They eat the gut of the prey first. If you saw corn in the scat, it didn't digest then.
Yup. Corn and apples in the prey will end up in the pred.

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They eat the gut of the prey first. If you saw corn in the scat, it didn't digest then.
When buying dog food, try to buy a feed that has grains in it. Ones that are grain-free are actually causing more harm.
There is a lot of misinformation out there about this. I belong to a training club and we had a guest speaker veterinary researcher talk about this at one of our club meetings (it was his field of research). Here is the gist of his (long) lecture:Can you please link to the data that proves this? I've read articles that debunk it.
Your dogs are gorgeousI suggest you look into it further. Most vets have no training in nutrition. And what they do have is usually provided by companies that offer horrible quality food.
This article has links embedded in it. Have a read.
https://medium.com/@danielschulof_1...ggest-pet-food-story-in-a-decade-5cdafae7be77
When you think about how the ancestors of the domestic dogs eat, feeding them grains makes little sense. I've never once seen a fox, coyote or wolf raiding a wheat field.
I adopted this gorgeous gal a little less than a year ago. She was being fed Purina One. When I got her, she was over weight, stunk (not dirty dog smell just a bad smell to her and she's not the first dog I've taken in with that funky smell to them that had been fed Purina) and her coat was dull.
I switched her over to a raw diet and then switched to Orijen because I just couldn't keep up with the work of feeding raw with everything else I have going on. I highly recommend both of these feeds but the OP was specific about not recommending raw as her parents wouldn't do that and the Orijen line is one of the most expensive kibble dog foods on the market. I drop $95 for the original formula and up to $137 for the Tundra formula and two more price points in between for 25# bags of food. All three dogs eat it. Not many people are willing to spend that kind of money on dog food. For this household, health and nutrition are number one priorities so I forego other non-essential things and put that money towards the grocery budget instead.
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She is not wet in this picture. She just gleams in the sun.
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I had no idea they're owned by Diamond. I thought I had done my research on Taste of the Wild (they haven't had a recall in a few years) but never came across their connection. Hmmmm gonna go google now.I was very interested in the Taste of the Wild brand, but the fact that they are owned by Diamond really wigs me out with the recall history.
I hate the lack of transparency with the companies as to who is really making their foods. I have read of some general discourses amongst some people about Blue Buffalo being bought out by.. General Mills, I believe? So far I have had no problems, knock on wood.It has been awhile since I have checked but this was the first answer...
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I'm really surprised because I don't like Diamond after everything terrible I've read.
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Ughhhh