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Issue 3 - January 2007

In this issue

Natural Feeding - the story behind Joe & Jack's

Joe's Recipe Lamb Stew with Crunchy Croutons

Special Treats for Special Days

Dog Dates for your Diary

Helsbury Park Photo Competition

Chilgrove White Horse 'Cuisine Club' events

Feeding Dogs a Raw Meaty Bone Diet

This month we thought we’d look at what’s on offer in the way of foods, and treats, for your dog.

TV vet Joe Inglis is not just a busy vet – he’s also a keen ‘pet chef’, and he can often be found cooking up a delicious treat for his pets and patients in the kitchen at his Cotswold surgery. He’s developed a range of healthy meals and treats for dogs using his expert veterinary knowledge – and the discerning taste buds of his faithful collie cross, Jack! This month Joe tells us the story behind ‘Joe & Jack’s’ and also has a tasty recipe especially for your dog.

Also in this issue: Jackie Marriott is a woman with a mission – she describes herself as 'a full-time (unpaid) campaigner for raw meaty bones'. Her article ‘Feeding Dogs a Raw Meaty Bone Diet' makes very interesting reading; Helsbury Park invite readers to vote in their photo competition and there's also news of 'Cuisine Club' events which are being held at the Chilgrove White Horse.


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Natural Feeding – the story behind Joe & Jack’s

By TV vet Joe Inglis (with a little help from Jack the collie cross)

As a vet with more than 10 years of small animal experience, I am well aware of the importance of correct nutrition for the well-being of our canine best friends. During my career, I’ve become more and more interested in what we feed our pets, and seen first hand the damage that inappropriate feeding can do to animals. From minor ailments right up to serious health conditions such as skin allergies and obesity, diet is key in so many of the cases I treat today.

picture of Joe & Jack

Much of the blame can attributed to what goes into the foods we feed to our dogs. Rather than ingredients that you or I would feel comfortable eating, too many commercial diets use ingredients such as ‘meat and animal derivatives’ and add in chemical additives such as colours and preservatives. Even those foods which call themselves ‘rich in Chicken’ or ‘with Beef’ often only have a tiny percentage of this meat, with the rest being made up with much cheaper and less healthy protein sources such as soya. With these ingredients being fed to our dogs, it’s not surprising that vets see so many diet-related health problems!

It was with this in mind that I started turning my mind to how we could improve the health of our pets through improving their diets. Initially, I began to create home-cooked recipes for dogs and cats, using the same fresh and healthy ingredients that I eat at home. The results were encouraging, with many clients taking up my recipes and using them as healthy treat meals for their pets – and my own dog Jack thriving in his role as chief recipe taster!

However, home-cooking (or raw food feeding) can only ever be part of the solution, as very few pet owners have the time and inclination to prepare fresh meals for their pets every day. So I decided to see whether I could take the principles of my home-cooked recipes – fresh natural ingredients that I would be happy eating – and turn it into a more convenient food for everyday feeding. ...more...


Joe’s Home-Cooked Recipe Lamb Stew with Crunchy Croutons

There’s nothing quite like this hearty stew for warming the inner dog after he’s been out for a long winter walk. It’s full of healthy veg and low in fat and salt, which makes it another great all-rounder. Best served warm, on a cold day.

To make enough for a pack of hungry hounds, you need:

  • 250g lamb or mutton, diced
  • 1 carrot
  • 1 potato
  • 1 apple
  • 1 cup stale bread

This is one of the easiest recipes around. Simply cover the lamb with cold water in a large pan, bring to the boil and simmer for 1 hour. While this is bubbling away, chop up the carrots, potatoes and apples into rough chunks, and break up the bread into small pieces. Cook the bread in a low oven for half an hour, so that it is crisp but not burnt.

Add the carrot, potato and apple to the lamb after an hour, and simmer it all together for about 7-8 minutes – until the veg are partially cooked but still firm. Then allow to cool, but serve while it is still warm. Mix in the bread croutons at the last minute so they stay crunchy.

Check out Joe's site for more great recipes there's even a couple of very special recipies for you and your dog(s) to share!


Special treats for those special days in your dogs life!

Chatfield Dog Cakes Specialists in celebration cakes for dogs. We're here for the special occasions in your dog's life.

The Dawg's Biscuits Pure, natural and healthy dog treats. No artificial additives or preservatives, at all. Ever.

Barkery Welcome to the Barkery where only the best is good enough for our Very Important Pets.

Mollys Munchies Homemade Dog Treats Baked with Love Magic & Sparkle! New to 2007 Best Buddy Hampers!


If you're a bit of a chatterbox why not join the Dog Friendly Britain Forum?

Dog Dates For Your Diary

Westonbirt Arboretum, Tetbury, Gloucestershire... Dog Days - Saturday 17th & Sunday 18th February 2007 - A celebration of our canine companions including: arena displays; have-a-go agility sessions, traders selling everything for you and your dog. Westonbirt Dog Show is on 17 Febwhile the first regional heat of Scruffts on 18 Feb. Westonbirt Arboretum website

To mark its 18 th year, National Pet Month’s (NPM) theme will be ‘Love is…….’ The month will run from 7th April 2007 to 7th May 2007 and culminate in a special ‘Wet Nose Day’ on 24 th April 2007 – a national day to celebrate pets and encourage people to get involved and raise valuable funds. National Pet Month website

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Picture and link to Hesbury Park

Helsbury Park Photo Competition banner
Picture and link to Hesbury Park

The Great Helsbury Park Photography Competition: Every Vote Counts...

Helsbury Park, the multi award winning dog friendly luxury self catering accommodation in Cornwall, has just released the shortlists for their annual photographic competition. They have identified the best photos in two different categories, Helsbury Dogs and Cornwall Dogs. The Helsbury Dogs category is shots of dogs on the 100 acre estate which includes pasture, woodland and river frontage as well as in the cottages themselves. Cornwall Dogs includes shots of dogs from all over Cornwall at various dog friendly beaches and local attractions. All short listed entries have already won a £50 voucher that can be used against their next stay, and the winner in each category will get a FREE week's holiday at Helsbury Park. All voters will also be entered in a draw for a £50 voucher too!

Picture and link to Hesbury Park

The photos and voting form can be found on their web site at www.helsburypark.co.uk/photo_comp/photo_comp.htm and they would love it if our readers vote for their favourites. For more information on Helsbury Park go to www.helsburypark.co.uk or email info@helsburypark.co.uk.


Picture and link to The Chilgrove White Horse The Chilgrove White Horse has three 'Cuisine Club' events in Jan, Feb and March, with food and wine designed around different regions of France (and don't forget Valentines Night of course!).  With its 600 wines, 2-rosette restaurant, and contemporary rooms, this 1765 restaurant with rooms is designed with relaxation in mind. Four-legged friends can join you in the bar by the open fires. (Weekends can get booked up, even in the winter, with more choice mid week).  Enquire about any of the forthcoming special events, or to simply come and walk the beautiful South Downs.  Tel: (01243 535219).  www.whitehorsechilgrove.co.uk

Did you know you can get your own WebPage from Dog Friendly Britain?

If you have a dog related business but don't yet have a website now is your chance to get your own webpage plus an advert on the Dog Friendly Britain site for the special price of £30 per full year - this offer is available for a limited period. You can include up to 6 pictures plus a full description we'll even give you a few hints & tips on what to include on your webpage. You can either upload all the information yourself or let us do all the work for you. For full information click here!


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Feeding Dogs a Raw Meaty Bone Diet
by Jackie Marriott

Since meeting vet Tom Lonsdale at one of his seminars, I have become a full-time (unpaid) campaigner for raw meaty bones! A few months prior to attending his seminar I had started feeding my Bernese raw minced meat and scrap bones, sort of following the BARF type diets advocated by Ian Billinghurst. It was only after meeting Tom, and then reading his book Raw Meaty Bones, that I realised that firstly, I was doing it all wrong and secondly, I had allowed the majority of the veterinary profession, notably the veterinary associations, as well as the advertising from the multi-billion pound petfood companies, to get away with ‘feeding’ me (and other pet owners) such a load of hogwash about dog/cat food for so long.

Dogs (and cats) thrived on ‘real’ food long before processed was invented - it’s only really in the last 40-50 years that feeding dogs and cats from a can or a packet has been considered the norm.

Having never been comfortable feeding dried foods, I tended to feed our dogs tinned or vacuum packed processed food. I used to think it was normal to be at the vet every few weeks with one of my (then) five Bernese. Itchy ears, runny eyes, skin problems, upset tummies, teeth cleaning etc etc. I often joked with my vet about how a Bernese would be an ideal dog for vets to own! Over the years many serious health issues occurred - each time leaving me feeling so angry that our lovely breed were so beset with problems, and we had them for far too short a time.

Listening to Tom was the proverbial life-changing experience and since then my dogs have been fed the carnivorous diet that they have evolved to eat. The difference in their health has been staggering. The difference in financial terms is equally amazing - I hardly ever need to take any of my dogs to the vet. Their teeth are clean, their breath doesn’t smell (we’ve all heard the term ‘dog breath’), their skin doesn’t smell ‘doggy’ - all things which so many people accept as normal. They look superb and have natural energy by the bucket load. They ‘work’ at their food, unlike dried, tinned or even minced raw, which is slurped down in seconds. I’m hopeful that as they progress into middle age, they will not develop the kidney problems, cancers etc that all my other dogs have died from.

So what is wrong with processed food? Most importantly, and aside from the fact that the food is cooked and full of artificial colours, additives and flavour enhancers, it is the size and texture of the food which is totally wrong to feed an animal designed, anatomically, physiologically and psychologically, from mouth to tail-tip, to rip, tear, crush and digest whole raw prey. Mankind has changed the external appearance of dogs, to create all the various breeds, but internally they are still the same as their wild ancestors.

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That's all for for now folks!

Best wishes from Ann & Jenny and, of course, Cassie & Sammie

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