Thursday, June 2, 2011

Monthly drawing! Leave a comment and win some goodies!


Every month we will announce a drawing for a pet related product. To be entered into the drawing all you need to do is to leave a comment, that's all! Either on our Facebook page or here - leave a comment, we just want you to come back to one of our pages every month, check the news, and stay in touch!
 
Leave a comment here to be entered into a drawing and win a free* dog or cat toy! All you need to do is to post a comment - what do you have to loose? Winner will be announced on June 30 and contacted via email. 
*up to $3.99 value. Shipping and taxes are not included

New kitten owner must-have list

Feel free to print out the list, take it to your local independent pet food store, and you will be set! 

I also included the brands we highly recommend for each category.
  1. Food: dry:  Orijen, Acana, Fromm Surf and Turf, Now! Kitten, Go!, Nature's Logic, Halo, Addiction 
  2. Food: canned: Addiction, Tiki Cat, Halo, Fromm, Nature’s Logic, Evanger’s, Taste of the Wild
  3. Food: raw: Vital Essentials, Bravo!
  4. Food: dehydrated: Addiction, Honest Kitchen
  5. Treats: Halo, PureBites, Now!, Wildside Salmon
  6. Supplements: Dr.Harvey’s Formative Years for Kittens Formula, Nature’s Logic All Food Fortifier
  7. Salmon Oil: Grizzly, Bravo!, Alaska Naturals
  8. Grooming:  shampoo, brush, nail clipper
  9. Stress relief remedy: Rescue Remedy
  10. Toys
  11. Feeding bowl, water bowl
  12. Plastic carrier
  13. Books: Whole Health for Happy Cats by Sandy Arora
photo: Natalia Foster, www.vegasbrits.com

Enjoy your new kitten!


Natalia Foster
Healthy Products Colorado
www.healthyproductscolorado.com

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Dangers of grain-filled diets for carnivorous animals

Carnivorous animals like dogs and cats are grain-sensitive on some level. Meat eaters do not have a good ability to digest or utilize gluten and other plant proteins. Therefore the sensitivity to gluten is caused by immune system’s reaction to a foreign substance. 
 
Such sensitivity is basically an allergy that results in inflammation of bowels. Condition then interferes with nutrient absorption, and the symptoms of gluten intolerance include diarrhea, vomiting, fatigue, slow growth in young animals, skin conditions like hot spots, rash, dry and flaky skin, shedding, itching, scratching; ear infections, weight gain, pancreatitis and hepatitis, as well as an increased susceptibility to infection, Cushing’s, thyroid problems and many others.
 
A diet containing excessive grains promotes excessive insulin and inflammatory chemicals production. These make it hard for the body to maintain its correct weight, and can lead to diabetes and other problems. Inflammatory chemicals cause more aches and pains. 

Improving your dog’s diet by reducing grain, may lead to dose reduction in dangerous non-steroidal and steroid drugs so commonly prescribed for dogs. 

 “Of course, not all these conditions are directly related to grain consumption, but the overload of grain in most modern commercial pet diets is thought to deplete the animal’s natural state of good health over time, leaving him more susceptible to these problems occurring. Some animal health experts have even speculated that long-term undetected dietary intolerance may be the underlying cause of degenerative diseases such as cancer, heart conditions and kidney failure.”


When fed a 100% grain-free diet, many pets improve within just a couple of weeks, not because of anything magic, just through the relief of no longer consuming aggravating gluten!

A word of caution: Diabetic animals or any other medical condition making a switch to a more protein-based diet should be under the close supervision of a trained professional.  

Natalia Foster


Healthy Products Colorado, LLC
108 E.Cheyenne Rd., #100
Colorado Springs, CO 80906
Ph. 719-650-8481
www.healthyproductscolorado.com

Friday, May 13, 2011

Read the Label

When you are at a store looking at colorful packages and debating what bag of food to buy for your pet, don't be fooled by the front page advertising. Words like "Natural", "Holistic", etc. are just words till you match their meaning to the actual content of the bag.

Every bag of pet food must have an ingredient list and nutrition analysis. This information is also available at a manufacturer's website. In order to make the package attractive and sellable, manufacturers often put only a fraction of the truth on the front of the bag. Say, majority of supplements (like vitamins and minerals) are chemically synthesized and added to the pet foods, but “all natural” statement is allowed to be put on the front.

Read the ingredient panel, not the front to get an idea how natural the ingredients are.

Another issue is what is called natural food for a particular animal.

Corn is natural. No one will argue with the statement. It has roots, grow from soil as any other plant. Yet, it is inappropriate to feed it to a cow, much less to a dog. Corn has never been a part of natural diet for these mammals, and probably will never be. Cows are herbivores; their natural diet is grass, not grains. Dogs are carnivores, meat eaters.

Corn and wheat also contain gluten that often is linked to severe allergies on pets with symptoms like excessive shedding, itching, scratching, ear infections, hot spots, fatty cystic deposits under the skin, and obesity.

Rice is natural, soy, potatoes and peas are too. Yet these plants are on higher glycemic scale. Meaning carbohydrates in these plants break down to sugars fast, and cause surges of high glucose in the blood stream. Pancreas releases insulin to offset these spikes, and in prolonged period of time such unstable glucose levels in the system eventually cause diabetes.

Diabetes and other diet related conditions are unknown in wild carnivorous animals - they do not eat potatoes, rice or peas. Plants and roots are not a part of their natural diet.

Natural foods still can contain chemicals, dyes, flavor enhancers and other unnatural ingredients. Including toxic fish meal preservatives like ethoxyquin. It does not have to be listed on a label as many manufacturers buy fish meal preserved with ethoxyquin from someone else. Since the final product ingredient list does not require full list of sub-ingredients, such toxic ingredients make their sneaky way into the final product.

Will you take a moment and read your pet's food ingredient list?

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Monthly drawing! Leave a comment and win some goodies!

Every month we will announce a drawing for a pet related product. To be entered into the drawing all you need to do is to leave a comment, that's all! Either on our Facebook page or here - leave a comment, we just want you to come back to one of our pages every month, check the news, and stay in touch!


Leave a comment here to be entered into a drawing and win a free* 13oz can of dog food, or 5 oz can of cat food! All you need to do is to post a comment - what do you have to loose? Winner will be announced on May 31 and contacted via email. 
*shipping and taxes are not included

Enjoy!

What pet foods Procter and Gamble own?

Do you know who owns a popular commercial brand of pet food? Here's the list as of today.

Nutro, Royal Canin, Cesar, Goodlife Recipe, Pedigree are owned by Mars.

Iams, Eukanuba, Innova, Innova EVO, California Natural, Karma and Healthwise are owned by Procter and Gamble.

Hill’s Science Diet and Hill’s Prescription Diet - by Colgate Palmolive.

Purina, Purina ONE, ProPlan, Friskies, Beneful, Alpo are owned by Nestle.

Natures Recipe is owned by Heinz.

If you feed your pet any of these brands, after you read the post, will you continue feed them?
 

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Lost pets and ways to find them

An article How to Find a Lost Pet gives us steps to follow if a pet is lost.

If you have trouble finding a pet try a new innovative service (link below). They will call all your neighbors with the description of a pet and a phone # to contact if somebody sees your pet roaming the streets. They claim to successfully recover many animals.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Pet Insurance Reviews

This pet insurance company (Embrace, banner below) has great reviews and rated 9.2 out of 10, good sign. I think these guys are worth checking out.


If you want to find out how other companies and plans compare, check
Pet Insurance Review website  

When on their site, click "Dog Insurance" or "Cat Insurance" on the left to see the complete list of what's available for your pet. 

Saturday, March 5, 2011

What do you know about pet nutrition?

Humans are typically responsible when it comes to what they eat. People are curious about the quality of their foods and quantities they should not over-consume. They look into diets and foods that lower cholesterol, reduce pain, make them look and feel good. Many shop at "Whole Paycheck" store (sorry, Whole Foods, great store, but not everyone can afford the prices).

In times of convenience, fast foods on every corner, and processed foods people have choices in all forms and sizes. Foods sold in stores are regulated by FDA and supposed to be safe and healthy.

Still, almost everyone wants to know what they eat. People pay attention to labels checking the nutrition analysis data, and read the ingredient lists on foods before they buy a product they think is right for them. People educate themselves all the time on what is good and what is not good to eat. They understand the foods a man eats make a man, and foods are also their medicine - if used correctly, many diseases can be prevented or reversed.

When it comes to food, humans have choices, pets do not. They eat what we feed them. But do we feed them right foods?

Best news about human nutrition - we all are omnivores. Meaning our digestive system is set up to digest and work on both plant and animal material. We have both sharp and flat teeth, we can chop and grind. Good for us.

Dogs and cats can't grind. They do not have flat teeth. They do not chew their food even. Why? They are carnivores. Animals that stock, chase and catch their pray, kill it with their sharp teeth, rip pieces of flesh off, swallow chinks of it. And then digest it for hours, felling full and happy.

You may say "No! My baby Yorkie is not a carnivore. She is not a bloody killer. She does not even like raw meat!" She is a carnivore, but why she does not eat raw chicken?

Thanks to commercial diets and claims their foods are "Best for Your Pet", about 40 years ago kibble foods emerged. Full of material that carnivore animal can not digest or absorb, kibble makers created a mix of flavored-popcorn-type feed plus more fillers and some chemicals on top. The result confuses any carnivore's taste bud till today.

Foods that were far from the original meat-based diet became so attractive to dogs and cats due to flavor and taste enchantments, and so convenient for their human to feed, that there is barely a household out there that has not fed their pets this stuff. And when you offer your Yorkie a piece of raw chicken, she turns her nose because her natural instincts are tranquilized by chemicals and her taste buds are spoiled by flavors. Raw chicken does not smell or taste anything like her favorite Iams.

Pets do not have a choice when it comes to their diet. They do not have a fridge full of goodies waiting for them. They eat what YOU put in their bowl.

People who own a pet have to make a wise choice in regards of a proper, species-appropriate diet for theor pet. If they trust a TV commercial for next generation of "improved diet", their pets are very likely to have, or will have some sort of disease. Wild animals do not have arthritis, diabetes, food allergies, diarrhea, sensitive stomach, anxiety, and many other issues that are so common nowadays in house pets. The main difference is the food they eat.

To be a responsible pet owner you need to have some knowledge of pet nutrition. Simplest thing to do is to see what your pet's wild relatives eat in the wild. Your dog is build the same as a wolf, a coyote, or a Tasmanian devil.  Your cat is the same miniature tiger. Inside. Tamed, but still a tiger.

Outside they can look different in size and shape due to artificial selection (breeding that retains a certain feature over generations), but not a single dog or cat yet has evolved to eat a plant based diet. The artificial selection did not effect carnivores' digestion.

Do not rely on veterinarians that generally are not educated in pet nutrition. Many sell prescription diets at their offices and learn about pet nutrition at few day seminars held by Hill's Prescription Diet makers. Veterinarians are financially interested to sell their product, and many unfortunately do not want to look into natural needs of dogs and cats to eat unprocessed raw and grain free foods.

Seek information from all sources and look at basics - what type of food your pet's digestive system is made to work on?

If you are a horse owner, you do not feed it raw fish. If you had a seal, you would not feed it hay, would you? Why so many people think it is OK to feed corn, wheat, soy, beet pulp and rice hulls to a dog???

Look for my next post titled.... "Step 1. READ THE LABEL."

Till soon!

Natalia Foster
Owner of Pet Health Store
www.healthyproductscolorado.com


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