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Excerpts from an article written by Elliott B. Weiss, a professional handler and conditioner of show dogs for over 25 years.  Mr. Weiss is a recognized authority on judging all breeds at international dog shows. Mr. Weiss does not specifically recommend any product - only his professional opinion.
Permission received from the author. 

Elliott Weiss:  I will be stating my personal opinion of feeding, exercising and maintaining coat condition on show dogs.  What I have come to call... the inside and outside of show conditioning.

The Inside:  "I believe show and coat condition is a direct reflection of what we feed our dogs.  Their condition outside is a result of what we put inside.  Over the years I have tried every dog food fad that has come and gone, and most of the current extruded or pressed types.  None of them produced results that satisfied me.  I have never been able to keep a dog in what I consider top condition by feeding anything other than a top quality KIBBLED biscuit mixed with meat and a fatty acid supplement.  It is a lot less expensive to extrude or press dog food than to bake or "kibble" it.

When all the major manufacturers of dog food did their market research, the number one concern of the public was that their dogs have hard stools that are easy to clean up.  They answered this public demand by adding ingredients to dog food that in my opinion are better suited to feed cattle than our dogs.  The side affects of the dog food companies solution to cutting production costs (extruding) and satisfying the number one concern of their public marketing survey are in direct conflict with this dog persons requirements for show conditioning.  It may be more costly to produce a baked or kibbled food, but the process appears to do something that allows the dogs digestive system to better absorb the necessary nutrients from the food.  With proper exercise and feeding a kibbled dog food, I have been able to maintain dogs in good weight and proper muscle tone.  I have not been able to do this feeding a pressed or extruded food.


Today I know that our dogs have a harder time digesting starches than we do.  The baking process makes the food easier for your dogs to digest by changing hard to digest starches into easy to digest dextrins.  Yes, baking dog food is more expensive, but the results I see in dogs condition certainly justify the additional cost.

The Outside:  There is nothing that is put on the outside (hair or skin) that is going to make the coat grow.  Second, to maintain coat, it must be kept clean and pliable.  Hair is an inside job, nothing but nothing, put on the outside is going to make it grow any faster or any better.  A dog's coat conditioned from within is pliable and therefore more durable and easier to maintain.

Try this: one one dog for a two month period.  Feed an all-natural premium kibbled biscuit.  Find one whose ingredients say:  chicken meal, lamb meal, NOT chicken by-products or pultry by-products.  Moisten with a little hot water and adding a small handful of raw meat, beef or lamb heart is excellent, organ meats are fine except for liver because it is a detoxifying organ.  Add a fatty acid supplement directly to the food.  In my opinion the very best product is cold pressed flax seed oil.  My second choice would be sunflower oil.  For a large dog give eight tablespoons daily for the first three weeks, then drop to five.  The diet will first appear to be much more costly, but give it eight to ten weeks and then tell a fellow dog person the results you see.

Some Additional Great Sources!:

What's the Best Dog Food for your Money? - From the Dog Food Book, Nan Weitzman & Ross Becker

Feline Health Center - From Cornell University

Pet Food Labels: A Misnomer? by Terri Symonds Grow



Increasing you pets longevity

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