Reply to Velda - Re: Itchy dog
Posted: Wed Apr 29, 2020 1:41 pm
MandysMom wrote:Anne, what does Joe eat? That is where I would look first. I'm in several groups where eliminating inflammatory foods reduced skin issues, in people and some have mentioned their animals. Not knowing what Joe eats, that's where I'm starting. I've heard there is a wholistic vet in Lincoln, but don't know more than that. Myself, I've has good luck with Quercitin, for allergy, but not sure if it's been tried in animals. Might look that up. An all meat diet is the ultimate elimination/anti inflammatory diet. By the way, apples are high in Quercitin, but you can't eat enough apples to reach dose needed, so I buy mine on Amazon, Now brand.
Velda
Thanks for your response, Velda.
Joe eats the same diet all year round - it is only in the warm(er) months, when the grass is growing and things are blooming that he has the itch problem. Which makes me think the itching problem is environmental, rather than nutritional.
Joe's diet is this, more or less (well, I'll talk about it in a minute!). Unlike cats, who are strict carnivores, dogs tend to lean towards the omnivore side. Especially if given the chance and the choice. More years ago than I can count (LOL - and I can count quite a bit!) I had a really big veggie garden up in the Sierra foothills where I used to live.
My dog was loose with me in the garden, he didn't bother the plants, just slept in the shade in one corner most of the time I was gardening. Because it was the foothills, and because the foothills mean veggie-loving deer, my garden was fenced with field fencing and topped with barbed wire up to about six feet tall to keep the deer out.
One warm summer day I'm working away in the garden when, out of the corner of my eye, I see my dog dash by with a copious amount of red dripping from his mouth. It was definitely an "O.S." moment, for sure. I was convinced that he had found a stray, left-over piece of barbed wire lying in the garden somewhere and had chomped on it, injuring his mouth.
I chased him down, to see how bad the damage might be, dreading what I supposed to be my upcoming 80-mile-roundtrip to the vet.
Nope. Not barbed wire. LOL. Tomatoes!! The tomatoes were just beginning to ripen, and he had discovered them before I did.
Now, can you imagine one of your cats strolling through a garden and voluntarily chomping on tomatoes with great relish? I could be wrong, of course, but I can't imagine it.
I had to keep my dog out of the garden after that.
To answer your question, I feed Joe 1 part cooked chopped chicken, 3 parts cooked rice and 1 part cooked fruits/veggies (this is a mixture of pretty much equal parts chopped butternut squash, apples, brocolli, brussels sprouts, tomatoes - natch!, bananas, with blueberries or raspberries as a topping. I throw this veggie mixture into a deep glass bowl and lightly microwave the mixture until it is a bit soft - so as to avoid choking or intestinal obstruction).
I do not give him any commercial vitamin supplements formulated for dogs, because I have unhappily discovered in the past that adding these vitamins results in my dog breaking out in mast cell tumors after being on the vits for a month or so. This happened to me and my dogs more than once before I finally caught on.
Again, sell the client vits now, reap $tumor surgeries$ later.
Again, I feed the same diet pretty much year-round. Of late, as chicken has become more and more difficult to acquire, I have added a bit of Iams dog food to the rice/veggies. But this years allergy woes had already begun before I began adding in the Iams.
Thanks for the info on the Quercitin, I will research that. Thanks also for the info on the holistic vet in Lincoln. I am about 50 minutes to an hour from Lincoln, so the round trip including vet visit might be a 4-hour trip for me. But I will try to find out more info on this vet, and keep the info in my back pocket "just in case".
I did give Joe an warm water epsom salts bath/rinse last night as I mentioned I might do in an earlier post. Interestingly, he seemed to really like it, standing there in the bath tub totally still with his eyes half closed and a look of bliss on his face.
The itching seems a bit less this morning, too.
Thanks!!
Anne