Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
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I agree. Free-feeding may work for some, but I really believe that it creates more problems, and makes the dog even less interested in food.
I agree that it might not work for everyone but like Maci, Bentley is not very interested in food. If I put food out in the morning he doesn't usually go to eat until the evening. He's been like that since he was a puppy, and we used to take it up after 15 minutes but then he would NEVER have eaten. So it works for us.
ooooo. I didn't read. You have 2 dogs! got it
I'm not trying to convince you to stop free-feeding since it works for you and Bentley, but here's the thing: eventually, I can promise you that he would have eaten. By the second or third day, he would have been so hungry, he would have immediately eaten anything that was set before him, lol. I'm pretty sure that there is no case on record of normal, healthy dog who refused to eat until he starved himself to death. :)
I understand! I know he would never starve but that's why I don't worry now. But he is my first dog, so I did worry when he was a puppy. The only way he ate was if I put his food in a treat ball and he would push the ball around and eat that way. He still does that sometimes now. Some days he eats, others days not much but at least now I don't worry.
I know most dont, but I have never had an over weight dog, and I have always done the free-feed method. This might go with Karen's reasoning, it might make them less interested, not over weight.
You might try rotating a couple of the Acana Regionals formulas, something different might get her a bit more interested. But I honestly wouldn't worry if the vet thinks she's at a healthy weight. Thin is good; they get heavier as they get older. The only way to increase her calories if she isn't interested in kibble would be to add toppers, and then you run the risk of creating a monster who won;t eat kibble at all, lol.
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