About 25 years ago I began
formulating pet foods at a time
when the entire pet food
industry seemed quagmire and
focused on such things as
protein and fat percentages
without any real regard for
ingredients. Since boot leather
and soap could make a pet food
with the "ideal" percentages, it
was clear that analytical
percentages do not end the story
about pet food value. I was
convinced then, as I am now,
that a food can be no better
than the ingredients of which it
is composed. Since this
ingredient idea has caught on in
the pet food industry, it has
taken on a commercial life that
distorts and perverts the
meaning of the underlying
philosophy of food quality and
proper feeding practices. Is
health reducible to which
ingredients a commercial product
does or does not have? As
contradictory as it may seem to
what I have just said, no it is
not. Here's why.AAFCO
Approval
The official Publication of the
American Association of Feed
Control Officials (AAFCO) gives
wide latitude for ingredients
that can be used in animal
foods. As I have pointed out in
my book, The Truth About Pet
Foods, approved ingredients can
include*:
dehydrated garbage
undried processed animal waste
products
polyethylene roughage
replacement (plastic)
hydrolyzed poultry feathers
hydrolyzed hair
hydrolyzed leather meal
poultry hatchery by-product
meat meal tankage
peanut hulls
ground almond shells
(*Association of American Feed
Control Officials, 1998 Official
Publication)
Simultaneously, this same
regulatory agency prohibits the
use of many proven beneficial
natural ingredients that one can
find readily available for human
consumption such as bee pollen,
glucosamine, L-carnitine,
spirulina and many other
nutraceuticals. It would be easy
to conclude that reason does not
rule when it comes to what
officially can or cannot be used
in pet foods.
From the regulators’
standpoint, they operate from
the simplistic nutritional idea
that the value of food has to do
with percentages and that there
is no special merit to any
particular ingredient. They deny
the tens of thousands of
scientific research articles
proving that the kind of
ingredient and its quality can
make all the difference in terms
of health. They also are silent
about the damaging effect of
food processing and the impact
of time, light, heat, oxygen and
packaging on nutritional and
health value.
The 100% Complete Myth
Consumers are increasingly
becoming alert to the value of
more natural foods. Everyone
intuitively knows that the
closer the diet is to real,
fresh, wholesome foods, the
better the chance that good
health will result.
Unfortunately, people do not
apply this same common sense to
pet foods. Instead they purchase
"100% complete" processed foods,
perhaps even going the extra
mile and selecting "super
premium" or "natural" brands,
thinking they are doing the best
that can be done. They surrender
their mind to a commercial ploy
(100% completeness) and do to
their pets what they would never
do to themselves or their family
- eat the same packaged product
at every meal, day in and day
out. No processed food can be
"100% complete" because there is
not a person on the planet who
has 100% knowledge of nutrition.
The claim on its face is absurd.
Understanding this simple
principle is more important than
any pet food formulation
regardless of the merits of its
ingredients. Everything that
follows will begin with that
premise, i.e., no food should be
fed exclusively on a continuous
basis no matter what the claims
of completeness or ingredient
quality.
Genetics Is The Key
Pets need the food they are
biologically adapted to. It's a
matter of context. Just as a
fish needs to be in water to
stay healthy, a pet needs its
natural food milieu to be
healthy. All creatures must stay
true to their design. What could
be more obvious or simple? For a
carnivore the correct genetic
match is prey, carrion and
incidental fresh plant material,
and even some fur and feathers,
as well as the occasional
surprise of unmentionables found
in decaying matter. It's not a
pretty picture to think that "FiFi"
with her pink bow and polished
toenails would stoop to such
fare, but that is precisely the
food she is designed to eat.
Since that is her design,
matching food to that design
(minus the more disgusting and
unnecessary elements) is also
the key to her health.
The Disease Price
We may prefer to feed a
packaged, sterile, steam-
cleaned, dried, farinaceous
chunk cleverly shaped like a
pork chop, but let's not kid
ourselves, that is not the food
a pet is designed
for....regardless of the claims
about ingredients on the label
making one think it is five-star
restaurant fare. Pets may
tolerate such food for a time,
but in the end nature calls to
account. The price to be paid is
lost health in the form of
susceptibility to infections,
dental disease, premature aging,
obesity, heart and organ
disease, diabetes, cancer,
arthritis and other cruel and
painful chronic degenerative
diseases. Because our pets are
not out in the rigors of nature
where they would quickly succumb
to such conditions and end their
misery, they languish in our
protected homes and under
veterinary care that does not
usually cure but merely treats
symptoms and extends the time of
suffering. That suffering begins
with the way in which we are
feeding our pets, not the
ingredients in a supposed 100%
complete pet food.
The Perfect Food
What is the solution? It is
simple and something I have been
preaching for the past 25 years.
Return pets to their
environmental roots. They need -
daily - interesting activity,
fresh air, clean water, romps in
nature, lots of love, and food
as close to the form they would
find in the wild as possible.
Fresh, whole natural foods fit
for a carnivore and fed in
variety are as good as it can
get. Anything less than that is
a compromise. Compromise the
least if health is the goal.
(Same principle applies to you
and your family.) To get a
packaged food as close as
possible to that goal requires
the right starting philosophy of
feeding (described above) and
the expertise to design and
manufacture such foods.
Enter The Profiteers
Elements of these principles
(often distorted or
misunderstood) have been taken
up by an endless line of pet
food entrepreneurs. The low fat
craze led to low fat pet foods.
The high fiber craze led to high
fiber pet foods. The "no corn,
wheat or soy" craze led to no
corn, wheat or soy pet foods.
The "omega- 3" craze led to pet
foods with fish oil. The
“variety” craze led to pet foods
supposedly offering variety. The
"four food groups" craze led to
all four bundled into a package.
The "raw" craze has led to raw
frozen pet foods. The list is
endless and the race for pet
owner dollars is at a fever
pitch.
One can only feel sympathy
for a concerned pet owner as
they stroll along the huge array
of pet food options in pet food
aisles. Unfortunately, armed
with only sound bites and lore
they may have heard from a
friend, breeder, veterinarian or
on a commercial, they make
choices that not only do not
serve the health of their pet
but may directly contribute to
weakened immunity and disease.
The first thing consumers
should keep in mind is the ideal
diet for pets as described
above. No packaged product
regardless of its wild claims is
ever going to equal that. The
next best thing is to home
prepare fresh meals. (Contact
Wysong for recipes and
instruction.) If that is not
always possible, then products
should be selected that are as
close to the ideal as possible.
(More suggestions below.)
Raw Frozen Pet Food
Dangers
At first glance, considering the
perfect feeding model I have
described - raw, natural, whole
- the best food may seem to be
one of the raw frozen pet foods
now clamoring to capture the
"raw" craze. I'm sorry to say
that some of these purveyors
even use my books and literature
to convince pet owners that
their frozen products are on
track. They take bits and pieces
of good information and distort
it into something that pretty
much misses the point and
misleads consumers. Also, these
exotic frozen mixtures of
ingredients of unknown origin,
manufacturing and freezing
conditions are most certainly
not economical nor the best
choice. They may, because of the
water content and raw state, be
outright dangerous.
Human Grade
Then there are claims about
"USDA approved" ingredients,
"human grade" ingredients and
ingredients purchased right out
of the meat counter at the
grocery store. Again, at first
glance - and superficiality is
what marketers like to deal with
- it may seem that such foods
would have merit over others.
But such labels only create a
perception of quality. People
would not consider the food pets
are designed for in the wild -
whole, raw prey and carrion -
"human grade" or "USDA
approved." Because something is
not "human grade" does not mean
it is not healthy or nutritious.
For example, chicken viscera is
not "human grade" but carries
more nutritional value than a
clean white chicken breast.
Americans think that chicken
feet would not be fit for human
consumption but many far eastern
countries relish them. On the
other hand, "human grade" beef
steaks fed to pets could cause
serious nutritional imbalances
and disease if fed exclusively.
Pet foods that create the
superficial perception of
quality (USDA, human grade,
etc.) with the intent of getting
pet owners to feed a particular
food exclusively is not what
health is about.
Pet Nutrition Is Serious
Health Science
Pet nutrition is not about
marketing and who can make the
most money quickly.
Unfortunately an aspiring pet
food mogul off the street can go
to any number of private label
manufacturers and have a new
brand made. These manufacturers
have many stock formulas that
can be slightly modified to
match the current market trend.
Voilà! A new pet food wonder
brand is created.
Pet foods are about pet
nutrition, and nutrition is a
serious health matter. There is
an implied ethic in going to
market with products that can so
seriously impact health. But the
ethic is by and large absent in
the pet food industry. Starting
with the 100% claim and on to
all the fad driven brands that
glut the shelves, health is not
being served. Nobody other than
our organization is teaching
people the principles I am
discussing here. Instead,
companies headed by people with
no real technical, nutritional,
food processing or health skills
put themselves out to the public
as serious about health ...
because that is what the public
wants to hear and what sells.
Never mind whether producers
really understand or can
implement healthy principles.
The façade sells and selling is
the game. Ingredients are
important, true, but not less
important than the expertise and
principles of the producer who
is choosing them, preparing,
storing, processing and
packaging them. Consumers place
a lot of trust that nondescript
processed nuggets are what
consumers are being led to
believe they are. Many a slip
can occur between the cup and
the lip. There are many slips
that can occur between the cup
of commercial claims and what
ends up in the lips of the pet
food bowl.
Consumer Blame
The consumer is not without
guilt in this unfortunate -
steady diet of processed pet
food - approach to pet feeding.
They want everything easy and
inexpensive. They don't want to
learn or have to expend too much
effort, and they want something
simple to base decisions on
like: "corn, wheat and soy are
evil," or "USDA approved," or
"human grade" or "organic is
good." They also want something
for nothing and think they can
get it in a pet food. People
want prime choice meats, organic
and fresh foods all wrapped up
tidy in an easy open, easy pour
package, hopefully for 50 cents
a pound. They may even pay $1 or
a little more if the producer
can convince them about how
spectacular their product is or
how much cancer their pet will
get if they choose another
brand.
Are By-Products Evil?
In the processing of human foods
there are thousands of tons of
by-products that cannot be
readily sold to humans. Does
that make them useless or even
inferior? No. Such by-products
could include trimmings,
viscera, organs, bones, gristle
and anything else that humans do
not desire. Should these
perfectly nutritious items be
buried in a landfill? As I
mentioned above, while Earth's
resources continue to decline
and people starve around the
globe, should we feed our pets
only "human grade" foods and let
perfectly edible - and sometimes
even more nutritious -
by-products go to waste? How is
that conscionable or justifiable
for either the consumer or the
producer?
Road Kill and Euthanized
Pets
This shift to "human grade" for
pet foods is partly due to a
variety of myths that have
gotten much stronger legs than
they deserve. Lore has spread in
the marketplace that road kill
and euthanized pets are used in
pet foods. I have never seen the
proof for this outrageous claim
and after twenty years surveying
ingredient suppliers I have
never found a supplier of such.
However, fantastic myths easily
get life and the more fantastic
they are the more life they
have. It's the intellectually
lazy way and what lies at the
root of so much misery. Sloppy
superficial thinking is what
leads to racism, sexism,
religious persecution and wars.
People would like to think the
world is sharply divided into
right-wrong, good-evil,
black-white. Marketers
capitalize on this by trying to
create such sharp distinctions
for consumers to easily grab on
to: human grade = good/all
others = evil; organic =
right/all others = wrong; rice =
white/corn and wheat = black.
Such simplistic and naïve
distinctions are quick and
simple for advertisers and
salespeople to use to sway
public opinion. But nobody
stepping back and using common
sense would ever think that
something as complex as health
could ever come from what is or
is not in a processed bag of
food. Reality is not black or
white; it is in shades of gray.
Grayness requires some
knowledge, judgment and
discernment before making
choices. It's a little more work
but is what we all must do if
the world is ever to be a better
place and people and pet health
are to improve.
What To Do
How do concerned pet owners
wanting to cut through all the
marketing clutter negotiate a
path? It is very simple if the
basic principles I have
discussed above are kept in
mind. Here are tips on how to
implement an intelligent health
and feeding philosophy:
1. Learn how to feed fresh
food. Alternate these with
honest processed foods fed in
variety, and complement these
foods with well- designed
supplements.
[How To Apologize To Your
Pet] http://www.wysong.net/PDFs/apology_pamphlet.pdf
Don't get all particular
and paranoid about balancing
nutrients and ingredient do's
and don'ts. Rotate, vary, mix it
up and fast once in a while.
Trust in nature, not some
marketing hype. (Use the same
principles for yourself and your
family if you want optimal
health as well.)
2. If you must have human
grade or organic foods for your
pet, go buy the real thing at
the grocery meat counter. Take
it home, cut it up and feed it
raw. Freeze the remainder into
small meal portions and use them
for subsequent meals. Don't turn
your brain off and go buy
"organic" or "human grade" pet
foods that for their cost could
only contain hints of the real
thing. Pet food manufacturers
may be clever at marketing, but
they are not magicians. One
thing is certain; they do not
buy ingredients and then sell
them to you for less than what
they buy them for.
3. Use appropriately
designed supplements such as
Call Of The Wild™ and Wild
Things™ to balance raw meals and
help make them safe if you are
not skilled at such meal
preparation.
4. The best raw, processed
food alternative to fresh foods
from the grocer is non-thermally
processed dry foods - not raw
frozen ones. (See Wysong
Archetype™.) Use this food for
alternate meals and as top
dressing to heat processed
foods.
5. Check the credentials
of the person making the
decisions in the company whose
products you buy. Don't go to a
plumber for brain surgery and
don't expect serious healthy
products from business people.
6. Steer away from brands
that are pushing any particular
hot buttons such as "natural,"
"no by- products," exotic
ingredients (quail eggs,
watermelon, persimmons, etc.),
organic, omega-3, rice and the
like. Although these features
may bring some merit to a food
(if they are put in at other
than "pinch" levels), they are
not an end in themselves and if
the packaged food is fed
exclusively can cause more harm
than good.
7. Steer away from brands
that fear monger. For example,
there is the no corn or wheat
scam - "buy our brand; it has no
corn or wheat." (Just saying a
product has "no" something is
enough to scare the non-thinking
public to the brand that doesn't
have the boogeyman ingredient.
Profiteers know this and play it
to the hilt in the pet food
industry.) The truth is, grains
are put in dried nugget foods
because they contain the starch
necessary for the extrusion
process. Starch is pretty much
starch regardless of whether it
comes from corn, wheat, rice,
potatoes, millet or whatever.
Grains also help decrease the
cost of pet foods. They
contribute some nutrition but in
a properly formulated meat-based
pet food the majority of the
nutritional value comes from the
meat. It is true that animals
may develop allergy to corn or
wheat but that can happen with
rice or any other grain or
ingredient as well. Problems are
prevented by varying the diet.
That is why Wysong has developed
the range of formulations it has
and puts them in small portion
packs so the foods can be
rotated. Of all the Wysong
formulations, the ones with corn
are chosen on almost a 5:1 ratio
over all others and are the
diets we receive the thousands
of raves about, even in those
pets supposedly allergic to
corn!
[Wysong Testimonials]
http://www.wysong.net/testimonials.shtml
This is not to tout the
merit of corn, or any grain in
pet food for that matter. They
are sort of a necessary evil in
dried extruded foods and any of
them can bring some benefit if
rotated in the diet.
8. Do not feed any product
exclusively. Variety is the
spice of nutrition and the road
to good health.
9. Features to look for in
a packaged product would be
those that bring the product
close to the
raw-whole-fresh-natural standard
described above: active enzymes,
probiotics cultures, natural
preservation and protection
against food-borne pathogens,
proper packaging, intelligent
formulation and balance,
micronutrient dense, freshly
produced, fresh ingredients -
and the expertise to do all of
this, not just say so on a
package or brochure. (Some
brands trying to get on the raw
food bandwagon make outright
false claims about "cold"
processing.)
10. The company should be
able to intelligently explain
what they are doing in terms of
processing, packaging, product
preservation and prevention of
food-borne pathogens. It is one
thing to simply put a certain
ingredient into a food, quite
another to protect it until it
is consumed. For example, Wysong
owns its own manufacturing
facilities in order to go beyond
industry standard techniques.
Special portion pack, light- and
oxygen- barrier bags, modified
atmosphere flush and natural
ingredients to prevent oxidation
and food- borne pathogens are
part of all Wysong products.
(See technical monographs on
Packaging, Antioxidants and
Wyscin™.)
11. Most important, learn.
Support a company that helps you
learn the truth and teaches you
how to be at least somewhat
independent of commercial
products. Demand that producers
provide proof for their claims
in the form of good logic,
evidence and science. Try to
discern the company's true
motives, your pocketbook or your
pet's health. Learn how to go
beyond The Pet Food Ingredient
Game.
Wysong R. L. (1993).
Rationale for Animal Nutrition.
Midland, MI: Inquiry Press.
Wysong, R. L. (2002, June
19). Why Modern Medicine is The
Greatest Threat to Health. The
Wysong e-Health letter. Wysong
Institute, Midland, MI.
[The Wysong e-Health
letter] http://www.wysong.net/health/hl_884.shtml
Wysong, R. L. (2002). The
Truth About Pet Foods. Midland,
MI: Inquiry Press.
Wysong, R. L. (2004).
Nutrition is a Serious Health
Matter: The serious
responsibility of manufacturing
and selling. Midland, MI:
Inquiry Press.
Wysong, R. L. (2004). The
Thinking Person’s Master Key to
Health (60 Minute CD Discussion)
Wysong Institute, Midland, MI.
Wysong, R. L. (2005).
Comparing Pet Foods Based Upon
What Matters: The First Study of
its Kind in the Pet Food
Industry. Midland, MI: Inquiry
Press.
Wysong, R. L. & Savant, V.
(2005). The Case AGAINST Raw
Frozen Pet Foods. Midland, MI:
Inquiry Press.
For further reading, or
for more information about, Dr
Wysong and the Wysong
Corporation please visit
www.wysong.net or write to
wysong@wysong.net. For resources
on healthier foods for people
including snacks, and breakfast
cereals please visit
www.cerealwysong.com.