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Showing posts with label Food Therapy For Dogs and Cats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Therapy For Dogs and Cats. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Kelsey from Arizona loves her Thyro GO to keep her Thyroid strong!

Kelsey from Arizona loves Thyro GO to keep her thyroid strong. Nutrient rich glands and organs are superb foods for cats and dogs. They are a vital part of a natural carnivore diet. Thyro GO is useful in many endocrine disorders such as hypothyroidism, and Addison's disease.

There are many reasons why fresh, natural foods are superior to processed pet foods. Processed foods (canned, dry, etc.) contain ingredients that are unnatural for pets. Common ingredients are grains and soy products. These are not found in a carnivore's natural diet. It is my opinion that high complex carbohydrate levels are incompatible with carnivore physiology.

The wild relatives of dogs and cats (wolves, tigers, etc.) eat other animals. It is logical that domestic dogs and cats should eat a similar diet. Despite breeding and domestication, they are not very different physiologically from their wild counterparts.

The building block for this formula would be to start first with Pet GO and then add to this depending on the pet's needs. PawHealer glandular concentrates are from New Zealand range-grazed animals. No fertilizer, hormones, antibiotics or feed supplements are used. We use no solvents.

Here are the Links for both:

Thyro GO

Pet GO



Disclosure PawHealer® (what we want you to know):

We offer our customers a $10 coupon for responding to our request for product experiences. It's our thanks to them for taking the time to do the work of writing the e mail and sending the picture. They use the coupon on their following order.

We sell traditional Chinese herbs, nutritional supplements, and pet products. We do not engage in the practice of veterinary medicine, veterinary surgery, or veterinary dentistry in any of its branches. We do not diagnose, prescribe, or administer any drug, medicine, appliance, application, or treatment for the prevention, cure, or relief of a wound, fracture, bodily injury, or disease of animals. We do not perform any surgical or dental operation upon any animal. We do not perform any manual procedure for the diagnosis of pregnancy, sterility, or infertility upon livestock Equidae.

This information is not intended to be a substitute for visits to your local veterinarian. Instead, these testimonials offer the reader information and opinions written by pet owners concerning animal health and products that they have used.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Foods to sustain the kidney...Kidney Yin Deficiency

肾阴虚
Food for : Kideny Yin Deficiency 

barley, black beans, black sesame seeds, black soy beans, black wood ears, blackberries, blueberries, duck, millet, pork, seaweed, string beans, tofu.

Foods to avoid;

alcohol
basil
chilies
cinnamon
citrus
clove
coffee
curry
game birds
garlic
ginger
lamb
leeks
onion
pickles
prawn
shallots
spices
tea
veal
vinegar
wasabai







Disclosure PawHealer® (what we want you to know):

We offer our customers a $10 coupon for responding to our request for product experiences. It's our thanks to them for taking the time to do the work of writing the e mail and sending the picture. They use the coupon on their following order.

We sell traditional Chinese herbs, nutritional supplements, and pet products. We do not engage in the practice of veterinary medicine, veterinary surgery, or veterinary dentistry in any of its branches. We do not diagnose, prescribe, or administer any drug, medicine, appliance, application, or treatment for the prevention, cure, or relief of a wound, fracture, bodily injury, or disease of animals. We do not perform any surgical or dental operation upon any animal. We do not perform any manual procedure for the diagnosis of pregnancy, sterility, or infertility upon livestock Equidae.

This information is not intended to be a substitute for visits to your local veterinarian. Instead, these testimonials offer the reader information and opinions written by pet owners concerning animal health and products that they have used.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Foods to sustain the kidney...Kidney Yang Deficiency

This is a list according to the notions of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). There are two aspects to understanding the TCM kidney system, one is kidney yin and one is kidney yang.

To under stand this system, lets use an a car as the analogy:

The fluids of the car, which include liquids such as oil, break fluid, windshield fluids, transmission fluids....are the yin aspect of the car's body.

The yang aspect of this car are the breaks, the steering wheel, the chassis, the transmission, etc...This is the actual functional aspect of the car...the working part's if you will.

Without the necessary fluids and liquids, the car will burn up and breakdown. What happens when our car lacks these necessary liquids? The answer; It over heats....the heating up of the engine because of the lack of fluids is called YIN DEFICIENCY. Yin deficiency is heat.

If the car begins not not properly function, and it begins to break down, the car is then becoming YANG DEFICIENT. Yang is the functional aspect of our car...and because it can't run....Yang deficiency is cold.


First step is to determine if you or your pet is warm or cold. Does your dog pant most of the time? Or does the furry friend want to snuggle under the covers most of the time?

If your dog seems hot; this is YIN deficiency, conversly if your dog (or you) is cold, this is Yang deficiency (strictly dealing with the kidney system).

Here is a list of beneficial foods for both you and your dog for kidney yang. I will post kidney yin tomorrow. Keep in mind that dogs are meat eaters, so use this list with common sense for a dog. I want to post this list to benefit both you and your dog!

Kidney Yang Beneficial Foods:

anchovies
barles
barley malt
beef
black beans
carrot
chestnut
chick peas
chicken
cinnamon
clove
dates
fennel seed
garlic
fenugreek
ginger
kidney
lamb
leek
liver
mackerel
molasses
mussels
nutmeg
oats
onion
palm sugar
parsnip
peas
pepper
pistachio
prawn
pumpkin
rice
rice soup
rosemary
salmon
shimp
spelt
squash
star anise
stewed fruit
sweet popatp
tuna
tumeric
turnip
walnut yams

FOODS TO AVOID IF YANG IS DEFICIENT:

chard
iced or cold drinks
kelp
millet
raw fruit
raw vegetables
salads
salt
seaweed
soybeans
soymeat
spinich
sprouts
sweets in excess
tofu
tomato
vinegar
wheat



Tomorrow I will post kidney yin foods!




Disclosure PawHealer® (what we want you to know):

We offer our customers a $10 coupon for responding to our request for product experiences. It's our thanks to them for taking the time to do the work of writing the e mail and sending the picture. They use the coupon on their following order.

We sell traditional Chinese herbs, nutritional supplements, and pet products. We do not engage in the practice of veterinary medicine, veterinary surgery, or veterinary dentistry in any of its branches. We do not diagnose, prescribe, or administer any drug, medicine, appliance, application, or treatment for the prevention, cure, or relief of a wound, fracture, bodily injury, or disease of animals. We do not perform any surgical or dental operation upon any animal. We do not perform any manual procedure for the diagnosis of pregnancy, sterility, or infertility upon livestock Equidae.

This information is not intended to be a substitute for visits to your local veterinarian. Instead, these testimonials offer the reader information and opinions written by pet owners concerning animal health and products that they have used.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Chicken Liver & Sesame Seed Delight

This is a home cooked recipe for pets and people. You will see Mark eating the family meal (the last picture).
The traditional Chinese medicine principle of this meal; Nourish Liver blood, and tonify the Kidneys!


Total ingredients fed 4 dogs that total 125 lbs all together, with one meal left over. I let my dogs eat until they are full. My dogs do not have any weight problems. I will also feed them a bit of grain free kibble if they are hungry in the morning. They let me know if they need food.

Ingredients:

4 containers of chicken livers
3 tablespoons of sesame seeds
3 cups of stock ( I used veal stock, but any type will work, including plain water)
2 tablespoons of sesame seed oil (I sauteed the livers in this oil).

Bring to a boil, and then simmer for 30 minutes...and serve. Now, if your going to use the seeds and the oil, your dog or you does not need fish oils. You can alternate different oils by seasons, or by meal. In this case, for the day, no other supplements needed. There are essential fatty acids in the liver!! This is how nutrition is meant to be eaten..
All the ingredients before cooking

After cooking

Pinky and Dayzee gobbling it down
Lily loving her dinner


Good for people...Mark loved it, very tasty!


Disclosure PawHealer® (what we want you to know):

We offer our customers a $10 coupon for responding to our request for product experiences. It's our thanks to them for taking the time to do the work of writing the e mail and sending the picture. They use the coupon on their following order.

We sell traditional Chinese herbs, nutritional supplements, and pet products. We do not engage in the practice of veterinary medicine, veterinary surgery, or veterinary dentistry in any of its branches. We do not diagnose, prescribe, or administer any drug, medicine, appliance, application, or treatment for the prevention, cure, or relief of a wound, fracture, bodily injury, or disease of animals. We do not perform any surgical or dental operation upon any animal. We do not perform any manual procedure for the diagnosis of pregnancy, sterility, or infertility upon livestock Equidae.

This information is not intended to be a substitute for visits to your local veterinarian. Instead, these testimonials offer the reader information and opinions written by pet owners concerning animal health and products that they have used.

Friday, March 7, 2008

Chinese Food Therapy for Dogs and Cats

Here is the link for the temperature of foods for our dogs and cats;

Chinese Food Therapy for Dogs and Cats


Dr. Pink Pinkerton and I have promised this information for a long time!

How do we use this chart?

Well, if for example the pet seems to run "hot" which would be indicated by panting, seeking cool places, thirst, redness of the skin or eyes, etc, then the food choices would come from the foods that are either Cool/Cold or from the neutral category.

The reverse of that would be if for instance the pet appeared chilled, wanting to curl up in a ball, wants under the covers of bedding, or seeks to lie in the sunlight, then the food choices would come from the group of Warm/Hot foods and from the neutral category.

Not sure? Then use foods from only the neutral category.

In the future the PawHealer team will be posting many more diets and food choices.

Stay tuned!









Disclosure PawHealer® (what we want you to know):

We offer our customers a $10 coupon for responding to our request for product experiences. It's our thanks to them for taking the time to do the work of writing the e mail and sending the picture. They use the coupon on their following order.

We sell traditional Chinese herbs, nutritional supplements, and pet products. We do not engage in the practice of veterinary medicine, veterinary surgery, or veterinary dentistry in any of its branches. We do not diagnose, prescribe, or administer any drug, medicine, appliance, application, or treatment for the prevention, cure, or relief of a wound, fracture, bodily injury, or disease of animals. We do not perform any surgical or dental operation upon any animal. We do not perform any manual procedure for the diagnosis of pregnancy, sterility, or infertility upon livestock Equidae.

This information is not intended to be a substitute for visits to your local veterinarian. Instead, these testimonials offer the reader information and opinions written by pet owners concerning animal health and products that they have used.