23-Lbs I and love and you Nude Superfood Dry Dog Food (Red Meat Medley)
$38
$74.99
w/ Subscribe & Save + Free S&H
+13Deal Score
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Amazon has 23-Lbs I and love and you Nude Superfood Dry Dog Food (Red Meat Medley) on sale for $38 when you check out via Subscribe & Save. Shipping is free.
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Chewy also has 23-Lbs I and love and you Nude Superfood Dry Dog Food (Red Meat Medley) on sale for $38 when you check out with Autoship & Save. Shipping is free on $49+ orders.
Features:
Meat is #1 Ingredient
Poultry-Free
Protein-Rich
Pre & Probiotics & Digestive Enzymes for Easy Digestion
Amazon[amazon.com] has 23-Lbs I and love and you Nude Superfood Dry Dog Food (Red Meat Medley) on sale for $38 when you check out with Subscribe & Save. Shipping is free. - OOS - Available Again
DogFoodAdvisor rates this dog food as 4.5 / 5 stars.
This sale price is $1.65 per pound, slick for a premium dog food.
Chewy[chewy.com] also has 23-Lbs I and love and you Nude Superfood Dry Dog Food (Red Meat Medley) on sale for $38 when you check out with Autoship & Save. Shipping is free on $49+ orders.
Product Description from Store
Meat is #1 Ingredient - Since the dawn of time, dogs have loved their protein—so that's why this dish is packed with delicious, crunchy bites of the good stuff: beef and pasture-raised bison.
Poultry-Free - Sensitive tummies, rejoice! This is an allergy-safe recipe, I.E. there's no cluckin' poultry (pardon our French).
Protein-Rich - Packed with 34% protein! Fun fact: this bag of kibble has 41.6% MORE protein to boost energy and maintain lean muscle mass compared to BLUE Buffalo Life Protection—Adult.
Pre & Probiotics & Digestive Enzymes for Easy Digestion - Nature's mighty little biotics work hard to ensure your pet's gut is in tiptop shape, and their #2s go smooooothly.
Superfoods - Each bite is packed with antioxidants which support long-term health and are rich with minerals to help your pet perform at their highest level.
Non-GMO Protein & Produce - When it comes to your pet's veggies and protein, GMOs aren't invited to the party. #SorryNotSorry
Grain-Free - Absolutely no corn, wheat, rice, soy, or oats in sight. We don't pack your pet's food with grains just to help us save a buck or two.
Filler-Free - Unlike other brands, we don't use ingredients like rice or corn to bulk out your pet's food because we know there's little nutritional value and it can contribute to obesity and lethargy.
Holistic Nutrition - Recipe recommended by our in-house holistic vet, Dr. Angie. These handpicked, balanced ingredients nourish your dog from head to paw.
I and love and you Nude Superfood Dry Dog Food - Grain Free Kibble, Pork, Prebiotics & Probiotics,23-Pound
Manufacturer:
NatPets, LLC
Model Number:
Nude Food
Product SKU:
B0092F0CAM
UPC:
740023210061
ASIN:
B0092F0CAM
Brand:
I AND LOVE AND YOU
Item Dimensions LxWxH:
15.5 x 25.53 x 5.25 inches
Item Weight:
23.3 Pounds
Item model number:
Nude Food
Manufacturer:
NatPets, LLC
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My dog died from dilated cardiomyopathy as a result of the grain free diet. There is a link between DC and grain free diets. Something to consider if you choose this path for your dog. There are high quality dog food brands with grain options and healthy meats, prebiotics, etc.
FYI on meat being the number 1 ingredient. That is not an indication of any percentage at all. It is a ratio of that compared to everything else. Beef could be 10% overall but still the number 1 ingredient. That is why most if not all dog foods that have the meat listed as the number 1 ingredient also have a loooong list of other ingredients to keep their individual percentage or ratio of each one below that of the meat. Like peas, sweet potatoe, chikpeas, pumpkin and so on. If they don't spread out and put a bunch of other stuff in there, meat would not be the #1 ingredient. Add up or combine the other fillers like peas, pumpkin, chikpeas etc and meat could be actually be the the #3-5 ingredient. That is intentional.
A example in this specific product, they have dried peas and pea protein listed, if they just used more peas and less pea protein, peas might actually be the #1 ingredient. It is telling because some of what they did add is non meat proteins that counts towards the overall protein content per serving which would normally not be required if there really was more actual meat in the product.
I am not bashing the product but don't be fooled by what they want you to see and concentrate on. There is nothing in that ingredient list or their claim that meat being the #1 ingredient that would imply this has any more actual meat in it than any other generic hard dog food. It may or may not but not by the required labeling so you are left to guess or assume.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Ricchann
02-08-2024 at 12:13 PM.
Quote
from Mr. Sparkles
:
Give grain-based treats. This could be due to taurine deficiency, add taurine.
This is not how it works unfortunately. The problem is beyond a taurine deficiency, there are studies showing non-predisposed dogs getting DCM with taurine levels of low, normal, and high (Qulliam et. al 2023) The bigger issue is that the diet overall is poorly formulated or not formulated by qualified individuals. Unfortunately, there is no way as a layman (non-board certified vet nutritionist/PhD in small animal nutrition) to understand what is nutritionally missing from a diet to begin supplementing. This is why it's extremely important to have a proper team of experts formulating the diet in order to avoid such issues. In addition, by randomly supplementing things you can be unbalancing other nutrients in the process.
In case anyone was interested, here is a very good video that explains DCM in a digestible manner. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1O5gK_hha3s&t=2s (@7:05 specifically is the topic of taurine)
From the article: Overall, there is further evidence to support a link between DCM-like changes and the wrinkled pea diet, but not lentil diet in a small dog breed that is not known to be susceptible to DCM. Further longer term studies are urgently needed to better explore these potential links between specific dietary factors and nutritionally-mediated canine DCM.
Not conclusive but definitely concerning if you have a small breed dog. It's enough to avoid primarily pea protein based dog foods.
This is all why I buy all the premium brands when they are on sale like this and I mix them all together. Just empty out a quarter of a bag of four different foods into a big trash bag and roll it around to mix them. It's the best way to get the best of all worlds and kinds of diets and foods, and my dog absolutely loves it!! I get all my dog food half-price and if you do it every time you see a good deal, you'll have three bags unopened waiting! My previous bff died of liver failure at six years old. So I'm never just going to feed them the same dog food all the time because who knows how and why it happened.
FYI on meat being the number 1 ingredient. That is not an indication of any percentage at all. It is a ratio of that compared to everything else. Beef could be 10% overall but still the number 1 ingredient. That is why most if not all dog foods that have the meat listed as the number 1 ingredient also have a loooong list of other ingredients to keep their individual percentage or ratio of each one below that of the meat. Like peas, sweet potatoe, chikpeas, pumpkin and so on. If they don't spread out and put a bunch of other stuff in there, meat would not be the #1 ingredient. Add up or combine the other fillers like peas, pumpkin, chikpeas etc and meat could be actually be the the #3-5 ingredient. That is intentional.
A example in this specific product, they have dried peas and pea protein listed, if they just used more peas and less pea protein, peas might actually be the #1 ingredient. It is telling because some of what they did add is non meat proteins that counts towards the overall protein content per serving which would normally not be required if there really was more actual meat in the product.
I am not bashing the product but don't be fooled by what they want you to see and concentrate on. There is nothing in that ingredient list or their claim that meat being the #1 ingredient that would imply this has any more actual meat in it than any other generic hard dog food. It may or may not but not by the required labeling so you are left to guess or assume.
It absolutely is. What do you think #1 ingredient means?
If the mixture is 60% corn and 40% beef, corn is the number 1 ingredient. Take away 29% of the corn by weight and replace it with wheat and now beef is the number 1 ingredient at 40% (same amount as before) and corn and wheat are second and third at 31 and 29. You didn't add any more beef to the mix at all and it is now the "#1 ingredient" in the resulting blob. That ratios scales to grams, ounces, pounds, tons, kilograms, etc, it doesn't matter, they are ratios relative to each other.
This is the reason there are a lot of other ingredients in dog foods that like to list "meat" as the first one. They need to put a bunch of different things in there so no other one exceeds the weight of the meat. In theory, a 100 gram serving could consist of 2 grams of meat along with and 98 other things in there at 1 gram a piece and meat would still be the #1 ingredient even though only 1/50 of the resulting product is actual meat. I doubt that is realistic but possible.
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.ni
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I would say it does:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.ni
$31.24 for me with S&S, no coupon.
No dry dog food is high quality.
A example in this specific product, they have dried peas and pea protein listed, if they just used more peas and less pea protein, peas might actually be the #1 ingredient. It is telling because some of what they did add is non meat proteins that counts towards the overall protein content per serving which would normally not be required if there really was more actual meat in the product.
I am not bashing the product but don't be fooled by what they want you to see and concentrate on. There is nothing in that ingredient list or their claim that meat being the #1 ingredient that would imply this has any more actual meat in it than any other generic hard dog food. It may or may not but not by the required labeling so you are left to guess or assume.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Ricchann
In case anyone was interested, here is a very good video that explains DCM in a digestible manner.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1O5gK_h
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That deal must have expired, rats!
https://www.ncbi.nlm.ni
From the article: Overall, there is further evidence to support a link between DCM-like changes and the wrinkled pea diet, but not lentil diet in a small dog breed that is not known to be susceptible to DCM. Further longer term studies are urgently needed to better explore these potential links between specific dietary factors and nutritionally-mediated canine DCM.
Not conclusive but definitely concerning if you have a small breed dog. It's enough to avoid primarily pea protein based dog foods.
A example in this specific product, they have dried peas and pea protein listed, if they just used more peas and less pea protein, peas might actually be the #1 ingredient. It is telling because some of what they did add is non meat proteins that counts towards the overall protein content per serving which would normally not be required if there really was more actual meat in the product.
I am not bashing the product but don't be fooled by what they want you to see and concentrate on. There is nothing in that ingredient list or their claim that meat being the #1 ingredient that would imply this has any more actual meat in it than any other generic hard dog food. It may or may not but not by the required labeling so you are left to guess or assume.
That's not how math and percentages work…
If the mixture is 60% corn and 40% beef, corn is the number 1 ingredient. Take away 29% of the corn by weight and replace it with wheat and now beef is the number 1 ingredient at 40% (same amount as before) and corn and wheat are second and third at 31 and 29. You didn't add any more beef to the mix at all and it is now the "#1 ingredient" in the resulting blob. That ratios scales to grams, ounces, pounds, tons, kilograms, etc, it doesn't matter, they are ratios relative to each other.
https://www.fda.gov/food/food-add...0Blue%20N
This is the reason there are a lot of other ingredients in dog foods that like to list "meat" as the first one. They need to put a bunch of different things in there so no other one exceeds the weight of the meat. In theory, a 100 gram serving could consist of 2 grams of meat along with and 98 other things in there at 1 gram a piece and meat would still be the #1 ingredient even though only 1/50 of the resulting product is actual meat. I doubt that is realistic but possible.
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