Making a dog's dinner: vets and canine experts on the most eco and affordable ways to feed your pooch
Last edited Tue Apr 29, 2025, 10:03 AM - Edit history (2)
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2025/apr/29/making-a-dogs-dinner-vets-and-canine-experts-on-the-most-eco-and-affordable-ways-to-feed-your-pooch. Nice read.
Dog food products labelled complete are legally defined as providing all the nutrients your pets need, in the right proportions. Whereas a product labelled complementary should not be a dogs only source of nutrition, says Lauren Bennett, RSPCA scientific and policy officer, as these do not contain all of the required nutrients, may lead to poor nutrition and can cause dietary deficiencies and associated disease, such as metabolic bone disease.
This sounds straightforward but the price of complete foods varies considerably, and cant be compared simply by cost per kilo, as different brands recommend different portion sizes. Comparing the daily cost of feeding a 5kg adult toy poodle, a clearer picture emerges.
Wet dog food is usually the most expensive complete option. Buying six meaty 400g tins of Pedigree Chum worked out at £1.05 a day, while a Butternut Box subscription of gently cooked, never ultra-processed pouches of meaty dog food taste-tested by humans came to a whopping £2.02 a day.