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Reviews Views Date of last review
1 40737 Sun March 5, 2006
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No recommendations None indicated None indicated
1Hills_pup_lamb.jpg


Description: Ingredients:
Lamb meal, brewers rice, rice flour, corn gluten meal, ground wheat, animal fat (preserved with Mixed Tocopherols), dried egg product, dried beet pulp, vegetable oil, natural flavor, flaxseed, taurine, beta-carotene, minerals (dicalcium phosphate, potassium chloride, iodized salt, ferrous sulfate, zinc oxide, copper sulfate, manganous oxide, calcium iodate, sodium selenite), vitamins (choline chloride, vitamin A supplement, vitamin D3 supplement, vitamin E supplement, ascorbic acid [a source of vitamin C], niacin, thiamine, calcium pantothenate, pyridoxine hydrochloride, riboflavin, folic acid, biotin, vitamin B-12 supplement).

Guaranteed Analysis:
Crude Protein (minimum) 27%
Crude Fat (minimum) 18%
Moisture (maximum) 10%
Crude Fiber (maximum) 1.9%



Editors

Registered: October 2005
Posts: 3953
Review Date: Sun March 5, 2006 Would you recommend the product? No | Price you paid?: Not Indicated | Rating: 0 

 
Pros: First ingredient is a named meat product.
Cons: Insufficient meat content, low quality grains and fat of unidentifiable origin, other controversial filler.

The first ingredient is a named meat product, in meal form. This is the sole meat product in the food.


The primary grain is brewers rice - a low quality grain and by-product. Rice flour, the third ingredient, is a grain fragment and filler.


Corn gluten meal is another low quality ingredient. Corn is a problematic grain that is difficult for dogs to digest and thought to be the cause of a great many allergy and yeast infection problems. We prefer not to see this used in dog food. The AAFCO definition of corn gluten meal is "the dried residue from corn after the removal of the larger part of the starch and germ, and the separation of the bran by the process employed in the wet milling manufacture of corn starch or syrup, or by enzymatic treatment of the endosperm". In plain English, that which remains after all the nutritious bits have been removed.


The 5th ingredient is wheat. The use of wheat is a significant negative: wheat is believed to be the number one cause of allergy problems in dog food. This is another ingredient we prefer not to see used at all in dog food.


Animal fat is a further low quality ingredient and is impossible to determine the source. Unidentified ingredients are usually very low quality. AAFCO define this as "obtained from the tissues of mammals and/or poultry in the commercial processes of rendering or extracting. It consists predominantly of glyceride esters of fatty acids and contains no additions of free fatty acids. If an antioxidant is used, the common name or names must be indicated, followed by the words "used as a preservative".


Beet pulp is further filler and a controversial ingredient – it is a by-product, being dried residue from sugar beets which has been cleaned and extracted in the process of manufacturing sugar. It is a controversial ingredient in dog food, claimed by some manufacturers to be a good source of fibre, and derided by others as an ingredient added to slow down the transition of rancid animal fats and causing stress to kidney and liver in the process. We note that beet pulp is an ingredient that commonly causes problems for dogs, including allergies and ear infections, and prefer not to see it used in dog food. There are less controversial products around if additional fibre is required.


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