My corgi Franklin has always been a super skinny little guy. Recently I took him to the vet and we weighed him in and he gained 5 pounds since his last visit!! For Franklin that is a good thing, BUT now he is at an ideal weight and I want to make sure he doesn't gain another 5 pounds! The only thing I can think of that has changed is switching his protein source in his food (from Wilderness Duck to Wilderness Salmon), and he now gets a few more treats (i.e. one stuffed Kong or a rawhide). Upon further investigation I found that the Salmon formula has 415 k/cals per cup where Duck had 410 k/cals per cup (he has been getting 2 cups a day for his entire life and has not gained weight until the last 3 months or so). So my question is this.....does 5 k/cals per cup really make that big of a difference? Also, in your best guess, what would 1 rawhide be equivalent to either calorie-wise or cup-wise? I've been searching and can't find any answers. I want to reduce his food on the days he gets a rawhide or a Kong but I don't know how much to reduce it. When I stuff a Kong he gets 1/5 of a Jumbone (which I know is pretty much pure sugar, that's why I sawed them into 5ths) and some peanut butter around the edges, occasionally he will get a cooked lasagna noodle instead of peanut butter. He also gets AT LEAST 45 min of offleash runtime a day.
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Every dog's metabolism is different, besides their gender, physical health and activity level, their age also play an important factor.
When my dogs were around your Franklin's age, they had 2 cups for the longest time and did very well, they are 7 now, Mocha eats 1 cup and Vienna eats 3/4 cup, she gains weight easily yet she is the active one with longer stamina.
2 years ago I had 2 foster corgi brothers and they were 10 + lbs overweight, as you can see in the photo comparison, besides the physcial difference from my pack, they also snored REAL loud, due to the excess fat around their neck collapse around the trachea, when you don't sleep well, you don't recuperate as well after exercise = slow weight loss.
I'll say get a human step on scale, carry them and weight yourself weekly for 1 month, if Franklin continue to gain at a rapid rate, cut down the treats, peanut butter and other dense calorie food. Franklin looks like a petite frame corgi, he looks awesome from your pics :)
By the way, I have calculated the calories in the food down into portions (quarter-cup, etc) and try to find the calories of extra food they get (yogurt or eggs or whatever) and reduce the amount of food by the same amount of calories as the add-in.
However, mine both gained weight when I started adding salmon or sardines to their food a couple times a week. Could be a coincidence, but not all the calories in kibble are necessarily digested (since dogs don't necessarily utilize grains the same way we do) and it could be that the higher protein in the fish packs on some pounds. Not really sure, and I have no science to back that up. :)
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