Opinion Why Your Dog Should Go Plant-Based for Veganuary

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Why Your Dog Should Go Plant-Based for Veganuary​

Yes, dogs can be vegan and here’s why your pooch should give up meat this January.
While many of us may be entering the new year with a desire to eat less meat or try out Veganuary to help offset our carbon footprints, there may be someone in your household that you’re overlooking. Here are the top reasons why your dog should go plant-based for Veganuary!

Vegan Dog Food Helps the Environment​

We know by now how much of an impact the standard American diet has on the environment, but what about the diets of our pets?

It turns out that traditional dog food is equally as environmentally destructive as a traditional American diet because of its heavy reliance on factory-farmed protein. In fact, a single cup of traditional dog food requires 80 square feet of farmland and 47 gallons of freshwater and emits three pounds of greenhouse gases.

If you’re trying to be conscious of your carbon footprint, this can come as a bit of a shock! Petaluma—a vegan dog food brand—is tackling this issue head-on. Petaluma uses organic ingredients in its dog food, and the produce is bought from small farms to promote biodiversity. Additionally, ingredients like sweet potato and peanut butter are used in place of corn and soy, which are traditionally found in most dog foods and take more from the soil than they give back.

But Aren’t Dogs Carnivores?​

A lot of people might ask, “But aren’t dogs carnivores?” While they may have started that way, dogs have evolved over the years to become omnivorous, just like we are. What they require in their diets is a balanced concoction of proteins, fats, vitamins, and minerals—all of which can be achieved with a carefully formulated plant-based diet.

Because traditional dog food is made with meat meal (a concoction of different meats melted down and dried into powder) and then pressure-cooked at high temperatures, many of the nutrients in traditional kibble are unavailable by the time the food makes it to your pet’s bowl. Many of the flavors are also lost in this process, which is why many leading brands add that flavored, chalky dust to the kibble to make it taste better.

Petaluma’s dog food was designed (and approved!) by veterinarians and is baked rather than pressure-cooked to preserve the nutrients and flavor. Made with ingredients such as organic chickpeas, organic sunflower oil, vitamin D2, and turmeric, Petaluma’s dog food has all of the necessary nutrients your pet needs.

But Does It Taste Good?​

While it’s all well and good to want to help your pet eat a more ethical and eco-conscious diet, not much is going to change if they don’t like the way vegan dog food brands taste.

Petaluma is confident your pup will love its savory baked bites—they even offer a free sample on their website to give it a try with your pup at home before you buy. Even better, Petaluma conducts its taste tests on actual pets, not laboratory dogs that are trapped in cages.

So if you’re looking for a way to help your whole household be more sustainable this year, grab a bag of Petaluma vegan dog food for your dog to try out in the new year. Use promo code VEGOUTat FeedPetaluma.com for 30% off now through January 31, 2022 (new customers only)!
 
So I checkoued out the vegout site and they have a list of products you should buy for Veganuary. Most of them are very expensive and can't be found in many stores. Seems to be a lot of sly product placement on this site. And a lot of shilling of non-alcoholic booze. They must make all their revenue through paid endorsements.

It's stupid really, an apple could be considered a "vegan snack". There's lots of delicious recipes out there that doesn't require meat, eggs and dairy, why try to fake what you can't have? Just eat the meat.
 
Dogs cannot consent to being vegans. If the kibble so healthy and wonderful, why doesn't the author eat it herself?

Here's an ingredient list from their website:
Organic chickpeas, potato protein, dried yeast, organic brown rice, pea protein, organic peanut butter (organic peanuts), organic sweet potato, organic flaxseeds, organic oats, organic peas, organic sunflower oil (preserved with mixed tocopherols), peanut oil, brown rice syrup, organic carrots, ground grass, baking powder (sodium acid pyrophosphate, sodium bicarbonate, corn starch, monocalcium phosphate, calcium sulphate), calcium carbonate, parsley, organic kelp meal, salt, marine microalgae, vitamins (vitamin E supplement, vitamin A supplement, niacin, d-calcium pantothenate, vitamin D2 supplement, riboflavin, thiamine mononitrate, vitamin B12 supplement, pyridoxine hydrochloride, folic acid), minerals (zinc sulfate, ferrous sulfate, copper sulfate, manganese sulfate, sodium selenite), turmeric, choline chloride, dl-methionine, cinnamon, allspice, taurine, potassium chloride, ginger, and rosemary extract

Other than the fact that vegan dog food should not exist at all, I quickly noticed how high up peanut butter is on the list. Too much can lead to obesity, and even pancreatitis. Most dog owners and vets will go by the 10% rule when it comes to peanut butter. It's also important to check the ingredients list for xylitol, which is toxic to dogs. I know Petaluma list says "organic", but that doesn't mean squat to most people. I don't even know what qualifies as "organic" these days. It seems to be a word used strictly to get more money out of retards who are willing to spend twice as much money on broccoli, but I digress.

I don't understand why these people simply cannot get a pet that is a herbivore, then I remember that these lunatics get off on having control over other living creatures, despite their claims that they want to help these animals and respect them.

I make my dog's food. It's easy and inexpensive. Way better for her than any commercial crap, too.

Same. It's not terribly time consuming, and it can save a good bit of money if you're a smart shopper. IMO this is the best thing to do since different dogs have different nutritional needs, and those needs change as they age. Those needs are best met in your own kitchen (and consulting a vet when needed) rather than relying on a bag of commercial food to do it.
 
This isn’t as bad as you think. Dogs evolved alongside humans and can tolerate eating basically whatever shit we throw at them - within reason.
Cats, on the other hand, are obligate carnivores and would suffer immediately.

Still retarded.
 
This isn’t as bad as you think. Dogs evolved alongside humans and can tolerate eating basically whatever shit we throw at them - within reason.
Cats, on the other hand, are obligate carnivores and would suffer immediately.

Still retarded.
One of the more horrifying things I read about dogs was the diet of dogs in a very poor African bush village. Basically they literally ate human shit for most of their diet and supplemented it with whatever they could find. The humans themselves were actually legitimately starving Africans, but I had no idea a dog could live off human shit.
 
In fact, a single cup of traditional dog food requires 80 square feet of farmland and 47 gallons of freshwater and emits three pounds of greenhouse gases.
How does a cup of Alpo even translate into square feet of farmland? Like, if Rover gets a snack is there now a hole in the ground in Iowa?

Somehow there are people in this world who actually believe this bullshit.
 
Dogs cannot consent to being vegans. If the kibble so healthy and wonderful, why doesn't the author eat it herself?

Here's an ingredient list from their website:


Other than the fact that vegan dog food should not exist at all, I quickly noticed how high up peanut butter is on the list. Too much can lead to obesity, and even pancreatitis. Most dog owners and vets will go by the 10% rule when it comes to peanut butter. It's also important to check the ingredients list for xylitol, which is toxic to dogs. I know Petaluma list says "organic", but that doesn't mean squat to most people. I don't even know what qualifies as "organic" these days. It seems to be a word used strictly to get more money out of retards who are willing to spend twice as much money on broccoli, but I digress.

I don't understand why these people simply cannot get a pet that is a herbivore, then I remember that these lunatics get off on having control over other living creatures, despite their claims that they want to help these animals and respect them.



Same. It's not terribly time consuming, and it can save a good bit of money if you're a smart shopper. IMO this is the best thing to do since different dogs have different nutritional needs, and those needs change as they age. Those needs are best met in your own kitchen (and consulting a vet when needed) rather than relying on a bag of commercial food to do it.
Vegans like that either want to play god and think they can change reality to suite their feelings or kill everything.
I've also noticed that more vegans on Reddit seem to have a hatred towards carnivorous animals.
 
Humans and the original wolves that would become dogs first bonded and formed alliance over, guess what? MEAT SCRAPS!

Idiot veganoids are literally breaking the original pact between humans and dogs that's many thousands of years old.
 
I'm not of the "NOOOO VEGAN FOODS WILL KILL DOGGO" crowd but for "environmental reasons" is a complete fallacy. I never see these vegan hacks go after almonds for their extensive water use, for instance.
It's about aesthetics and adopting a lifestyle to show your purity. Repeating the slogans you have been told. Pretty much all of that environmental shit is that way. Who cares that a bit less water makes it to the ocean because they grew some almonds? Is that even an environmental issue worth caring about? They built all of that water infrastructure in California to do exactly that but since some dickheads in the Bay Area threw a fit about some smelt in the estuary the "science" says that all the farmers have to stop farming. Not them, obviously. They put in a low-flow toilet and other water use restrictions into the building code, so they are immune from having to curb their massive water use. It's those darn almonds.
 
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