:lol3: Love that title.
Sorry - keep forgetting to post this!
OK - so it is ONE dog. Totally not controlled - but I love this. It's one of those raw feeding myths that we can't find any basis in fact, yet we all have repeated it. So a vet decided to challenge it.
But ... doesn't it make sense that kibble would digest faster? Anything ground up tends to digest faster. And we know from human nutrition that carbs digest faster than protein. So ... :dk:
http://therawfeedingcommunity.com/2015/01/08/digest-this-kibble-may-actually-digest-faster-than-raw/
*I* wouldn't want to feed kibble with raw other than during a transition because I don't want to feed kibble - and there are concerns the kibble may be contaminated with bacteria.
But for those that want to feed kibble and raw - go ahead. Don't worry about the timing. If your kitty gets an upset stomach or gas - then yes, separate them.
Sorry - keep forgetting to post this!
OK - so it is ONE dog. Totally not controlled - but I love this. It's one of those raw feeding myths that we can't find any basis in fact, yet we all have repeated it. So a vet decided to challenge it.
But ... doesn't it make sense that kibble would digest faster? Anything ground up tends to digest faster. And we know from human nutrition that carbs digest faster than protein. So ... :dk:
http://therawfeedingcommunity.com/2015/01/08/digest-this-kibble-may-actually-digest-faster-than-raw/
*I* wouldn't want to feed kibble with raw other than during a transition because I don't want to feed kibble - and there are concerns the kibble may be contaminated with bacteria.
But for those that want to feed kibble and raw - go ahead. Don't worry about the timing. If your kitty gets an upset stomach or gas - then yes, separate them.
Last edited: