Why a Vegan Great Dane?

In 1987, I brought home a beautiful female Harlequin Great Dane whom I named Dagmar. (In Danish, it means "joy of the Danes".) My Dalmation, Sasha, immediately took over the job of potty training and other canine maternal tasks. When I took Dagmar to the vet, who also happened to be a homeopathic vet, I asked the vet if it was possible for a dog to be vegetarian. I was a bit timid about even asking the question, not wanting to impose a nutritional regimen that might not be suited to a canine digestive system, or worse, might be detrimental to the health of the dog. I was surprised when she answered, "Not only will that make your dog healthier, it will extend her life expectancy." I found two "higher quality" brands of dog food at the pet store and, with some of my own dinner menu mixed in, raised my Great Dane as a vegetarian, and switched my Dalmation over to a vegetarian diet. My Dalmation lived to 16 years, and my Great Dane, who was supposed to live 7 to 9 years, lived beyond her 11th birthday. When Dagmar died, I expected to get another Great Dane, followed by a second one, when I was ready, but life got busy and complicated and I lived 14 dogless years before I got another one. On September 23rd, 2012, after I had searched the internet for over a year for exactly the right puppy, my husband and I went to the breeder to pick up a beautiful female Harlequin Great Dane. She was a couple days shy of being seven weeks old. I named her Valentina, which means "brave protector". (It was the name I had come up with 14 years previously, in anticipation of getting another Dane puppy after Dagmar died.) I'm sure every parent thinks they have the most beautiful baby in the Universe, just as every puppy owner thinks they have the most beautiful puppy, but I must insist, this dog is beautiful and very smart. She learned her name by the second day with us, and within the week, she had learned "come", "no", how to ring the peepee bell on the door, "kisses," "sit" and "no bite", (even though teething and tempted to bite everything in sight!). After two weeks with us, Valentina understood questions like,"Do you want to go outside/inside?" (She goes to the door.) "Do you want to go upstairs?" (She runs to the foot of the stairs.) and "Go eat your food." (She would go over to her food dish, look in it, and then look up at me as a signal that I needed to put more food in the bowl.) as well as the command "shake hands." After having read so much about the atrocities contained in commercial dog food, I vowed to make her food from fresh, organic, vegan ingredients, so she could have a good shot at exceeding the current life expectancy for Great Danes. I went to my nearby PetsMart, to get a bag of "transitional vegan kibbles," and found that they no longer carried any. We were happy to find that a local specialty pet store had vegan kibbles and I began transitioning Valentina toward the vegan kibbles, and transitioning myself towards making all her food. So much has changed with the internet. I have found a wealth of knowledge, and connected with people that I never would have found in a library. I have ordered books, researched blogs and websites, and amassed a compendium of vegan canine recipes, all via the internet. And, yet, I feel I have just scratched the surface of what I need to know.

So, Vegan Great Dane will be a record of what my husband and I experience and learn about providing a nourishing diet for Valentina with more-than-minimal nutrients plus everything else involved in raising a healthy Great Dane. (And, of course, I won't be able to resist including some pictures of her.) Much has changed about the approach to puppy training -- I have been surprised to learn that I did a lot of things right in training my other dogs in the past.

One more detail: Valentina will be a bi-national dog. We split our time between Austin, Texas and Lake Chapala, Jalisco, Mexico. Like Kafka, the Dalmation that I had before Sasha, Valentina will be trained in two languages, so she will understand commands both in English and Spanish. There are requirements for taking a dog into Mexico and for taking a dog into the US, so, I'll also be sharing those experiences with you. I welcome your comments, support and any information you might offer. If you are offended by veganism/ vegetarianism, please take your criticism elsewhere. I raised two dogs as vegans, and they were extremely healthy their entire lives. I'd love to hear from you, your experiences, information, your stories, and your support. Thank you.

Companies That Sell Vegan Dog and Cat Food

Evolution Dog Food -A 100% Complete For All Life Stages Dry Dog Kibble. Human Grade Pure Vegan Ingredients. (Also sold on amazon.com)
F & O Alternative Pet Products Vegan dog and cat kibble and canned food1-877-376-9056
Harbingers ofa New Age Vegecat™, Vegekit™, Vegedog™, and digestive enzymes406-295-4944
Natural Balance Canned and Kibble Vegan dog food 1-800-829-4493
Natural Life Pet Products Canned and kibble dog food 1-800 367-2391
Nature's Recipe Canned and kibble dog food 1-800-237-3856
Newman's Own Organic vegan dog treats
Pet Guard Canned dog food and biscuits
V-Dog Vegandog foodv888-280-8364
Wow-Bow DistributorsCanned and kibble dog food and biscuits1-800-326-0230
Wysong CorporationDog and cat kibble 989-631-0009




Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Check It Out -- New Wheat-Free Kibble Recipe!

Valentina has a new wheat-free kibble recipe.


Valentina’s New Wheat-Free Kibble Recipe

Revised, Sept 16, 2013

2 cups sweet potatoes, baked at 350 degrees until soft (30-45 min.?) and then cooled a bit.

3 ripe bananas, mashed

4TBSP flaxseed meal + 3/4 cup boiling water

1-3/4 cups water

3 TBSP coconut oil (or olive oil)

1 cup dried cranberries, minced (preferably no sugar or sweetened with apple juice)

1 1/2 cups  frozen blueberries or ½ cup dried blueberries (or 1 cup froz. Blueberries + ½ cup froz. pineapple chunks)

1/2 cup hulled hemp seed (hemp hearts)

1/2 cup raw pumpkin seed (whole if put in food processor  as part of wet mix)

1/2 cup raw sunflower seed (whole if put in food processor  as part of wet mix)

1 1/2 cup whole whole spelt flour

1 TBSP VEGEDOG (Vitamin Supplement for Vegan Dogs)

1 1/2 cup rye flour

1 cup brown rice flour

1 cup millet flour

1 tsp. salt

1 1/2 cup oat flour

2 TBSP VEGEYEAST or nutritional yeast + 2 TBSP nutritional yeast

1 cup garbanzo bean flour

1/2 cup raw oat bran

2 cups buckwheat flour

1/4 cup kelp powder

1/2 cup coconut flour

1 cup barley flour

1.       Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (160 degrees C).

2.        In food processor, create wet mix: mix sweet potatoes,  bananas, hemp seed, pumpkin seed and sunflower seed, and process a minute or two until the seeds are broken up. Then add hydrated flaxseed meal, oil, cranberries, blueberries. Add the 1 ¾ cup water after you have blended the other ingredients or the water will leak out!. (It will mix in with the thick mixture without escaping from the processor.)  Your 11 cup food processor will barely hold this mix. [If you wish, you can put the sunflower seeds and the pumpkin seeds in the dry container of your high speed blender, but it's more work getting the seed meal out of the blender. If you do put it in the blender, use a chopstick or end of a wooden spoon in place of a metal spoon to remove the seed meal -- this preserves the sharpness of the blades.]

3.       In Kitchenaid  6-quart mixing bowl, add liquids (above) then dry ingredients; mix with dough blade until well mixed.

4.       Refrigerate dough until cold (In bowls or Zip Loc bags).

5.       Flour hands (buckwheat)and counter to keep dough from sticking. For normal-size  jelly roll pan/ cookie sheet, (about 11” x 17”) measure out 3 cups of dough, form the three cups of dough into a flattened rectangle about 4” by 6” . It will be around an inch or more high. Sprinkle some flour on the rectangle.

6.        For kibble, place on oiled (coconut oil) jelly roll pan/cookie sheet.

7.       Roll dough to about 3/8 inch. I use a Kitchenaid  Teflon-coated rolling pin. (They cost about 30 dollars, but you will not regret buying one. Bed,  Bath and Beyond sells another similar brand.  If you use a wooden rolling pin, keep flouring the rolling pin to avoid sticking.) Rotate the side of the pan 1/4  turn each timeand keep rolling until the dough is evenly distributed.  Sprinkle flour over dough if rolling pin sticks.

8.       Cut dough in the pan with K-9 kibble cutter or pizza cutter, or if you’re making treats, a cookie cutter. If you dust the rolled-out dough in the pan with flour, then tap pan over cutting board to remove excess flour , the kibble cutter will not stick in the dough.  It goes very quickly this way. I use a small sieve, to sprinkle the flour.

9.       Bake for 20 minutes.

·         To make crunchy,  (good for healthy teeth!) place in warm oven (at lowest temperature) for 2 to 8 hours, or leave out in the air for 2-3 days to dry, or dry in a dehydrator oven until crunchy.

·         This recipe can be rolled out on a cutting board and cut into cookies for treats, or rolled out in the pan and cut into kibble size pieces to feed as dry dog food.

·         Each recipe makes about 15 cups of dough,  5 sheets of kibble. (3 cups of dough per pan.) I always make 2 batches at a time.

·         Because this process can take some time, I break it into three parts over three days.  I put together two batches of the dry mix one day, and place it in 2 ZipLoc bags the first day.  The second day, I make the wet mix and put wet and dry mix together,  place the dough in the same bags and place the bags in the refrigerator. The dough is impossible to handle without refrigerating it.  The third day, I roll out the refrigerated dough, cut it, and bake it and dry it out. If I’m running out of kibble, I do the dry mix and wet mix, combine them  and refrigerate the first day, and roll out and bake the second day.

 

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Almost Birthday Time!






 
 


We survived the heat! (I'm talking about Valentina's heat, not the Austin weather!) It went longer than websites predicted -- around three weeks. With the adjusted timeline, we now have no idea how long she is impregnable, so we have been postponing the dog park a little while, just to be safe.)

Since my husband Tom and our puppy dog have the same birthday (August 7th), Tom said I needed to have a birthday cake that both he and Valentina could eat.  His suggestion was a peanut butter cake, since she loves her peanut butter, given every evening in her Kong, just before bedtime.

Valentina is beginning to mellow.  I've heard that Great Danes take longer to mature physically (18 months, instead of 12) and emotionally (3 years instead of 2), but we already see many grownup changes in her.  Her receptive vocabulary is immense.  She understands phrases such as "Do you want to go water the tomatoes with me?" (She runs over to the gate at the tomato enclosure.) My last Great Dane (also very bright) was only interested in watching the occasional black and white TV program (The Donna Reed show, at 5 AM was her favorite.) Valentina loves color television.  She recognizes all the dog images, and surprised us when she recognized a very primitively drawn cartoon image of a dog in a commercial and started barking at it, and followed it as it ran across the screen. She has a large number of toys that she will bring to us when they are named. She watches African animals on the AT&T U-verse channel, knows many of the names of the animals,  and when she saw a large, painted metal sculpture of an elephant outside of a consignment store, as we waited for the traffic light to turn green, she raised her ears, focused her eyes intently, and began to bark at it. She now has a big stuffed elephant toy that she loves.

I've already bought Tom's birthday present, but we haven't yet bought Valentina's.
I now sprinkle and mix in  Barley Grass Powder and Wheat Grass Powder in addition to Alfalfa Powder on her soft food. (This is a good healthy way to keep their breath fresh, and enzymes flowing, and is much better than the grass they occasionally eat in the yard.)
Stay tuned for a few additions/ modifications to the Kibble Recipe.
 

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

What I have learned from Valentina's First Heat (So far)

I've decided to start counting Valentina's heat from Tuesday.  She started about Monday, but her discharge was slow and mucusy and brown.  Around Tuesday she started with the red-blood discharge. So, we are in the what must be about the 9th day of the heat.  Poor baby!  She is very swollen and now is still bleeding a slightly less red, more watery discharge. Most of the time, she has been very good about wearing her hot pants (diaper).

Here is what I have learned from this experience, so far:
Valentina started her heat in her 10th month.  (It is predicted for the 9th to the 12th month for large dogs. The say the bleeding will last 8 to 10 days.)
The pet store does not have diapers big enough for a Great Dane. If your Great Dane is approaching the predicted time for her Heat, run, don't walk, to your computer, and order online the XXXL size (Yes, three X's!) of the SnuggEase Washable Dog Diaper (2-pack, minimum!). I ordered from Amazon (Sold by Famous Shamus Pet Supplies) The triple X size is for 90 pounds and over. These diapers are nylon on the outside, with a thick, diaper-like material on the inside, covered by a net material.  I ordered the pads (Simple Solution Disposable Liners), but did not use them.  They were simply too narrow. I had gone to the pet stores and had bought the largest size (Large) of doggy diapers. I opened the package, tried one on her, and they were too small. When I discovered that the pads I had ordered were too narrow, I cut away all the surrounding materials from the disposable doggy diapers and had a very absorbent pad that was about 5 or 6 inches wide and also was the perfect length to fit the length of the XXXL Dog diaper. (You want to have a 2-sided, 3/4 inch wide tape ready to fasten the "pad" to the netting.) I had also bought the largest pants at the Pet Store, but they were  too small. (Because they were made of a knit fabric, and stretched, they sufficed while I waited for the 1-day delivery of the XXXL dog diaper.) With the purchase of a 2-pack, I have to wash the diaper every day, so Valentina can have a fresh diaper every morning, so you may want to order more than 2. When she was flowing less, I could use one "pad" per day and one "pad" per night, but as she began to flow more freely, I just make the decision to change it  based on how saturated the "pad" looks when I remove the diaper for her to go outside to go peepee. Be Prepared:  When she is not diapered while outside, she drips like a leaky faucet, and she is VERY swollen. (Poor baby!) So far, she has accepted wearing the diaper.  Sometimes she will move around and make it a little difficult to put it on her, but she has not tried to remove it once it has been put in place.

We are looking forward to the next phase (I think!). She will stop bleeding pop p and the swelling will go down. BUT, she will be pregnable and will easily accept male advances (I've heard they will do anything to get out of the yard, and the interested males will do anything to get into the yard!) -- so we must be careful to keep her inside except for potty trips. By the time this 21-day experience is over, I will have (and Valentina will also have) a serious case of cabin fever. I have left the house a couple of times, with my husband doing the puppy-sitting, and we have both left the house another two times, leaving Valentina inside for a short period of time.

When we finally return to taking Valentina to the dog park, she will be ecstatic.  The only exercise she has gotten has been running the depth of the back yard, back and forth, with two little yippie-dog Yorkeys on the other side of the fence, and circling the perimeter of the back yard.  We have taken her for a drive (avec diaper) a couple of times (her favorite activity) just to avoid too much cabin fever.

So, that's about it for now. So far, we've survived it!

Monday, June 10, 2013

Happy Tenth Month, Valentina!

Valentina turned 10 months old while we were in Mexico. She has now gone into heat, so she is wearing a large doggie diaper around the house. Large breeds typically go into heat the first time between 9 and 12 months, so she is within the normal range. They bleed for about 8-10 days, and after that are impregnable, I believe, up to 21 days from start of heat. The vet told us that to avoid higher risk of mammary cancer, they should be spayed after the first heat, and before the second.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Happy 9-Month Birthday Valentina!



Today our precious puppy is 9 months old!  (and 91 pounds!) She has remained the sweetest, most affectionate, most alert, and smartest puppy ever -- truly a special spirit and such a joy to have in our family! It is amazing how much she understands from what we say. I am continuing to make all her food -- both kibble and soft food.  (We do keep a few cans of Evanger's canned Vegetarian Dog Food in the pantry just in case.) She just loves vegetables.  One thing I've learned, though, is that dogs don't have the dental structure to chew their food the way humans do, so if you want your dog to absorb the nutrients effectively and to enjoy the flavor of all the foods, it is important to make sure the food is in small pieces.  I use the food processor, and my spiralizer to break up the foods and create as much exposure to the surface of the foods (and nutrients) as possible.  Valentina loves carrots -- thinly sliced, grated, or spiralized. There's hardly a veggie she doesn't like. One of her all-time favorites is the glorious sweet potato.  She  devours the sweet potato leather I make, her kibble contains sweet potatoes, and I always cook extra because it is easily added to her soft food.  I'm being careful to keep onions out of her foods (rumored to be toxic for dogs), but I put in a little garlic (cooked) in her soft food for extra flavor.She loves seeds, like sunflower and pepitas (pumpkin seed), but I've learned to make it into meal in my Vitamix Dry container. (When I fed her the whole pumpkin seed, it was whole and green going in, and it was whole and white coming out.)  She is well muscled, slim, calm, yet high-energy. I've tested her urine and it's in the middle of the healthy range.  Her eyes are bright and the surrounding tissue is pink and red ( a sign of excellent health for dogs!) She is the picture of excellent health.

Great Dane Meet-Up, Sunday, May 5, 2013

 
Beautiful Great Danes Everywhere!













There must have been 40-50 Great Danes at the Meet-Up! All kinds, all ages, and all colors! Harlequin, Mantle, Merle, Fawn, Black, Blue, Grey, and Brindle! One lady had 5 beautiful Great Danes!  At first, Valentina was a bit overwhelmed; she was two days short of being 9 months old and, although there were a few other puppies smaller than her, she was not used to the majority of the dogs being larger than her.  She adored and ran with the Mantle puppies, ran with some of the other Danes, got lots of kisses from many admirers and gave many kisses, too! We were going to stay for only an hour, but Valentina was having soooo much fun, we ended up staying for 2 hours. She ran and ran and ran! When we got home, she was pleasantly exhausted and slept for a couple of hours. What a wonderfully fun day!

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Doggy Puberty

They say that Great Danes usually go into heat around 9 to 12 months old.  In four more days, Valentina will be 8 months old.  So, now we wait.  We have a couple pairs of Doggy Hot Pants with pads, and we have a package of adult diapers -- there are several comments online that suggest using disposable adult diapers and cutting a hole in them for the tail to fit through. The vet recommends spaying  dogs after the first heat, but before the second for the maximum protection against mammary cancer. The question I still have is, being that meat is drenched in hormones, and some human females are going through puberty at 8,9, and 10 because of all these hormones in meat, would a vegan Great Dane go through puberty later than a meat-eating Great Dane because it receives none of these hormones from meat? Anybody have an answer to that?

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Almost Eight Months Old!

Valentina will turn 8 months old in about a week.  We are so grateful that she is such a smart, sweet puppy dog. I make all her food (vegan), both kibble and soft food, and both veterinarians who have examined her have pronounced her VERY healthy. It's interesting that we have been told that a dog MUST have meat, and yet Valentina remains extremely healthy, full of energy, and exhibiting all the the signs of an extremely healthy dog. She loves every kind of vegetable, raw and cooked, and her favorite chews are the "Broccoli bone" and the Sweet Potato "Leather" The Broccoli Bone (a long stem from broccoli)  is raw, but after experimenting with baked and dehydrated sweet potato slices, I came to the conclusion that baking the the sweet potato slices (about 3/8 in. thick) at around 250 or 300 F, for about 3 hours, (or 325 or 350 degrees F for less time) then dehydrating them for several hours (6, maybe 8 or 10 hours at 105 degrees in the dehydrator, depending on the dryness and chewiness desired) gives the best result.  (I have an Excelsior dehydrator.) When I just baked them, they were too soft and  not "leathery" enough, and when I only dehydrated them, they lacked the caramelizing of the natural sugars. (If you don't have a dehydrator, you can put your oven on the lowest temperature setting, and if you want to lower the temperature a bit more, you can leave the oven door slightly ajar to let a little heat escape and lower the temperature a bit. It's best to purchase a little in-oven thermometer to know exactly what the resulting temperature is.)  Valentina will eat sweet potatoes any way I make them, but it seems that the "bake and dehydrate method" makes the slices she likes the best. I "paint" a coating of warmed coconut oil on all surfaces of the slices, so they don't dry out too much or stick to the cookie sheet. I bought a bag of commercial sweet potato slices for $8.98 at a local pet shop the other day.  The bag did not even have 9 slices.  That means they cost more than a dollar a slice! Valentina actually prefers mine anyway. The first time I gave her a sweet potato slice, she did an intricate dance around and near the slice before she ate it.  Now, even when she is given a broccoli bone or other treat, she will do what we now call "The Sweet Potato Dance.". Stay tuned for  more pictures.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Happy Six Month Birthday, Valentina!

As I write this post, Valentina is lying on a rug next to my desk, playing with her stuffed toy, Christmas doggie. She was six months old as of February 7, 2013, and I must admit she is a well-behaved dog.  When you read up on Great Danes, you will always find a mention somewhere that Great Danes are people dogs.  They are not the kind of dog that you can throw in the back yard and forget about.  They thrive on human attention, and they can actually go crazy and become agressive without human contact.  Personally, it is hard to understand why anyone would get a dog without giving them attention.  Valentina goes everywhere with us.  Our yard in Mexico has not been fenced in yet, so we really do take her everywhere.  We eat in restaurants that are dog friendly, and if we run into the store for groceries or other items, one of us stays with her in the car and walks her out in a patch of grass. When we arrived at our home in Mexico, Valentina was a very timid little puppy, unsure of strangers who came up to admire her, and she would bark at little children, thinking them odd little aliens.  Now she LOVES to meet new people, relishes little children petting her, and is very outgoing. In addition, she behaves herself at restaurants.  We carry a rug, toys, travel water and food dishes with us, and she lies down , plays with her toys, or waits, respectfully, for a bite of spaghetti al pesto, or the occasional corn chip (sans salsa). (She likes my homemade vegan pasta with pesto best, but loves the vegan spaghetti al pesto that they make at the Peacock Garden Restaurant, too. And, at the Peacock Garden, she loves to watch all the multicolored exotic chickens and the peacocks in all their regalia!  The friendly servers  know Valentina by name and always greet her.) 

We have to remind ourselves that she is still a puppy.... Nevertheless, this 80-pound puppy behaves herself at restaurants and everywhere around town.  All  of this has happened because we do take her everywhere with us. She's part of the family. Both Cesar Millan (How to Raise the Perfect Dog) and Sophia Yin (Perfect Puppy in 7 Days) emphasize that you need to take the puppy with you to as many places as possible, and even tie the puppy's leash to your waist as you go about the tasks of your day.  The dog becomes socialized that way, and learns how to act in all the many situations he/she might encounter in life with you.  That advice has paid off -- we have a very well-behaved puppy!

P.S. Have you seen Cesar Millan's new show on National Geographic Wild?  It's called "Leader of the Pack." Just like with Dog Whisperer, I always learn a lot from his show. He's now based in Spain. Lucky Europeans!

Thursday, February 7, 2013

A PETA Recipe for Vegan Dog Food

PETA has a great recipe for vegan dog food.
The only thing I change in this recipe is I use one, 14 oz. jar of natural peanut butter instead of the full 24 ounces in the recipe, because I don't want to overdo the protein with a growing Great Dane puppy, I add minced dried cranberries (no sugar) in place of cranberry extract (because I haven't found any cranberry extract here at Lake Chapala, and didn't bring any down with us from the US), and I add BacPac probiotic from  www.nzymes.com in place of PB8. I put it in a rice cooker, and it turns out beautifully.  Lately her soft food consists of a steamed veggie, like green beans, ., a  mixture of cooked grains (millet, brown rice, quinoa, barley, oats,  etc. -- usually 3 or more) , some raw food cut up in a blender,  and a cup of this mixture.  I now try to put it out at least mid-morning (warmed up to at least room temperature or a little warmer) so she can eat what she wants of it all day.  She always leaves some by the end of the day, so I know that she is probably getting what she wants and needs. And  I always keep out a bowl of some of my homemade kibble recipe.  Here's the recipe, which can also be found at:
http://www.peta.org/living/companion-animals/say-no-to-kibble-vegan-dog-food-recipe.aspx

Homemade Sweet-Potato Peanut-Butter Vegan-Dog Delight
6 cups (filtered) water
1 cup mixed rice and quinoa (I mix black, brown, and long grain rice with black and/or
white quinoa.)
1 cup mixed lentils (I mix green, red, and French lentils.)
3 medium sweet potatoes sliced into 1-inch cubes
3 cups or 24 oz. natural peanut butter
1½ cups or 8 to 12-oz. apple cider vinegar, optional (My dog is a flat-nosed breed, which means she tends to get gassy. The vinegar gets rid of virtually all of her gas, but if your dog does not have a problem with this, you can omit the vinegar.)
8 g hemp protein
1 Tbsp. flaxseed oil with DHA (Store in the fridge or freezer.)
200-250 mg cranberry extract (Since a vegan diet is alkalizing, your dog may need this acidifier to maintain a healthy urinary pH.)
VegeDog multivitamin powder
Prozyme Plus (This helps with digestion so that your dog can absorb as many nutrients as possible.)
125 mg PB8 brand probiotic (1/4 pill)

  • Boil the water.
  • Add the rice, lentils, and sweet potatoes.
  • Reduce the heat and simmer, covered, for 40 minutes to 1 hour, or until all ingredients are soft. Stir occasionally and add more water as needed. Too much water is better than not enough water. (Remember, you want the ingredients to be extra moist because they will be easier to digest.)
  • Mash the sweet potatoes with a fork and mix thoroughly. Let cool.
  • Add the peanut butter and vinegar. Stir well.
  • Place 3 to 5 servings in your refrigerator and store the rest in the freezer.
  • Measure 2/3 cup of food per meal.*
  • At mealtime: Add hemp protein, flaxseed oil, cranberry extract, Vegedog, Prozyme Plus, and PB8 into the 2/3 cup of food. Mix well and serve twice daily.

* Serving size is based on the diet of a 20-lb. dog. Please adjust the portion size to suit your dog's weight.

Note:Please remember, as with the introduction of any new food, to introduce this new diet gradually. This means replacing a small portion of your dog's current food with the new food and gradually increasing the amount of new food while decreasing the amount of old food over a period of approximately 10 days.

 

 

 

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Valentina's Recipe for Kibble and Treats

We did it!  Valentina was eating 6 cups of homemade kibble to 1 cup of commercial vegan kibble.  Now she eats only homemade kibble, cooked grains and other soft food, and raw food.  I noticed when I went to get the one cup of commercial vegan kibble from a tub on the floor and had the 6 cups homemade kibble in the dish to the side, Valentina would always walk up to me and try to  eat only on the homemade kibble side.  We did a taste test, putting 4 kibbles of commercial on the right and 4 homemade kibbles on the left, and she ate the homemade kibble, and walked away, not interested at all in the commercial kibble.

I put down a bowl of cooked food midday or late afternoon, and I put out kibble a cup at a time throughout the day.  Valentina is not a binger, so I don't think I have to worry about that, but I think  it's just safer to put out her food in 5 or 6 smaller portions.
Here's Valentina's recipe for Kibble and Treats:
  


Valentina’s Tantalizing Treats
or
Valentina's Krunchy Kibble

2 cups sweet potatoes, baked at 350 degrees until soft (30-45 min.?)

2 ripe bananas, mashed

2 TBSP flaxseed meal + 6 TBSP boiling water (soak 3 minutes) or 3 TBSP flaxseed meal + 9 TBSP boiling water

1-3/4 cups water

3 TBSP coconut oil (or olive oil)

1 cup dried cranberries, minced (or dried blueberries or dried cherries) (preferably no sugar or sweetened with apple juice)

2-1/2 cups whole wheat flour OR whole wheat pastry flour

1 TBSP VEGEDOG (Vitamin Supplement for Vegan Dogs)

1 cup rye flour

1/2 cup brown rice flour

½ tsp. salt

1/2 cup oat flour

2 TBSP VEGEYEAST or nutritional yeast

1/4 cup garbanzo bean flour

1/4 to 1/2 cup vital wheat gluten flour

1/4 cup to 1/2 cup hulled hemp seed (hemp hearts)

1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (160 degrees C).

2. In food processor, mix sweet potatoes, bananas, hydrated flaxseed meal, water, oil, cranberries, and hemp seed.

3. In mixing bowl, add liquids (above) then dry ingredients; mix first with mixing blade, then switch to dough blade until well mixed.

4. Flour hands and counter to keep dough from sticking. Knead dough by folding it on itself until elastic, as if making a pie crust.

5. Roll dough to about 3/8 inch.

6. After placing dough on cookie sheets, poke with a fork to prevent voids, unless using cookie cutters,(before baking)

7. Bake for 20 minutes.

8. To make crunchy, (good for healthy teeth!) place in warm oven (at lowest temperature) for 2 to 4 hours, or leave out in the air for 2-3 days to dry.

Makes ….A LOT!!!
Be prepared to flour hands, board and rolling pin, because this dough is sticky!
This recipe can be cut into cookies for treats, or cut into kibble size pieces and fed as kibble.
The recipe is very versatile, so you can substitute one kind of flour for another if you don't have it.
For a K-9 Little Treats Maker go to:
If you don't have a kibble cutter, you can cut with a pizza cutter to speed up the process. Trust me, you want to get this kibble cutter!


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I add the following to about 6 to 7 cups of kibble, and then serve in 1 to 1-1/2 cup portions:
1 TBSP to 1-1/2 TBSP Flaxseed oil (the kind without added Vit. C)
2 Gamma - E capsules (I use NOW brand) pierce gel capsule and squeeze out vit. E oil. (This E vitamin supplement has all 4 vit E's, not just alpha tocopherol.)
Mix the two oils into the kibble, then add:
VEGEDOG (vitamin supplement)
VEGEYEAST (OR IF YOU DON'T HAVE IT, ADD NUTRITIONAL YEAST)
Amino Acids removed from capsules: L-Carnitine, L-Taurine, L-Methionine, L-Lysine
Prozyme, or NZyme -- enzyme supplement
BakPak -- probiotic supplement (or PB8 Probiotic)
Mix.

   

Thursday, January 24, 2013

In Search of Dog Food Recipes

Today I made "Homemade Sweet-Potato Peanut-Butter Vegan Dog Delight" for Valentina. (PETA recipe --See Dog Food Links) I knew it was going to be good, because it smelled scrumptious. Valentina gobbled it up.
Later today, I was continuing my search for Homemade Dog Food Recipes, and I happened upon a Great Blog -- Vegan Heartland. (See Dog Food Links)  I found a post (June 7, 2012) entitled "Making Your Own Vegan Dog Food" This one is a real keeper.  Matthew has broken down all the possible foods into categories, as well as described the various nutrients in each food.  He even has a formula for determining how much to feed your dog, as well as correct proportions for protein, starches, fats, etc.  Even though the percentage of protein  for a full grown dog should be 50%, a Great Dane puppy's protein should be limited to 18-23%  (instead of the normal puppy protein level of about 35%) in order to slow down the rapid bone growth of Great Danes.  Matthew has done a great job on this Vegan Blog.  It's well worth  reading. Every time I find a vegan blog like Vegan Heartland, it reminds me that the world IS changing for the better.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

It Had to Happen Sooner or Later!

This evening I prepared two grain burger sandwiches with Tomato Olive Sprouted Bread (from Kenn and Sandra Quinn at the Organic Farmer's Market in Ajijic), homemade eggless mayonnaise, and greens. I set the plates with the sandwiches on the counter, turned my back, and before I knew it, Valentina had jumped up, paws on the edge of the counter, and snatched the top piece of bread on my sandwich.  I grabbed it out of her mouth, didn't give her the satisfaction of getting to eat what she had pilfered! She's tall enough to reach the kitchen counters, so we're going to have to watch what we put on the edge of the counters.  (She's sorry, gave us lots of repentant kisses.)

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Las CabaƱuelas

Valentina has experienced her first rains.  Yesterday and today, January 1st and 2nd,  soft rains have bathed dusty foliage and moistened the earth at Lake Chapala.  In Mexico, “ las  cabaƱuelas” refers to the special rains that come in January.  Usually short-lived and gentler, they are different from the rains that come in summer in Jalisco.  In the prehispanic world, as well as in ancient Spain, parts of Africa, and a few other parts of the world, the weather that occurred during the days of January was believed to predict the weather for the whole year. (See, Wikipedia, “cabaƱuelas”).  In modern Mexico, for those who have no grandparents closely tied to the land and agriculture, the term has lost its significance and now means only the rains that come in January.  Today, we ran a few errands, ate lunch at Pranzo, a local cafĆ© with outdoor seating, feeling lucky that we had dodged the rain and were able to sit outside at a table, accompanied by Valentina. We had on long-sleeve shirts, so we were only a little chilled.  Valentina, however, appeared to be trembling a bit from the cold.  (Great Danes do not do well in extreme temperatures.  The weather here was definitely not extreme, but when I went to WalMart and  bought  an inexpensive insulated vest for myself, I couldn’t  resist a 60 peso vest for Valentina.  That’s about five dollars.)   At Pranzo CafĆ©,  Valentina had a bowl of kibble and a dish of water, but we also shared our French fries with her. She is quite the proper puppy, never begs, but waits on her little rug, with a sweet pathetic look in her eyes, hoping we will share with her. As I write this from home, the evening rain continues its soothing, gentle pitter-patter on our roof and the tile of our terrace, and Valentina is safe and warm in her bed, asleep, floating on two giant, fake-fur-covered pillows and one smaller one that she likes to rest her head on. (She’s not spoiled at all!) 

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Time Flies When You're Having Fun!

Wow! So much has happened lately -- Valentina-wise! Tom and I (and all the people who see her weekly) are watching her grow so quickly.  Valentina is so full of energy (She's a fabulous soccer player!), yet so mellow and so very sweet, loving and affectionate.  She is constantly curious, very alert, and learning all the time.  Her receptive vocabulary is amazing. She is quite well-behaved in public, and if she gets a little too playfully "bitey," all we have to say is "Where's the water bottle?." (It's a spray bottle.) and she turns into an affectionate, all-kisses doggie. Lake Chapala is a wonderful place to socialize a dog.  Everyone takes their dogs almost everywhere. Most restaurants with outdoor seating permit dogs. When we arrived, Valentina was a bit timid about meeting new people, and she would bark at small children.  Now, she is eager to meet new people of all ages.  We take her to the organic farmer's market on Tuesdays and Fridays, and she has a multitude of admirers who greet her by name and always comment on how fast she is growing. We still get the question from newcomers, "Is she a Dalmation?" but as she grows much bigger than a Dalmation, I'm sure that question will come up less. Regardless, she is a great conversation starter and is a great way to meet new people.   Today, she is 20 weeks old, and on January 7th, she will celebrate her 5- month birthday! We haven't weighed her for a couple of weeks, but she was 44 pounds the last time we weighed her.  She has to weigh close to or over 50 pounds now! She is  big, and we have to keep reminding ourselves that she is still a baby. Her diet has been my constant subject of study and research. I've incorporated fresh, raw vegetables into her diet, as well as a cooked brown rice- barley - lentil mixture.  She loves green beans and asparagus. Every day she gets a couple of tablespoons of canned pumpkin which is full of fiber and helps move things along the intestinal tract.  We have a little more than one extra large bag (28 lbs.) of vegan dog food left, and I always mix Vegedog vitamin supplement, probiotics, enzymes, vitamin E complex, l-Taurine, l-carnitine, VegeYeast, flaxmeal, into the vegan kibble, with a tablespoon of Barlean's flaxseed oil.  Why this brand?  I had to find a brand that did not have vitamin C, and Barlean's has only flaxseed oil as its ingredient.  William Cusick, in his book, Canine Nutrition and Breed Specific Diets: The Best Diet for a Great Dane, explains that although a great deal of brands of dog food have vitamin C, (chiefly because it serves as a cheap preservative,) that Vitamin C should not be supplemented in dog diets.  He explains that dogs manufacture their own vitamin C (with a unique molecular structure), using the trace mineral Cobalt, in the liver, and supplementation of vitamin C can cause the liver to stop working as it should.  It can damage the kidneys by creating a pH imbalance because the dog cannot use the kind of vitamin C used and sheds it into the urine.  There's so much to learn! Cusick warns to never give dogs commercial treats, so quite a while ago I modified a recipe for Vegan kibble from the Vegepet recipe and she eats only homemade vegan treats. (The treats contain sweet potatoes, bananas, flaxseed meal, coconut or olive oil, cranberries, whole wheat flour, Vegedog vitamin supplement, rye flour, oat flour, Vegeyeast, garbanzo bean flour, and hulled hemp seed.) The homemade treats have become popular with the dogs of friends, too. They have no preservatives and contain all healthy ingredients. Our local grocery stores (in Mexico as well as in the US) usually carry an ample supply of sweet potatoes, so Valentina always has a supply of baked sweet potato slices. So far, according to all her vet exams as well as her physical state, Valentina is very healthy.  Her coat is shiny and soft.  She is full of energy.  She has all indicators for excellent health: eye color, membrane under lower lid, gums and mouth tissue, skin condition, coat condition, energy level and muscle tone. I've tested the pH of her urine, which most vets say should be between 5.5 and 7.0,  and it falls about in the middle at 6.3or 6.4. As we celebrated the  New Year with friends, eating a vegan feast of  Tofurky, Seitan Roast, Mashed Potatoes, Cranberry Relish, Roasted Basil Corn-on-the-Cob, Mushroom Gravy, Steamed Fresh Brussel Sprouts, and apple-cranberry stuffing, Valentina joined us with her bowl of two tablespoons of cooked pumpkin puree, brown rice- barley - lentil mixture, and a small slice of seitan roast cut into tiny pieces. We all had a great time!