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The Castor and Pollux Organix you listed looks like it's 26% protein which would probably be fine. Blue Buffalo also has a regular adult food which is around that protein level too I believe. I know the choices seem endless! I tried a higher protein Wellness formula a while back and Henry just didn't do well on it, soft poops and absolutely AWFUL gas, lol, so I switched to Fromm's Four Star Nutritionals all life stages food for both dogs and I've been very happy with it.
Just so you know, from the Dog Food Advisor's own website, he's not an animal nutritionist or a vet or anything else that makes him an expert. How he determines if something is 3 or 4 or 5 stars is something I'm not sure of. I have yet to see any studies that show that potatoes are a better starch for dogs than high-quality grains. Not saying those studies don't exist, but I haven't seen them.
Hi, my name is Mike Sagman. And as the editor and creator of the Dog Food Advisor, I think it’s important for you to know a little about my background.
I’m a graduate of the Medical College of Virginia with a doctoral degree in dental surgery.
And my college training includes a major inchemistry and a minor in biology.
High-protein food is very new for non-performance dogs. Back when people used to feed dogs scraps, they got scrapings and leftovers and whatever the family didn't eat. Before that, the ancestral dog was most likely a scavenger, living on the outskirts of human civilization and eating what it could find, supplemented possibly with some small game it killed.
While wolves and the like are primarily carnivores, they travel tens of miles a day. They spend most of their adult life either pregnant, nursing, or raising pups. They feast and then they famine. They carry very high parasite loads. And they tend to live very short lives. They need large quantities of very high-quality food (meat and organs).
While cats are obligate carnivores and do well on a higher protein diet, dogs are actually carnivorous-leaning omnivores and CAN digest carbs quite well. Moreover, cats on high-protein diets are meant to eat mostly canned, which is something like 75% to 80% water. Those that eat mostly dry tend to run into kidney trouble. It's believed they don't drink enough water to keep the kidneys flushed.
I would personally be very wary of a high-protein kibble until we see more long-term results of what happens to these dogs over time and especially as they age. Feeding a high-protein canned (which has a lot of water) would be a bit different, but of course it's not nearly so convenient.
If you want to go with Blue, I'd stick with their regular line for a pet. Different story for a dog who is a WORKING herding dog (on stock every day), a hunting dog in very high use, a dog who does active S&R, or any other dog who is running many miles each day or swimming a lot in cold water and has higher energy needs.
We're in the middle of transitioning Sidney to Taste of the Wild. The first week I mixed 1 1/2 cup old food and 1/2 cup new (in a plastic container, lasts about a week) , then this week we're on 1 cup old, one cup new. Next week we'll do 1 1/2 cups new, 1/2 cup old. Then we'll be 100% on Taste of the Wild (the chicken recipe).
6 months should be fine for an all-life-stages adult food :)
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