Tags:
I feed neither. Corgi's should be on an all life stages food. Since it is good for big or small dogs, puppies and adults. The deal with Corgi's is that as puppies they shouldn't be on puppy food and on an all life stages food or big dog puppy food. I just prefer all life stages since I won't have to switch to anything else as she grows. For food brands that have a good ALS food I prefer Orijen, Acana, Fromms, and Evangers.
No, they don't. Many have smaller kibble sizes, which is the ONLY real difference between most large and small breed dog foods.
12.8 lbs is pretty tiny for a corgi but I would still just feed a regular adult or ALS food personally.
I'm not a huge fan of Blue Buffalo. I would look at Dogfoodadvisor.com and pick a good 5 star ALS food. You'll see loads better results from a high quality food than a anything you'd find at a big box store like Petco.
They've had some recalls and for the money you pay for Blue I can buy a grain free 5 star food that hasn't had any recalls (aka Acana). Plus I've seen lots of dogs do poorly on it. Our pet store doesn't sell many of the bigger brands like Diamond, TOTW, Blue, ect because their standards are really strict. Blue doesn't meet their standards. I'm also not a huge fan of anything made by Diamond Pet Foods since their of poor quality.
Having seen a number of discussions on here about large breed dog food and such, I asked my vet about puppy chow. She was adamant that all puppies, regardless of breed or size, should be on puppy formulated chow. Nemo is on Fromm's Puppy Gold (the same chow his breeder had him on).
Well, your vet is wrong. I've talked to many breeders of corgi's and my own vets. They both think corgi's should be on ALS food. The reason is that they need to grow at a slower rate and the higher phosphorus and clacium in puppy food can make them grow too quickly. Which causes them to become in pain or worse, deformed. My breeder said corgi's should be moved from puppy food at 9 weeks old. I'm going to trust her since she's current on her breed needs and information and has been breeding corgi's for over 35 years.
My breeder has bred for over 30 years, has done a lot of winning, has healthy dogs, and feeds a large-breed puppy food. :-) There are lots of opinions out there.
I agree that my vet is probably not that familiar with corgis. She said something that made it sound like she thought they are "small" dogs. And while I respect a professionals opinion, I'm currently feeding him based on my breeder's recommendations. She has been breeding corgis for 30 years and came recommended by other breeders in the region. I
© 2024 Created by Sam Tsang. Powered by