I had an interesting conversation about dogs yesterday, when I was told that a family dog is given a roast dinner every Sunday. I do occasionally recycle a few suitable leftovers, with the usual dog food, via my dog, Nell. She loves having those little treats, especially gravy, but it never occured to me to cook a Sunday roast and give her that instead of dog food. She has Iams or Wainwrights dried dog food and it keeps her healthy and slim. Their dog is equally healthy. Does anyone else feed their pets with the family meals?
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Do you feed your dog (or cat) your own food?
(31 Posts)Not deliberately. "Human" food is too rich for my greyhound, but try telling her that. Because she is so tall, little is safe. She once had a go at a very large and expensive haunch of venison left out to thaw whichI had planned for a lot of people. I, (promise you won't tell anyone) trimmed off the nibbled bits, cubed the rest and did it as a casserole. Is my secret safe?
If there's one thing that annoys me it's seeing an overweight dog and hearing the owners talk about how they feed it ice cream and cakes etc. My dog does get things like the odd bit of cucumber or an apple core; bits of cheese or a carrot, but she'd never get anything with sugar in. Dogs will drool over most things that are edible, but one has to question their taste buds when they are equally happy eating cow pats! I have started giving her some tinned tripe with her dried food, because she was getting tired of having dried food every day [she told me that
]. I suppose a Sunday roast with meat, vegetables and gravy is acceptable, as long as the yorkshire pudding and dessert are omitted! My last whippet did steal a bunch of grapes from the kitchen table [having always had spaniels I didn't realise how high up a whippet could reach or what thieves they were!]; she was lucky to survive because I understand grapes and dried fruit is poisonous to them, along with chocolate.
Ha ha! gracesmum. Anyone with a dog has a story like that. My dog ate a quarter corner of the top tier of my wedding cake when we came back from our honeymoon. I trimmed it and cut it into slices, then took it into work, without even a blush. The funny thing was, it was in the middle of a large, round dining table, so he can only have got to it by climbing and eating it perched up there.
Wish you'd had a picture!
We had a labrador who ate 3/4 of a chocolate "nest" shaped birthday cake with chocolate icing and filled with litte chocolate sugar eggs. She was very sick, had very bad diarrhoea but lay in her bed groaning with the sort of expression that said "It was worth it!"
When I was a child there was no commercial pet food, so they were all fed on left-overs and they seemed to thrive. Our butcher would give us bones and sometimes the dogs had tripe.
Nobody we knew had a fridge, so food had to be used up pretty quickly.
Well, dogs only starting living with man because they ate all the rubbish and kept us warm!
I have read that chocolate is actually poisonous to dogs. I don't have a dog, but it may be worth Googling to check the facts.
When my MIL gave me instructions on the care of her overweight Jack Russell while she was on holiday, she said "don't try to give him banana because he doesn't like it". I had no intention of doing so! I think he used to share their meals, and too much too often.
We had an Alsatian that loved apples, but only French golden delicious
Alsation jeni - I thought that they were all German Shepherds now. I still can't get used to the new name for them. Did the kennel club think that they might leave the reputation behind if they were re-named?
Must admit that I don't like the kennel club - I think that they have done a lot of damage to a lot of breeds in the last few years
My Springer spaniel loves a cup of tea in a mug!
Anagram; dark chocolate is the most dangerous. We spoke to a couple when out walking the other year who had lost a dog that had stolen and devoured a block of dark chocolate. Raisins are poisonous as well [Ithink I get my raising, currants and sultanas mixed up!].
She also loved whisky!
At the risk of repeating myself, the last greyhound disgraced herself by snarfing a whole box of chocolates I had left (gift wrapped) as a Christmas present for the cleaner.I got a slightly embarrassed phone call to say Thank you for the wine (for her husband) and then..... "was there something else ?" as she had found a piece of ribbon and a gift card, but NOTHING ELSE! The dog had polished off the chocs, the box and the wrapping paper. No point in telling the dog that chocolate is bad for dogs- too late. There were no ill effects, I clearly don't buy posh enough chocs.
Am I the only one with cats ... they like to share a little taste of some of our food - they'll finish off the readybrek, rice pudding, cheesey pasta, marmite on bread, one of them loves garlic sausage! one also wants chocolate digestive biscuits and malteesers, but chocolate is poisionous to them apparently, so I have to lick chocolate off first.
I love that story gracesmum 
Many years ago, at Christmas time, the dog of that time ate a whole box of liquor chocolates that were ready wrapped and left under the tree (yes, I know now that it was a stupid place to leave them).
Do you remember when small slices of wedding cake were posted to those who couldn't get to the ceremony? Another dog of mine was really happy when the postman dropped a small parcel through the letter box. If only dog had eaten the whole thing I would never have known, but he left just a tiny corner of the silver box!
All my cats love cheese and sausages and three of them will steal toast and Marmite if given the chance. One has managed to grab a whole chicken kebab on a stick out of someone's hand and Dingbat stole hazelnut chocolate in spite of the fact that cats do not have a tastebud for sweetness. He also dips his paw into a more or less empty tea mug and sucks it.
My dear late dog was a rescue with a food fixation greater than the normal dog. He had to be watched while the cats ate their breakfasts. He would ignore his and stare fixedly at their bowls until they had finished, then rush in and lick up any last morsels before eating his own breakfast. He also reckoned that the cats' water was better than his. He not only ate a stolen rib of beef, a mince pie out of someone's hand and any leftovers on offer - he especially liked pasta with ham, mushrooms and cream - but also ate two pillows, the best part of a sofa, a duvet and several cushions. He had to have surgery to remove a Harrods plastic bag (much stronger than Tesco) that had bercome twisted in his gut.
Greatnan I agree about dogs thriving when they used to be fed on scraps. When my last dog was very ill I took her to a wonderful holistic vet (I know - lots of people thought I was completely mad but there we go) and his view was that dogs should be fed on a more natural diet ie fresh meat (raw or cooked), vegetables, and scraps from the table - but he was very specific about what this should include and he didn't mean cakes and biscuits! He also believed that dogs in the past who were fed on scraps were much healthier and lived longer. He felt that commercial petfood was full of rubbish and was directly responsible for a lot of the health problems we see in today's pets. He wasn't able to cure my dog but with his help she lived a year longer than my other vet had predicted. I found him quite inspirational.
Btw I don't very often cook a Sunday roast for the people in the house unless we have guests. I certainly wouldn't do it for the dog. At the risk of offending you Carol, which I really wouldn't want to do, the person to whom you were talking really needs to get a life.
My daughter in England insists on feeding her dogs on the most expensive tinned dog food, even though the vet has told her that they need at least some dry food to give their teeth something to crunch.
I know that when dogs got bones to eat, their faeces were white and chalky and much easier to clean up.
Down with sloppy pet food!
We always had a Border Collie - before they were fashionable, and like in Greatnan's family they ate what what was available. My father knew a butcher and brought him a bone everyday when he came home from work. This of course made him into my father's dog, not my dog although he was my birthday present. Dogs in those days were free to roam about and were generally very well behaved and not aggressive.
DD has a dog who only eats those expensive dried biscuits and is fit and active on this food. I think it is because their dog poo is easier to collect and dispose of.
My 16 year old tabby lives on whiskas or similar and now he is getting old gets scraps of meat, washed sardines, and egg yolk occasionally. The cats we used to have did better as DD2 was a picky eater and there was always plenty of dinner left over.
I have promised him that when he is really old and frail I'll cook for him everyday!
absentgrana I beg to differ on cats not having a sweet tooth! My cat who died last year aged 19 would also dip his paw into tea, but only if it had sugar in it
. He was also partial to cheese, roast potatoes and crisps. His twin sister who died aged 17 preferred to drink her water from a dripping tap. Lovely moggies 
When we moved into this house there was an old mother cat who lived in the half-built, unfinished house so we more or less had to take her on. She was not easy and scratched a lot. She definitely had a sweet tooth. On DD1's birthday I made a large German cheesecake for the party. When the guests had arrived I saw with horror that the top yellow layer of the cake was all licked off.
I said nothing and powdered a thick layer of icing sugar over the cake, which the children ate with pleasure.
We kept her for further 12 years and the vet gave her a stomach lift as she had mothered so many kittens her stomach dragged on the floor. After her sterilisation and 'lifting' she led a long active life and we had to buy motor cycling leather gloves up to the elbow, to catch her to take her to the vet or put her downstairs.
Cats are lovely and it makes me sad to think that my lovely tomcat is my last one.
I know how you feel, expatmaggie - I adore cats and would love to have one but my present life makes it impossible. When I move to NZ I will be be able to share my daughter's pets (two dogs and two cats) but I will also be able to keep one in my own cottage as she will look after it when I am on my travels.
In the meantime, I watch funny cat videos on Youtube.
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