McDadeTXAggie said:
Old RV Ag said:
McDadeTXAggie said:
That's what you took from the facts I posted? Its directly off their label
But you never explain with any evidence about your choices. You just call dog food 5* review brands which is marketing and based on people basing it mostly on what their dog "likes"
I mentioned previously that years ago I did a lot of reading/researching on dog foods. It's been years and products change over time. But the first 3 or 5 ingredients is suppose to be what makes up the bulk of what's in the dog food.
What else do you want to know? I posted a few cheap/crappy brands that all have corn listed as their #1 ingredient. I listed a few higher end brands that have either a meat product or rice as their #1 ingredient.
If Mr. Vet in texags is comfortable pushing off corn filled dog food for your dog... have at it
As you continue to show your ignorance about dog food. I'll try to give you a little information on how labels are manipulated towards the marketing of the "first 3 or 5 ingredients " on the label. Do you know how they are put in order? It is by weight of raw ingredients. You take a meat product which has very high water content which adds a lot of weight to the raw ingredient (which by the way is mostly cooked out of the final product) so it artificially appears to be more. Then you take rice or corn or whatever other ingredients and break them down into components (rice meal, rice hulls, and on and on) that are in a dry form, thus lower weight each, and magically they fall down lower on the ingredient list even though they make up more of the final product than your precious meat that was first on the ingredient list. Some companies play this manipulation game and some do not. Glamour words like human grade (which has no definition and anyone can throw it on their label), no byproduct, and fillers get thrown around and marketed because the public eats it up. And surprisingly, corn does have nutritional value, think about the corn being ground up and not the whole kernels that you're staring at in your turd in the toilet. It contains some antioxidants, vitamins, and protein that is of value in an overall balanced diet. It doesn't matter if those ingredients come from corn, wheat , or some rare sourced, organic, "fully digestible", wild blueberry found only on one island in the world. The key is having a balanced diet that is appropriate for your dog and not getting caught up in all the marketing bs.