Want to Feed the Best Diet for Your Dog, But Don’t Know How?
Now there is a fast and easy way to learn!
Check out Lew Olson’s easy-to-follow, on-line course videos!
Read on to learn about Canine Nutrition
and preparing Raw and Home Cooked Diets!
Now there is a fast and easy way to learn!
Check out Lew Olson’s easy-to-follow, on-line course videos!
Read on to learn about Canine Nutrition
and preparing Raw and Home Cooked Diets!
It is becoming more and more common to hear people talk about their dogs having ‘allergies’, ‘food sensitivities’ and ‘sensitive stomachs’, and how these ailments are oftentimes accompanied by odd sores, redness and itching, poor coat and skin, with occasional diarrhea and defy diagnosis! Although I have addressed these…
When a dog has ongoing symptoms of diarrhea, gas, and occasional vomiting, this is often diagnosed as Irritable Bowel Disease (IBD). The best description of this is that the lining of the intestinal tract has become inflamed. This causes the food to shoot through the digestive tract, which in turn,…
For several years, the January B-Naturals newsletter has been a reference newsletter that contains compiled qualified and resourceful canine nutrition information by category. We consider this a great 'one-stop' resource when you need or want to find specific information on a health issue. As Lew writes to you each month…
Of all the questions I am asked, one of the most common is "What supplements should I add to my dog's diet?" This question is asked regardless of what type of diet the dog is being fed. Whether you are feeding a raw diet, a home-cooked diet or a commercial…
How can I be sure the diet is balanced?
That answer is easy enough! Just make sure to add 900 milligrams of calcium to the diet. You can use carbonate, calcium citrate or ½ teaspoon of ground eggshells per pound of food fed to your home-cooked meals. Design the recipes to be at least 75% animal-based protein and 25% low-sugar (low-glycemic) cooked and mashed carbohydrates.
For raw diets, feed half the diet in raw meaty bones and half in animal protein with a slight amount of liver or kidney added.
Lew Olson started sharing her canine health information to her readers in the form of Newsletters in 1997 and over the past 23 years, she has shared 215 of them with her readers. This month we compiled and organized Lew’s Newsletters into in alphabetized categories. We have done this a couple of times over the past two decades because it provides Lew’s readers an easy and convenient way to find their topics of interest quickly and easily.