Be educated about what the terms used on
dog food labels actually mean.
Not exact matches
Perhaps one of the more important parts of choosing the right type of
dog food is to
actually read the ingredients
label.
Learn to read
dog food labels carefully and consider rotating or changing from a few different brands so your
dog is not always eating the same
food every meal, which can
actually cause a
food sensitivity to develop.
You will find many products
labeled as limited ingredient
dog food that
actually contain way more than the recommended ingredients.
Reading the list of ingredients on the
label is the best way to discover if a
dog food is
actually healthy or not.
Watch those «low fat» and «weight management»
labels on
dog food, as they could
actually be laden with unnecessary weight loading carbs.
This means the wet
dog food actually has a minimum protein content of 40 % and not 10 % as printed on the
label.
Feeding your companion natural
dog food instead of a cheap generic formula full of unhealthy additives may seem more expensive but in most cases if you pay close attention to the
labeled feeding requirements on both brands and compare, you may notice sometimes you're
actually saving more than you're aware.
waste money on the «best»
dog food where you need to trust the big corporations that they're
actually using the ingredients they say (and close your eyes to whatever extras they put in and don't need to
label, or «forget» to
label)