BARF is about feeding dogs properly. The aim of BARF is
to maximise the health, longevity and reproductive capacity
of dogs and by so doing, minimise the need for veterinary
intervention. How do you feed a dog properly? You feed
it the diet that it evolved to eat. Its evolutionary
diet. A Biologically Appropriate Raw Food diet. A BARF
diet.
Such a diet, a biologically appropriate diet is simple
in philosophy and construction. The very essence of common
sense. It looks at the diet of a wild or feral animal
and duplicates or mimics that type of feeding regime using
available whole raw foodstuffs. These diets may be enhanced
with various supplements. Once the principles are understood,
anybody can do this. No great education is required.
In the case of the cat, which is an obligate carnivore
and a hunter, the biologically appropriate diet is based
largely upon animal derived foodstuffs. Basically, whatever
nutrition can be derived from a whole fresh raw carcass
in its entirety - constitutes a biologically appropriate
diet.
In the case of the dog which is an omnivore, a hunter and
a scavenger, the diet can be based on a wider range of
whole raw foods of both animal and plant origin, with
the further proviso that the foods may be either fresh
or auto-decaying via endogenous enzymes.
Both species rely on bones as a major part of their diet
for a variety of reasons including teeth cleaning and
the myriad benefits which flow from that together with
the nutritional attributes of bones, their psychological
benefits and so on.
The BARF movement appears to have begun in response to
the dietary guidelines outlined in the book "Give
Your Dog a Bone" written by yours truly - Ian Billinghurst.
The acronym BARF started out as meaning "Born Again
Raw Feeders." Initially this was a sling off at dog
owners who fed raw food to their dogs. When the originator
of that term tried a raw food diet on her own dogs, she
was so impressed that she began an Internet list advocating
the use of raw foods for dogs. Along the way she changed
the meaning of the term BARF to the Bones And Raw
Food diet. BARF could also stand for the Billinghurst
Australian Real Food diet. In fact anything you like that
works!
The philosophy behind using BARF, or the hypothesis on
which it is based is that the diet a dog evolved to eat
- over many millions of years of evolution - is the best
way to feed it. This is the hypothesis accepted by most
modern zoos or any zoologist concerned with preserving
a species of endangered animal. It is not the theory endorsed
by pet food companies or the people they train - and that
includes unfortunately - most vets.
If you want to feed your dog[s] BARF, it means not feeding
your dog[s] cooked and or processed food. That is, not
feeding your dog[s] a diet based on cooked grains, no
matter how persuasive the advertising. Artificial grain
based dog foods cause innumerable health problems. They
are not what your dog was programmed to eat during its
long process of evolution.
A biologically appropriate diet for a dog is one that consists
of raw whole foods similar to those eaten by the dogs'
wild ancestors. . The food fed must contain the same balance
and type of ingredients as consumed by those wild ancestors.
This food will include such things as muscle meat, bone,
fat, organ meat and vegetable materials and any other
"foods" that will mimic what those wild ancestors
ate.
Please note that modern dogs of any breed are not only
capable of eating the food of their wild ancestors, but
actually require it for maximum health. This is because
their basic physiology has changed very little with domestication
despite obvious and dramatic changes in their current
physical appearance and mindset.
The BARF diet, being an attempt to mimic the evolutionary
diet of dogs, must, from a practical point of view, use
food that is available from the local supermarket or whatever
local or distant source is economically viable. BARF feeders
do not have to go hunting or send their dogs out to hunt.
That is why I said BARF must mimic, not duplicate the
evolutionary diet of dogs. This is an important distinction.
The BARF feeder will MIMIC as closely as possible rather
than duplicate the NATURAL diet of the dog. We are not
trying to return our dogs to nature. It is impossible
to feed any domestic animal its natural diet, let alone
allow it to live under natural conditions. The natural
diet and natural conditions under which the ancestors
or wild cousins of our dogs live include grave dangers
such as lack of shelter, starvation, attack by potential
food, attack by other predators and the non use of medical
intervention including surgery, vaccination, antibiotics
and preventative measures against external and internal
parasites etc. In other words, natural diets and natural
conditions can be deadly! They are not what we want for
our pets. What we want for our dogs is a diet and an environment
that maximises health. That means a Biologically Appropriate
Diet rather than a natural diet. This is my favourite
use of the term BARF - Biologically Appropriate Raw Food.
One aspect of the BARF programme of diet and health for
dogs that is controversial, is the use of whole raw [meaty]
bones as food for our dogs. I have fed my own dogs with
these for decades, as have thousands of my clients and
readers of my books. For most dogs, whole raw meaty bones
do not constitute a danger. They simply and easily promote
positive good health being a biologically appropriate
food for our dogs. However, where there is a perceived
danger, do not stop feeding bones. In these cases, simply
use bones that have been finely ground.
This brings us to a very practical point. Dog owners who
want to feed BARF must find a source of raw meaty bones,
offal and vegetables plus whatever supplements are appropriate
to balance the diet or treat particular disease problems.
The good news is that there are commercial foods becoming
available that are designed as BARF diets. Watch out for
these. They will make this whole process much easier.
However, even if such foods become available, it is essential
that dog owners fully understand what BARF diets are all
about. That means learning about BARF!
If you want to learn about how to start feeding your dog[s]
a Biologically appropriate raw food diet - and there is
little doubt that using the manufacturers recommended
fuels, spare parts and lubricants is always the best insurance
against breakdowns and system failure - then I strongly
suggest you get hold of - and read - my two books
Give Your Dog a Bone and Grow Your Pups With Bones. In
the case of cats, until my cat book becomes available,
follow the ideas in Give Your Dog a Bone only - leave
out most but not all the vegetables.
These contain the information you need to set your dogs
on the path of true health. The other source of information
and encouragement will be one of the many raw feeding
lists now in existence on the Internet.
Copyright © 2000 Dr
Ian Billinghurst. All rights reserved.
Revised: May 23, 2000
This paper is � copyrighted and may only be used
for information
purposes. It is the sole property of the author and any commercial
use or reproduction without written permission is prohibited.