4 out the first 6 ingredients in PPP sport are grain products.
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4 out the first 6 ingredients in PPP sport are grain products.
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Chicken, corn gluten meal, brewers rice, animal fat preserved with mixed-tocopherols (form of Vitamin E), poultry by-product meal (source of glucosamine), whole grain corn, corn germ meal, fish meal (source of glucosamine), animal digest, fish oil, dried egg product, salt, calcium carbonate, potassium chloride, calcium phosphate, Vitamin E supplement, choline chloride, L-Lysine monohydrochloride, L-ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate (source of Vitamin C), zinc sulfate, ferrous sulfate, manganese sulfate, niacin, Vitamin A supplement, calcium pantothenate, thiamine mononitrate, copper sulfate, riboflavin supplement, Vitamin B-12 supplement, pyridoxine hydrochloride, garlic oil, folic acid, Vitamin D-3 supplement, calcium iodate, biotin, menadione sodium bisulfite complex (source of Vitamin K activity), and sodium selenite
Keep in mind Terry many people feed a brand of dog food containing a 4 grain as the main ingredients. Many people rarely compete their dog at a high or extreme level. The weekend warrior hunting dog for the most part will do well on such a recipe but will require more cups of kibble per day as compared to a meat base dog food that require less.
My 58lb lab gets 2 1/2 cups of RedPaw dog food a day and my 38lb Springer gets just under 2 cups a day. They would most definitely require more if the kibble was a heavy grain base because of their daily exercise routine.
Corn gluten meal is actually a source of protein, not a carbohydrate. Is it really relevant whether it's a grain?
Ingredients lists do not tell you about the quality of a dog food. They do not tell you the proportions of the ingredients, nor how the food is prepared. They don't tell you about bioavailable nutrition.
What tells you the quality of a food is the health and performance of dogs fed that food. Pro Plan is doing just fine in that regard.
At the moment, my own dogs are on Loyall.
I'm not disputing that likely 75% of trial dogs live on PPP. But if 75% of the field uses the same feed then really the feed isn't what makes one dog rise above others. Its training and genetics at that point. Many people I talk to say they have "always" fed PPP. Well if that's the case then they really don't know if their dogs would actually do better with something else if it hasn't been tried. Allegiance to Purina because of marketing support in the trial world is understandable but if Loyall all of a sudden outspent Purina for 5 years straight I think you would see the same support.
My dog does great on Acana but the next one may not. Couldn't get a solid dump out of him with PPP. I'm not going to assume Acana is going to be the best for the next one.
Yes dog genetics is the main ingredient .I personally know many people that use to feed Purina to their racing dogs during the early 1990's because of price point not quality. Many dog foods surpassed them soon after that because a small handful of kennels were actually involved in research developing a better kibble working along side a couple of dog food manufacturers.