


The biggest names in fishing at the lowest prices. Choose from over 10,000 items.
FREE
PRODUCTS
--------
Pedi-Pooch, the UK's favourite online pet store. We guarantee lowest prices on all
pet supplies and our shop features more pet products than any other online pet stores. With everything from the widest
range of pet food brands online to luxury dog beds and pet accessories
—------------
Garden Bird Supplies is one of the UK's leading mail order suppliers of high quality wild bird and animal food, including its own trademarked "Ultiva" range, which is made to a secret recipe.
--------------
Petpals Direct has been looking after British pets as if they were their own. We have helped over 500,000 people and their pets enjoy access to modern veterinary science and protected them from costly vet bills.
—----------------------
Pet Supermarket offers over 4,000 products at guaranteed lowest prices, including free delivery
--------------
Puchi Petwear offer a stylish range of designer dog and cat products for the fashion
conscious pet owner. Diamante studded collars and leads, stylish pet beds, fashionable
dog jackets and petwear.
SPECIAL OFFERS >
------------
Petmeds sells animal health products for cats, dogs, horses, small animals and birds.
offering 'prescription items' also, more people learn that vets inflate drug costs
as much as 3-400%, save money. This is also relevant for people with insurance because
they hit the ceiling limit of their claim quicker when using vets.
--------------
ZooPlus offers an extensive product range including food & accessories for dogs, cats, fish and other small animals at very competitive prices. ZooPlus also offers a ‘Stock up and Save’ program where the user gets 5% off +10% OFF First ORDER!!>>
Dog care: how to make homemade dog food
Do you really know what's in today's dog food? You're sure to know all the ingredients when you learn to make the food yourself.
A growing number of studies suggest that dog food on the market today is unhealthy, often causing stomach, heart and kidney problems. No wonder, after learning what typical dog foods contain, that it could cause medical ailments. Soybean meal and corn meal are commonly used for the protein content of many pet foods. These ingredients are poor sources of protein compared to meats. BHA and BHT are also found in many of varieties of dog food, and these chemicals are proven to be potential hazardous additives. If the ingredient label mentions bi-products, this could include the internal parts of animals such as heads, undeveloped eggs, feet, intestines, or even lungs. The rules set down by the FDA for personal food consumption are not the same as rules for manufacturing dog food. Although food which is diseased or decayed is unacceptable for human consumption, it is considered fit for commercial dog food. Because of the practices of many dog food manufacturers, some people have taken upon the challenge of making their own dog foods. Although it is slightly troublesome to make all your own dog food, your pet will be much healthier in the long run.
Items often used for homemade dog food are left over scraps of meat or bone, scrambled eggs, milk and leftover vegetables. These can be stirred up in various combinations, then frozen or stored until the next day. Other possible ingredients include rice, pasta and nuts. In many instances, you can make your own recipes easily by just thinking about how you would like a stew to look or how you would create a meal for your own family. You might want to start out experimenting on your own, or search library books or online resources to find specific recipes.
Try mixing together such leftover items as a couple of cups of macaroni, the same proportion of mixed vegetables, a pound of beef or chicken, 3 cups of water and one to two tablespoons of corn starch for thickening. First you'll need to boil the meat, and then separate it from the broth. Prepare noodles and vegetables as you would for your own consumption, then drain off water. Dissolve the corn starch in a quarter cup of cold water, then add meat, veggies, pasta, broth, 2 tablespoons of olive oil and a clove or two of pressed garlic. Bring to a boil, then stir in corn starch and water mixture. Turn the burner down on low and let simmer until mixture starts to thicken. After it is the desired consistency and has cooled considerably, scoop out with a cup into freezer bags. Thaw the concoction the night before the intended feeding.
For a quick puppy snack or treat, pour a pound of chicken livers along with a cup of liquid into a blender and blend until it is completely liquefied. Add one egg and blend a minute longer. Pour into a medium sized bowl and add a cup each of corn meal and flour, along with a tablespoon of garlic powder. Spray baking pan with a no-stick spray and bake for 15 minutes at 400 degrees. After cooling, but while still warm, cut into small shapes and freeze until ready for consumption.
Another great meal for a dog is an omelet. Heat a medium sized pan with a small amount of olive oil. Whip together an egg and 2 tablespoons of instant or mashed potatoes. Spread in pan. Layer with a half cup of cooked veggies and a half cup of diced turkey or chicken. Cover and simmer until egg cooks and the mixture is warm. Sprinkle a quarter cup of cheese on top, then cook a few more minutes until cheese is melted and egg is golden brown. Let cool, then cut into slices. Store in refrigerator until usage. Ideas for creating recipes are hamburgers and meatball meals, vegetable stews, canine cookies or bacon and cheese recipes. A basic rule of thumb when making your own dog food is to prepare foods which look and smell good enough for you to eat, trying to include as much protein as possible. Keep homemade foods from spoiling by storing in the refrigerator or freezer until needed. And for future reference, keep a doggy cookbook so you can recreate your pet's favorite dishes.
Cat care: how to make homemade cat food
Make your own homemade cat food to ensure that your cat receives proper nutrition. Follow the easy recipes here to make homemade cat food.
Many busy cat owners free feed their cats, allowing them round-the-clock access to dry cat food. Cats seem perfectly content with this arrangement. Often, there is no indication of food-related problems until the geriatric years. In order to understand why free feeding dry cat food may be the worst feeding approach and why homemade food offers the best approach, it helps to understand how felines evolved.
Feline evolution
Felines hail from the desert and the plains regions of northern Africa where water was scarce. Fortunately, cats were able to rely on their prey to satisfy most of their water requirements. Since animal protein contains up to 70 percent water, the lack of a constant fresh water supply was not life threatening.
Today, domesticated cats and their feral counterparts are still similar creatures. The most significant difference is their diet, something over which domesticated cats have no control. Feral cats, just like their ancestors, rely on their hunting skills. Cats are carnivorous, relying almost 100 percent on their prey to satisfy their nutritional requirements. Unlike humans, cats are obligate carnivores; they require meat to live. Some of a cat's nutritional needs can only be satisfied with raw animal protein, something that homemade cat food can provide.
Raw plant products have never played a role in cat nutrition. That's not to say that cats didn't eat vegetables. They ingested whatever happened to reside in their prey's stomach, including predigested vegetables. This explains felines' lack of digestive enzymes necessary to digest large amounts of raw vegetables.
Domestic companion cats
Domestic cats have altered their eating habits, because their human owners are in charge of their care and feeding. Most cat owners opt for the quick and easy route: dry commercial cat food.
Dry kibbles consist mostly of binders. These carbohydrate binders connect vegetables, additives, preservatives, and small amounts of animal protein and fat. Dry cat food more closely resembles cheap components from the human food pyramid than feline nutritional essentials.
Why would you want to make homemade cat food?
Is it any wonder that cat owners find dead chipmunks, squirrels, and birds scattered across their lawns? You can scream, "Stop that! Leave Mr. Chipmunk alone," until you're hoarse and the neighbors think you're crazy. It's not just instinct that causes domesticated cats to hunt; their bodies crave the essential nutrition lacking in their diets.
Cats lack amylase, the enzyme necessary to digest carbohydrates, the primary component of dry cat food. The lack of bio-available nutrients in dry cat food, its incomplete nutrition, and its lack of water content contribute to a host of problems aside from malnutrition. Academic research has linked dry cat food to chronic and degenerative feline diseases such as chronic renal failure (CRF), fatty liver disease, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), dental problems, feline urinary tract disease (FUTRD), kidney crystals, dehydration, and more. Canned cat food typically contains more protein, and up to 70 percent water content. Still, the commercial cat foods may not provide a nutritionally complete diet.
Homemade cat food most closely simulates a cat's natural diet. Only homemade cat food provides complete nutrition to cats in a form that allows them to assimilate all the essential nutrients.
Homemade cat food ingredients
Exact recipes for homemade cat food vary, even among experts. If you have committed to serving your cat homemade cat food and you can afford it, use free-range meats and organic vegetables. Most agree that homemade cat food consists of the following ingredients:
• Raw ground meat and fat
• Finely diced vegetables
• Bone meal or finely ground eggshells – Cats require nutritional bone meal, not gardening bone meal. Purchase bone meal at the health food store. If using eggshells, grind into a fine powder.
• Nutritional supplementation – The simplest way to add the proper dose of vitamins, minerals, and essential fatty acids (EFA) is to use tablets or capsules formulated for cats.
• Digestive and other enzymes – The simplest way to add the proper dose of enzymes is to use multi-enzyme capsules formulated for cats.
• Pure water – Anything is better than tap water.
• Cooked or soaked whole grains – Grains are optional. There is disagreement among experts about feeding grains to cats. Some believe they are part of a healthy diet. Others believe that grains were never part of the cat's natural diet, and there's no additional benefit in including them.
Another disagreement among experts is whether to mix meats. One group believes that cats should eat only one meat at a feeding since cats in the wild did not eat a mouse with a side of bird. The other group finds no benefit in limiting the food to one meat ingredient.
Getting started with homemade cat food
Homemade cat food consists of separate mixtures: a meat mixture, a vegetable mixture, and an optional whole grain mixture. It's easier to prepare each mixture ahead of time and combine the mixtures at feeding time.
Preparing the mixtures and optional grains
Use any of the following raw meats: lamb, beef, turkey, or chicken. Do not use raw pork or raw fish. Ask your butcher to grind the meat and the fat together. You may also feed your cat organ meat up to twice a week. Since organ meat is extremely lean, you'll need to add fat. Ask the butcher to add fat when grinding the organ meat. If this sounds like too much trouble, the simplest way to get started is to buy ground hamburger beef that contains approximately 30 percent fat.
Meat mixture
1 pound combined meat and fat
1 cup water
4 tablespoons bone meal or 3 tablespoons powdered eggshells
Add the water to the thawed ground meat. If you use ground chicken, reduce the water to 3/4 cup, adding more if necessary. Incorporate the water into the meat. Add the bone meal or the powdered eggshells to the meat and mix well. Store the meat mixture in an airtight container or zipper bag and refrigerate or freeze.
Vegetable Mixture
Use several different vegetables for this mixture. If you use any of the hard-rind squashes, cook the squash only until the rind is slightly soft. Do not use nightshade vegetables: onions, tomatoes, potatoes, eggplant, and peppers. The nightshade family causes a host of problems in cats.
1 cup mixed fresh vegetables
Wash and dry the vegetables. Grate the vegetables, and then chop the grated vegetables into small bits. If you have a food processor, process the vegetables until they are finely diced. Store the mixture in an airtight container or zipper bag and refrigerate or freeze.
Grains
1/4 cup oats, rice, bulgur, millet, cornmeal, etc.
Water
Follow the instructions on the grain package to determine the proper amount of water. Boil or soak the grains until fully hydrated. Hydration is the goal; it is not necessary to cook the grains.
Mealtime preparation
The meat and vegetable amounts are approximations. After you feed your cat homemade cat food for a few days, you can adjust the amount of each mixture according to your cats needs. After your cat has been on the homemade diet for a few weeks, you'll have a better idea how much of each mixture to use. You can make enough for several days at a time, or you can make bulk mixtures and divide into smaller portions before freezing.
Add approximately 3 spoonfuls of meat and 1 spoonful of vegetables to a clean bowl. If using grains, add a scant spoonful and mix well. Add enough hot water to create a stew consistency when well mixed. Cats prefer warm food--78-103 degrees Fahrenheit. After fully incorporating the hot water, add the nutritional supplements and enzymes. If your supplements come in tablet form, you can grind them in a coffee grinder before adding them to the mixture. If you don't have a coffee grinder, you can place the tablets between two pieces of wax paper and pound them with a hammer. Stir the ground nutrients into the mixture. Serve immediately.
Feeding your cat
The time has come to feed your cat its first natural meal, and you're probably excited about providing your cat with the best possible nutrition, especially after all your hard work. Well, guess what? Kitty may not be nearly as pleased as you are--in the beginning.
Just like their human owners, cats are creatures of habit, and they expect to eat whatever it is you've been feeding them. Do yourself and your companion a favor by gradually incorporating the natural food into the cat's regular food. Start by serving your cat 3 parts commercial cat food to 1 part homemade food. Gradually decrease the commercial food over a week or two depending on your cat's tolerance. Even if your cat never accepts a 100 percent homemade diet, you're still feeding it a higher-quality food, prepared with tender loving care.
Don't panic!
When your cat adjusts to the homemade diet, you're going to notice some changes. Over time, your cat will consume less food and water. The homemade food contains a greater density of nutrients than commercial food, and it contains far more water. A full-grown cat will only require several spoonfuls of mixture a day. Since the stew contains so much water, you'll notice a decrease in water consumption. Your cat is hydrating naturally and isn't as thirsty as before. In fact, you may even notice that your cat's nose is moist. Don't be concerned; this is natural.
You may also find that they gobble their food, and then do not require food for an entire day. If you've been free feeding your cat, this might scare you in the beginning. Carnivores' eating habits are quite different from omnivorous human eating habits. They tend to eat, sleep, play, and eliminate before eating their next meal.
This is going to be harder on you than it is on your cat. This is the way cats are meant to eat, the way they've eaten for thousands of years in the wild. You are providing the closest thing to a cat's natural diet. Relax and enjoy the fact that you are doing what many veterinarians and scientists have determined is the best possible thing you can do for your cat, and you may be adding years to cat's life in the process.
Best Deals > On Sale >>