Article Title: 4 Important Tips When Feeding Your Dog
Author: John  Mailer
Rule 1: A dog should be fed by the same person at every
feeding. This rule  is not nearly as important where a couple of
house pets are being fed by  several members of the same family,
as it is where large numbers of dogs are  being fed by numerous
different kennel personnel. It is particularly  applicable where
dogs are in strange environments such as boarding  kennels,
veterinary hospitals, or show arenas. Dogs that have  become
accustomed to one feeder may exhibit all sorts of erratic
eating  behavior if that person is changed. 
Rule 2: Every dog should have its  own food and water container.
This precaution is not only sound behavioral  psychology, it also
is just plain good hygiene. It is especially wise to  assign food
bowls on an individual basis when your feeding containers  are
noticeably different from one another. Besides improved  feeding
technique, certain practical benefits are to be gained  from
following this rule. In racing stables, for example,  where
maintenance of body weight is so important, feeding
instructions can  be written on the bottom or the side of each
dog's feeding container, right  next to its name or number. 
Rule 3: A dog should be fed in the same  place every time it is
fed. Whether it be the corner of the kitchen, beside  the
back-door steps, at the rear of a kennel run, or along the
left-side  wall of a cage, the site where the food container is
placed should remain the  same every day. In fact, everything
that's done with the food container  should be identical at each
feeding. lf you use a push cart or wagon to carry  the tub of
food to the dogs, always use the same cart and tub. lf  you
pre-fill food bowls in the diet kitchen and carry them on the
cart,  don't decide one day to carry the tub of food on the cart
and fill each bowl  as you reach the dog. It may have become
boring to you, but to your dog it  has become the way of life. A
change only serves to disrupt his way of life  and to create
cause for insecurity. 
Rule 4: No dog should ever have  its food changed without a good
reason. Contrary to popular opinion, dogs do  not need a change
in food from time to time to keep them from growing tired  of
the same food all the time. Many dogs have lived normal,
healthy lives  by eating the same food throughout their entire
lifetimes. In many instances  where a dog owner thinks a dog has
gotten sick and tired of a food, the dog  has just gotten sick
from the dog food. Not so sick, perhaps, that it really  showed,
but sick enough to stop eating. When a dog food is deficient,  it
is not uncommon for a dog eating that food to lose its appetite.
Of  course, dog nutrition deficiencies are not the only thing
that will cause a  dog to lose its appetite.
About The Author: John Mailer has written many  articles about
dogs and puppies and how to train them.His main business is  as
an internet marketer.
http://www.howtosta
http://www.basicsdo
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