dogology
® Avon
70 East Main Street
Avon, CT 06001
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Dogology® |  Copyright © 2013  | www.dogologyct.com 
  • Dogology
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