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We’ve all seen it on TV and printed in magazines. Advertisements for commercially manufactured, highly processed cans and bags of unhealthy pet food.
Such ads have become a fixture in our media, an integral aspect of our culture for decades. They always seem to depict the happiest, most contented people, along with the healthiest looking, most beautiful, vibrant, clear-eyed, glossy coated, friendly, lovable and adorable cats and dogs imaginable.
Nothing could be further from the truth!
These advertisements, while seemingly innocuous, are actually extremely sophisticated in terms of the ways in which they’re designed to appeal very powerfully to our subconscious nature, so as to coerce us into purchasing the products they’re pushing.
They often anthropomorphize animals, causing us to identify with our pets even more closely than we already do. The ads sometimes also strive to convince us that the kinds of foods that are appealing to and/or perhaps healthy for us are also good for our animal friends to eat.
The Ploy of “Delicious” Pet Food
Many pet food ads also make a big point of focusing on how delectable their products are, driving home the point of how much our pets absolutely love and crave the taste of them. Since these ads are obviously not meant for the animals themselves to watch, it’s almost as if the advertisers are trying to make our human mouths water with the kinds of graphic descriptions they use to convince us of just how incredibly yummy and delicious these pet foods really are!
Besides the irresistible flavor of the products they’re promoting, these ads also often describe the ingredients pet foods contain as being utterly wholesome, exceptionally nutritious, and totally geared toward promoting the good health of our pets.
Pet food commercials often give us a very warm, fuzzy, comforting feeling. They can be very effective at engendering in us a sense of safety and security as if to convince us wholeheartedly that the products they’re selling are a really good, solid, nourishing foundation upon which the health of our pets can be built. These ads can make us feel that if we buy the products they’re selling and feed them to our pets, that by doing so we’re taking the best care possible of our beloved furry friends. The ads lead us to believe that by feeding our animals their particular brand of products, we’re making the best choice possible to ensure the good health and longevity of our precious, beloved animal companions.
Pet Food Is All About Branding
We get ‘branded’ when we get sold on a brand and plunk down our hard earned money to buy that particular one.
And yet despite how effectively these pet food ads evoke such feelings in us — feelings of being so safe and secure, so good about ourselves, and so comforted in the notion that the products they’re convincing us to buy are such a good healthy choice for our pets to eat on a daily basis – the real and startlingly contradictory truth underlying the pet food industry at large is a subject about which the vast majority of people remain quite blissfully unaware.
Most people have no idea that virtually all of what goes into those cans and bags of pet food are vast amounts of waste products – many of which are pretty darn nasty – that are left over from the manufacture of food for human consumption.
Another significant portion of the ingredients used in the manufacture of commercial pet food is derived from genetically modified grain crops, particularly soy and corn, which are virtually always heavily sprayed with toxic petrochemical pesticides and herbicides, and grown in depleted soils treated with synthetic fertilizers.
I believe the term “junk pet food,” which is the phrase I use to describe commercially manufactured pet food, was coined by Australian veterinarian Dr. Tom Lonsdale. He’s the author of two books about raw feeding for pets, entitled Work Wonders and Raw Meaty Bones.
The reason I call it junk is because after doing a great deal of research and digging very deeply into this subject, it has become abundantly evident to me that the majority of these pet food products are of extremely – nay, shockingly – poor quality. In fact when it comes to providing the kind of nourishment our carnivorous companions truly require to thrive, the vast majority of these pet foods fail miserably, and many, in my opinion, are downright dreadful.
That many pets can even survive at all on a lifelong diet of such abysmal junk food is truly a remarkable yet tragic testament to their incredible resilience and adaptability.
We who are interested in learning about, purchasing and preparing the most nutrient dense, wholesome foods possible for ourselves and our families, are all too well aware of what a profoundly deleterious effect the consumption of poor quality, highly processed junk food can have on our human health.
Pet Food Leads to Chronic Pet Ill Health
Well, the same is true for our furry friends. And the epidemic of chronic ill health in the form of debilitating ailments such as periodontal disease, obesity, diabetes, cancer, etc. etc. in the junk pet food-fed domestic pet population is surely a telling parallel.
So just what are the dirty secrets of the junk pet food industry? The most disturbing, nitty-gritty details, which are beyond the scope of this piece, can be found by reading several online resources that are linked at the end of this post.
To provide an overview here, what’s most important to know is that the bulk of ingredients used in most commercial pet foods come from places called rendering plants. Rendering plants are facilities designed to process a wide variety of leftover waste products, a number of which are quite unspeakable, and most of which are derived from the production of food for human consumption.
Here’s a partial list of items that are routinely sent to, and processed by, rendering plants. Even the cheapest homemade dog food or cat chow would be light years better than this!
- Slaughterhouse wastes, including almost all portions of animals that are not generally considered to be fit for human consumption, such as heads, hides, spines, hooves and diseased body parts
- Diseased, disabled, dying or dead livestock deemed unfit for human consumption, aka 4D animals
- Expired meats from grocery stores, including their plastic and styrofoam packaging
- rancid, overcooked oils drained from fryolators, and filthy grease from grease traps from fast food and other restaurants
- The bodies of domestic cats and dogs that have been euthanized, sometimes right along with flea and tick collars still attached around their necks
- Road kill, YES ROAD KILL!
Rendering plants take the above sorts of items and throw them all into a giant auger to pulverize them.
The resulting ‘soup’ is cooked at extremely high temperatures, surely at least in part to kill off all the potentially harmful bacteria, pathogens and parasites that may be lingering on dead, rotting flesh. However this very high heat also destroys much of whatever nutritional value the stuff may have ever had to begin with. Then the fat is rendered off, and what’s left is made into various products that are known by the euphemistic terms we’re used to seeing on pet food ingredients lists.
If you haven’t already, I would strongly encourage everyone reading this post who is concerned about the health of our pets to start reading pet food labels.
Here’s a partial list of suspect ingredients that come from rendering plants:
- meat by-products
- chicken by-product meal
- meat meal
- meat and bone meal
- animal digest
- animal fat (often treated with things like BHA and/or citric acid)
Also, notice how many junk pet food ingredients listed on the label are grain based, such as corn, soy, wheat, rice, sorghum or barley etc.
As you begin to notice how many grain based ingredients are contained in these products, please bear in mind that dogs and cats are carnivorous animals whose bodies were never designed to consume grains in any appreciable quantities.
For those of you interested in learning the details, below are links to several relevant web pages and articles that delve even more deeply into this troubling subject:
http://www.rawfedcats.org/toxic.htm
http://www.homevet.com/index.php/diet-discussion/item/315-an-excerpt-from-the-book-food-pets-die-for
http://www.examiner.com/article/the-ultimate-recycling-the-rendering-industry
Sources and More Information
Katrina
In researching healthier food options for our cat I stumbled across your site. An earlier site I was on stated that it can take months or even a year to safely transition a cat to raw food. Currently my cat is eating an “all natural” brand of dry food that I thought was good for him. Are there any brands that you can suggest to use during the transition from dry to wet and wet to raw? I can’t find anything and have spent days looking into it.
Linda Zurich
The length of time it can take to transition any one cat to raw inevitably varies depending on the individual animal, so there’s really no way to say for sure how long it will take your particular kitty to make the switch.
I personally do not ever make recommendations on any brands of commercial pet food, however those products containing any sort of grains (or other starchy plant based fillers) are no doubt the worst, so reading labels is important.
It’s also worth noting here that some kibble fed cats do not need the interim step of switching to canned (wet) food prior to making the switch to raw, so why not start implementing the suggestions in the Practical Guide section of my site as soon as you’re ready and see how things unfold from there?
Bryan @ Acana
I like this! Do you have any pets or would consider doing a recipe for dog and cat food!! I like many of your recipes for humans! You surely could come up with a recipe for pet food! Thanks!
Bryan
Sue Huss
I feed my dogs a healthy homemade recipe but my cats will only eat garbage like fancy feast. They were strays so obviously raised on this not so good pet food.
dr. Munib Smajić
In Sarajevo, capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina, wandering the streets more than 11,000. dogs. The same situation exists in other cities in Bosnia and Hercegovina. Most of this dogs were leave by their owners and thrown into the street because of the poor financial condition. The state of Bosnia and Herzegovina do any help for dogs.
Organization for animal protection Bosnia Dogs collects food and cares for dogs. The living conditions of the dogs in the shelter are desperately poor. Most food purchased from your donations, and we try to create favorable conditions for their life in shelters for dogs. The rest of foods we collect at restaurants, kitchens and other places.
The living conditions of dogs on the streets and in shelters for dogs follow at our Facebook page.
800th dogs live in very poor conditions. Necessity foods for a day is the 400th pounds Monthly needs is 12000th pounds of food. Foods for these dogs have only thanks to your donations. Small donation for these dogs is very helpful. Please, Donate if you want to survive these dogs.
Visit our site. Thank you.
Your donation and the public announcement of the donation we obtained also promote your company and your products.
izzy
(heard this before just didn’t know what to swich to) THANK YOU though, not a lot of people care enough to write something like this. (: a lot of people only care about their own pets ( or hate animals.) (I’m crazy about my pets! )
izzy
I was wondering if you knew of or could list some good dog foods / recipes. (sorry if you did already. I didn’t want to have to read 1000 comments to find it)
Linda Zurich
Here you go!
http://www.rawfeddogs.net/Recipes/
Linda Zurich
The products on that Maverick website look to be highly processed and ground into mush.
Feeding domestic pets a diet of whole raw foods is much preferable and infinitely more natural and healthful than feeding them processed, mushy ground and/or cooked pet food products.
For myth-busting information on the so-called bacterial ‘dangers’ of feeding pets raw, check out this article:
http://rawfed.com/myths/zoonotic.html
Just out of curiosity, Karen, do you by any chance have a financial stake in the Maverick Pet Foods Company and/or Nature’s Kitchen Dog Food?
Karen
I was introduced to Maverick Dog Food products. It is a new company in the United States. Its USDA Grade A (ONLY USA) products are catching on fast. There is no soy, wheat, corn, or perservatives of any sort in the food, NOT EVEN SALT. They flash freeze their products. Check out their website. Everything is listed. The factory is in South Florida. I have my 85 year old dad living with me so I don’t want Raw in the house at this time. They have a lightly cooked product called Nature’s Kitchen (A complete balanced meal.) Their Genesis Raw is also a complete meal. Their products are “spreading” across the U.S. into the natural dog food boutiques. My dogs don’t come up for air. Check them out.
Stephanie Sorensen
Don’t you cook for yourself and possibly your father? What is the difference between the raw meat you cook for your human family and the raw you would give to your dog? Is it not brought into your house raw before you cook it?
This is just out of curiosity – not trying to attack you in any way!
Mans best friend
That is so wickedly disgusting. I knew that the stuff that they call “cat and dog food” was junk but I didnt know that it was absolutely horrific such as this. This is Soylent Green for dogs and cats!!!!!!!! Thank you for this article, I hope it will help more people to wake up.