Search Maine Yellow Pages 
Log In | Register | Help
Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Vet says home cooking is best
By COLIN HICKEY, Blethen Maine News Service Portland Press Herald Saturday, April 14, 2007

Blethen Maine News Service  photo by Joe Phelan
Blethen Maine News Service photo by Joe Phelan
Dr. Judith Herman, posing with her dog Bryan, says, "When I switched my animals to homemade food, I saw a big difference in energy level and ... in their overall health."
The recent nationwide recall of contaminated pet food didn't affect how veterinarian Judith K. Herman feeds her animals.
Herman, who has a practice in Augusta, doesn't use commercial pet food. Her dogs and cats eat raw, homemade meals.
She recommends to her clients that they do the same. "Number one, you have control over the ingredients," she said. "Number two, the quality is the same stuff you eat."
Herman, who owns Animal Wellness Center, said such a switch does more than just protect pets from the threat of contaminated commercial food.
"When I switched my animals to homemade food, I saw a big difference in energy level and in their coats and in their stools and in their overall health."
Herman, though, is a bit of a renegade in her profession in recommending homemade food.
The American Veterinary Medical Association discourages pet owners from adopting the practice. The largest veterinary group in the world, the association features an article on its Web site that stresses the perils of fixing homemade meals.
Tom McPheron, a spokesman for the organization, said people must understand that the recall affected only about 1 percent of the pet food on the market. They also need to understand, he said, that feeding a pet properly is more complicated than putting table scraps in a bowl.
"We just recommend that if they insist on cooking for pets that they educate themselves and work with their veterinarian to ensure the pet gets proper nutrition," McPheron said.
Matthew Townsend, a veterinarian with Kennebec Veterinary Services in Oakland, also urges caution when considering the homemade food option.
"You can run into more problems trying to do the right thing for your pet," Townsend said.
"If they have the time and can prepare a well-balanced diet for their dog or cat, that can work great. The problem is preparing a well-balanced diet."
Townsend added that diet needs can vary, sometimes dramatically, from pet to pet, depending on a number of factors, including age and whether an animal has health problems.
Herman agrees that people need to educate themselves before making their own pet food. But Herman said once the knowledge is acquired, the practice is not that difficult.
To provide a dog a balanced diet, she said, "means that you have a meat source, that you have a calcium supplement to balance out the meat, and that you have the correct ratio of meat to vegetables."Ý
Herman said that ratio generally is 60 percent meat to 40 percent vegetables.
Cats, in contrast, need a higher percentage of protein and cannot survive without meat, Herman said.
As a starting point for anybody contemplating homemade pet food, Herman recommends the book "Dr. Pitcairn's Complete Guide to Natural Health for Dogs and Cats."
Herman has never had a problem using raw meat, but said many veterinarians frown on that because of concerns about E. coli and salmonella.


Reader comments

Sort by: Oldest first | Newest First

Carol13
Apr 15, 2007 8:17 AM
I disagree with Xportlander. This is NOT overblown.

I completely advocate raw diets. My cat got Feline Diabetes from eating that stupid Royal Canin/MediCal formulations. Now she is in remission from raw diet, PZI insulin and the Tight Regulation protocols of Dr. Elizabeth Hodgkins www.yourdiabeticcat.com. Dr. Hodgkins testified at the Congressional investigation this week as an expert witness. She only sells raw food at her clinic.

Xportlander, get educated before you make comments like this about which you have poor knowledge.report abuse
min19972001 of Berwick, ME
Apr 14, 2007 9:11 PM
We feed our dogs raw. We see such a difference in their health, coat, teeth, allergies, and our allergies. I'll never go back to commercial dog food.report abuse
RKG of Sanford/Springvale, ME
Apr 14, 2007 7:48 AM
I don't understand the concern over feeding cats and dogs raw meats. I've never known a cat to cook the mice they kill. Cats, by nature, eat RAW meat.. and so do dogs.report abuse
Xportlander of Scarborough, ME
Apr 14, 2007 6:56 AM
This is being way over blown. Although I realize it is tragic to lose a pet. How many have actually died from pet food that has been fed to pets for years upon years.report abuse

You must be a registered user of MaineToday.com to post a comment. Register or log in.