HeartOfCoal wrote:Junsui wrote:Occasional fruits still boost their health, it's not like its the only thing they eat. *shrug*
Since I don't want to quote the ginormously long rant, I figured I'd just say Junsui is right. Fruits and veggies are beneficial to a dog's health.
My proof. Could this be wrong? Yes. However, I think I'm going to believe them over you, Jazi. So please, before you shoot someone down, kindly do your research. I've talked to my vet about it earlier today, and he said there is nothing wrong with giving dogs fruits and veggies, as long as they aren't harmful (such as grapes, though my dog eats them fresh off our vines and so far hasn't been harmed. However, I highly don't suggest feeding your dog any seeing as how mine only got ahold of the grapes because she broke into our garden.) It can help your dog more than you think.
Now, I could have misunderstood the argument, and if I did then I apologize. But from what I read, I don't think so. I'm going to leave the argument after this, so if you have any interest in replying, please note that I most likely will not see it.
While you said you might not see it, I'd like to point out two things. One, Animal Planet is not an end-all to discussions and has been wrong in the information they give on multiple occasions. You wouldn't believe how many times their Dogs 101 show has given
very incorrect information about the breeds (for instance, saying that pits snap, showing a GSD in a picture for the Malinois, not giving the full side of the story on
why the asian spitz breeds are considered aggressive, etc), their Swamp Wars show has pulled small snake species such as Rats, Corns, and Ball Pythons out of people's homes and stated that they could grow to be 8+ft long monsters and eat people (none of those species gets past 6ft, and even reaching THAT is noteworthy... most are around 3-4ft, and there is no current snake species that can eat an adult). Give me an actual scientific journal saying that plants are
beneficial to a dog's health.
Second, I said no where that some fruits and vegetables (so long as they are simpler to digest [no corn, no grains] and not toxic [no grapes, no onions]) occasionally would
harm the dog. Like I said, I'm not saying that a dog will die or grow three heads or develop incurable cancer from the occasional plant in their diet. I liken it to candy, cookies, and cake for us. Do we actually
need candy and cake? No, not if we eat a proper diet from the start. Do we
benefit from eating candy and cake? Aside from a sugar rush, we'd get what little nutrients sugary treats have to offer if we ate a proper diet. But candy, cake, cookies, twinkies, butterscotch krimpets, whathaveyou are delicious and tasty, quite a few people eat quite a lot of them on a daily basis and as long as they have a high enough metabolism and aren't couch potatoes, they can eat as much as they want with little to no adverse effects. Same for dogs. Do they
need fruits and vegetables? Not if you supply with with a good solid diet made of mostly meat sources (or raw) from the start. Do they
benefit from fruits and vegetables? While plants have nutrients in them, meat is a much better source of the nutrients that dogs need, and if a diet of mostly meat sources (or just plain raw) is fed then you don't need to feed them the plant matter at all. Do nontoxic digestible fruits and vegetables
harm the dog? If they did, they wouldn't be considered "safe to eat". Depending on the plant you're feeding them, it might make them a bit fat (fruit has sugar), but with proper stimulation outside you can keep a lot of that weight to a minimum.
Remember, surviving is not thriving. I'm allergic to several fruits and vegetables (and most other plants... my diet is sort of like the opposite of a vegan... most of the things they can't eat are the only things I can). I eat mostly meats and some grains, and a whoooooole lot of candy because candy is tasty and I have absolutely no self control. As expected, if I don't take a vitamin that gives me the nutrients I'm missing from plant matter in my diet because I'm an omnivore just like the rest of us humans, my immune system and my digestive system start yelling at me. Am I outwardly healthy? Aside from some genetic health problems, yes! I'm fit, athletic, and thin. I'm actually a bit
underweight according to the BMI. Most people would be content with that, but I'm not nearly as healthy as someone who can and does get
all of their nutrients for every meal and keeps a stricter exercise regimen (and doesn't have any genetic dispositions to bad health) like an Olympic swimmer.
Dogs that do strenuous tasks such as racing, sledding, military, and police work are not fed kibble. Many hunters don't feed their dogs kibble. Some are fed "slop", made of fish and intestines and all sorts of gross stuff that carnivores like. Some are fed raw, whether it's processed meat or whole prey items depends on the people feeding the dogs. Why is that? Because their handlers don't want the dogs wasting time digesting things that might be harder on their stomach than what a carnivore needs. Because the dogs have a job to do and need to be at the top of their game, which means no putzing around with anything other than what is directly needed by the dog. The fat lab down the road fed might live to be well into his double digits and only suffer expected problems from an old fat dog and be fed Science Diet every day of his life, but he'll never have been as healthy as one of those dogs.