ubershann (09-01-2010)
I've had a really hard time finding information on when a puppy/dog should be moved to adult portions. I know puppies need up to 10% of their weight, and adults need only 2-4%, but what age are they considered adults? I think of them as puppies for the first 1.5-2 years, but I don't know if that's accurate for feeding purposes.
Thanks!
Hi!
My understanding is that as soon as the higher percentage exceeds the amount you would feed as 2-3% of your puppy's estimated adult weight, you switch to that amount.
For example: A 10 pound puppy whose estimated adult weight is 100 pounds would be fed 1 pound, spread over several meals. When the puppy weighs 40 pounds, if you use the 10% rule, you would be feeding 4 pounds - too much! - because the 2-3% rule maxes your dog's "anticiated adult weight" of 100 pounds out at 2-3 pounds of food total....so when you get to the point where amount of food you are feeding on the 10% rule is GREATER than the amount of food you would feed at 3% of anticipated adult weight, you switch to the 3% of anticipated adult weight.
I did not say that very clearly! Did it make any sense? If not, tell me what kind of dog you have, his weight now, and his anticipated weight, and I will do the math for you (good thing I am better at math than I am with words!)!
:o) Michelle in Massachusetts
I can't think of anything that brings me closer to tears than when my old dog — completely exhausted after a hard day in the field — limps away from her nice spot in front of the fire and comes over to where I'm sitting and puts her head in my lap, a paw over my knee, closes her eyes, and goes back to sleep. I don't know what I've done to deserve that kind of friend. ~Gene Hill
ubershann (09-01-2010)
How old is your pup?
How much are you feeding her?
What does she weigh?
How big is she supposed to get?
She's an 8 month old lab. I haven't weighed her for a bit but I think she's between 50-55 pounds right now. I'd guess she'd top out around 70?
The percentage explanation made perfect sense, and it sounds like she right around the point when I don't need to give her too much extra. I'm sure she'll be disappointed though! lol!![]()
Oh, she's definitely at weight where you would only feed her 2-3% of her ideal current weight. So if you feed 1-1 1/2 pounds per day you should be good to go for a bit. Then start to increase as she grows the last bit.
When raw feeding a puppy you only feed 10% of their current weight for the first few weeks to months depending on the dog or breed.
For example, right now Zuri weighs about 16 pounds so we are feeding her about 1.5 pounds. Not until she weighs about 25-35 pounds will we cut her back to feeding 2-3% of her current weight. This is because that 10% of 25-35 pounds (2.5-3.5 pounds) EQUALS 2-3% 125 pounds (2.5-3.6 pounds), which is her ideal adult weight. She will reach 25-35 pounds probably in the next month, or right around 3 months old.
ubershann (09-01-2010)
This is so confusing!
We all had this at the start. I think I hit it lucky with a dog whose ideal weight is 100 lbs so it was dead simple, I fed 10 % of her puppy weight until I got to 2 lb (2 % ideal) then stayed around their adding in the occasional extra pound (1 %) when needed. Hope this helps:-)
*SARA*
*Lucky* GSH Pointer - fed PMR since August 2010
*Duncan* Black Russian Terrier - fed a modified BARF diet since October 2010
When PRM is not ideal: Hyperuricosuria and the BRT
http://preymodelraw.com/2010/12/02/w...raw-not-ideal/
I just made an excel spreadsheet that will calculate how much to feed your dog(s), based on your dog(s) weight. If anyone wants it, feel free to PM me and I will send it (I do not know how to attach a file to a thread post!).
:o) Michelle in Massachusetts
I can't think of anything that brings me closer to tears than when my old dog — completely exhausted after a hard day in the field — limps away from her nice spot in front of the fire and comes over to where I'm sitting and puts her head in my lap, a paw over my knee, closes her eyes, and goes back to sleep. I don't know what I've done to deserve that kind of friend. ~Gene Hill
Thanks everyone! I hope you don't mind if I blame you when Tiki gives me the stink eye for feeding her less![]()
How do you figure out if you should be feeding 2%, 3% or 4%? Is it based on activity level? Or just by try-and-see? Meaning watch for weight loss/gain
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)