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Dog Food: Determining the Amount of Dog Food Needed for Your Dog

18/01/2015 16:33

Dog Food: Determining the Amount of Dog Food Needed for Your Dog

The pet dog has the same nutritional needs as any other dog.  The only difference is the reduced number of calories it uses because of the type of life a dog leads as a household pet.  The house dog living exclusively indoors is probably one of the least active animals in the world.  More inactive and especially the less daily exercise you offer your dog,  then your puppy or dog will be unable to ‘burn-off the excess calories that can easily build-up from the daily task of overfeeding your family puppy or dog. In practice this situation of lack of exercise and your puppy or dog being prone becoming overweight or obese is more critical for a dog that has reached maturity because of the simple fact that a growing puppy needs more calories per day for the task of actually the growing process, and extra dog food at this crucial time physically required – although it is still a simple task to overfeed your growing puppy at this critical stage of your puppy’s life, so you must read, understand and follow the dog food manufacturers labelled instructions consistently, as a dog or puppy becoming overweight and becoming obese can be deadly as there are specific dog obesity diseases that will be responsible for destroying your dog’s internal organs – Liver and Kidneys and Arthritis from physically carrying the extra weight.

Most of a house dog's time is spent sleeping.  Its greatest effort, in many instances, consists of a 10-foot walk from the back door three times a day for eliminations, and a 10-foot walk from the family room couch to its food bowl in the kitchen.  As a consequence the house dog is the most overfed and suffers from the greatest overweight problems of all the house-pets.

The dog that spends most of its daylight activities outdoors, but comes in at night, has a higher energy need than the pet kept indoors constantly.  Not only does it get more exercise, but it requires extra energy to maintain its body temperature during cooler weather outdoors.  Even with such additional requirements it is not uncommon to find indoor/outdoor pets that are fed too much and are borderline overweight.

The dog that stays outdoors all of the time is the pet least likely to develop obesity.  As an outdoor dog it enjoys the same, or more exercise as the indoors/outdoors dog.  In addition, outdoor dogs have a considerably increased need for energy to maintain body heat.

This need for extra energy for body heat becomes especially high at night and in colder weather.  In fact, there are occasional instances where outdoor dogs, when improperly fed, begin to appear just like the undernourished farm hounds of a past era of dog feeding.

Calculation: The quantity of food a house dog needs is determined by the same things that determine the amount of food any other dog eat, which is its optimum body weight and the caloric density of the dog food it eats.  The amount is calculated in the same manner as for other dogs.  Determine the number of calories a dog needs daily to maintain its optimum weight.  Then divide that number by the number of calories in a pound of food you are feeding.  The results will be the quantity of food you should feed, measured in pounds.

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Desmo Boss

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