Quote:
Originally Posted by Kazz
Debated as to if to say this or not but here goes.
My old cat Oscar had Chronic Renal Faliure. CRF for short. And was prescribed the "special food" but he would not eat it. His sister who was fine ate it.....however Oscar would not I decided not to feed him that and anything he ate was a bonus (obviously not dried food) but he ate an assortment ie wet food (various types) as he kept going off them, fresh meat always roasted/grilled and fed warm, chicken, lamb, turkey, duck, tinned salmon and pilchards/mackrel, lots of variety including offal liver kidney etc etc, he also had cod, plaice and other fresh fish in other words anything at all that tempted him and he ate was fine by me.
I decided, that was my choice.
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I can understand exactly what you did and why - I am much in the same vein of thought. What age was your boy?
I have thought long and hard and agonised over this. It is as you say, they eat a food for a bit and then go off it. Ive been doing a fair bit of research today into food both for renal animals and human. Im still not confident at all with all the vitamins + nutrients that renal dogs need but I am going to have a go at cooking for her, although it will be part raw with the tripe
This evening she got quarter tin of K/D, diced cooked potato, cooked chicken with the skin on + some raw tripe and she cleared her dish. Im not sure about the potato [carbs] but at the end of the day its better she eats than not. Ive boiled a batch of eggs - they can have the white but not the yolk as apparently it is high in phorporous - never knew that
I read somewhere they can have crushed egg shells for the calcium but I want to check into that a bit more.
At the end of the day its not the vets that are trying to feed them. In the beginning the vet was very surprised to hear that Katie was eating the K/D kibble at all so I presume it is common that dogs refuse it
Ive decided all I can do is try cooking for her - there is no cure sadly, all any of us can do is attempt to manage their condition as best we can for as long as we can.