Choosing
Feeds
Sled dog sports today include a wide variety of dogs and activities
and are practiced in almost every kind of climate. There is no one
perfect diet that will meet the requirements of every sled dog under
every condition because the right diet for a dog depends upon its
genetic makeup, environment, age, physical state, training regimen,
and the food sources that are available.
Sled dog diets
usually consist of commercial dry food, meat-based food, or a combination
of the two. Dry foods are convenient to store and feed and, if formulated
for working dogs, may not require supplementation except when the
dogs are working several hours a day. Fresh meat products are usually
more difficult to store because they require freezing, and they
contain a lot of water (most contain around 75 percent water) and
therefore take up more space per calorie fed than dry food.
Meat feeds are,
however, extremely palatable to dogs, and they may help maintain
hydration because they contain so much water. Dry foods may experience
some nutrient loss due to processing, although manufacturers usually
compensate for this, while meat products are more susceptible to
spoilage. High-quality feeds from both categories are readily available
in all but the most remote locations.
Meat-based products
should be dried, canned, or kept frozen until they are used. Commercial
dry foods should be used within six months of the milling date and
should contain adequate preservatives so that their fats and vitamins
do not spoil in storage. Keeping dry products in cool, dry, pest-free
environments will help keep them fresh, and once a bag has been
opened, it should be kept away from heat, light, and air. Cleanliness
in food preparation is also very important. Clean food and water
containers help to reduce the risk of diarrheas caused by bacteria.
When choosing
a product or combination of products to feed your sled dogs, remember
that a sled dog's nutrient requirements change significantly depending
on its age, environment, and physiological state. You may wish to
choose one product that will meet your dogs' requirements for all
of these situations, or you may choose a feed that will act as a
base that you can supplement as the need arises. In either event,
choose a product that is relatively high in fat (15 percent minimum),
relatively high in protein (25 percent minimum), fresh, and of the
highest quality available. (Note that low-quality commercial foods
will not maintain a working sled dog.)
Determining
a Working Dog's Dietary Needs
The very best
way to monitor your dog's nutritional status is to run your hands
over it. Perform this examination at least every two or three days.
(In extreme conditions, it is important to keep an even closer watch
on a sled dog's weight.) The ribs, spine, and hip bones should not
be buried under an inch of fat, nor should they protrude, but they
should be easy to feel. A well-conditioned sled dog should be lean
and muscled, not skinny. If you are unsure of what the ideal appearance
and feel of your individual dogs should be, solicit the help of
an experienced musher or veterinarian. Also, take every opportunity
to feel and look at the dogs that are doing well in your particular
mushing activity.
It is important
to note that there is no formula or table that will tell you how
much you should feed your dogs. Formulas and tables will give you
a place to start, but they should not be relied upon for long-term
feeding guidelines. There is too much variation in metabolism among
dogs and the environments they live in, let alone the workloads
they perform, to rely on an "average" requirement. However,
an "average" 44-pound husky living on its chain in the
summertime will require around 30 calories per pound of body weight.
An average 30 percent protein, 20 percent fat dry dog food (on an
as-fed basis) contains about 2,050 calories per pound. Therefore,
this "typical" maintenance dog will require about 101/2
ounces of dog food per day. If a dog is genetically more "husky,"
it may require less food; if it has more hound in its background,
it may require more. Again, monitor your dogs' nutritional status
with your hands.
Meeting
the Demands of Training
As you gain
experience in feeding your dogs, you will find that you will frequently
need to change the amount you feed them in order to maintain them
at their optimal weight. When you begin training and each time you
increase the workload, your dogs will require more food. During
cold or wet periods, they will need more food just to maintain their
normal body temperature. One of the most difficult periods of time
to maintain a dog's body weight is during the fall when the weather
is often cold and wet and the training miles are increasing. During
such periods, anticipate your dogs' increasing nutritional needs
and begin to feed them more before they start to lose weight. During
the most demanding periods of time, a sprint dog may require two
to three times what it was eating during the off-season, and a long-distance
racing dog may require three to six times its off-season requirement.
Adding
Fat
It may be difficult-if
not impossible-to get your dog to eat enough of a standard 30 percent
protein, 20 percent fat commercial dry food to meet its needs during
Alaska winters or under racing conditions. This problem can be overcome
by feeding the first 2,000 to 3,000 calories in commercial food
and meeting the remaining caloric requirement with a fat supplement.
This amount of commercial food will usually meet a sled dog's vitamin,
mineral, and protein requirements, and the fat supplement will satisfy
its need for extra calories. If you choose to feed meat as the basic
portion of your dogs' diet, balanced commercial frozen meat products
are available.
Keep in mind
that there are limits to the amount of fat that can be supplemented.
Working dogs will do very well on diets where up to 60 percent of
the calories (35 to 40 percent of the dry matter) comes from fats.
When fat intake is raised to 80 percent of the calories (about 55
to 60 percent of the dry matter) for periods of longer than seven
days, dogs can become anemic and suffer a decline in appetite and
performance.
Mixing
Your Own Rations
Some mushers
prefer to mix their own meat ration and add some commercial dry
food to it as a source of vitamins, minerals, and carbohydrates.
If you choose this route, be sure to enlist the help of an experienced
musher or nutritionist, as it is not always easy to balance a ration
this way. Recently a few commercial dry products designed to be
fed with meat have become available. These products are enriched
with vitamins and minerals and take some, although not all, of the
guesswork out of feeding non-commercial meat-based diets.
Feeding
During the Off-Season
Most domestic
dogs spend most of their adult life in the state known as maintenance.
This is also the nutritional state of most sled dogs during the
off-season. During this time, there is a tendency to feed rations
that are poorer in quality than those fed during the working season.
Recent research results indicate that dogs maintained through the
off-season on high-quality rations are better prepared to resume
training because their bodies are more able to mobilize and burn
fat during exercise. It also seems to take several weeks for a dog's
metabolism to adapt to a high-fat diet. The drawback of feeding
premium dog food year around is that it can be easy to put extra
weight on a dog in the off-season, so watch your dogs closely and
adjust their portions as necessary.
Life
Stages
In addition
to changes in weather and training, dogs will experience different
nutrient requirements during pregnancy, lactation, growth, and old
age, and you will need to adjust their diet and food intake during
these times.
Pregnancy and
lactation. A female should be maintained on a performance-type ration
throughout pregnancy and lactation. She can be fed at maintenance
levels for the first four weeks; however, from the fifth to the
ninth week, her intake should be increased by 10 percent each week
so that when she whelps, she is getting about 11/2 times what she
was eating in the maintenance state. As a rule of thumb, her food
intake should be increased by 30 percent of maintenance for each
puppy she is nursing. Thus, if she only has one puppy, she should
be fed 130 percent of maintenance. These suggestions are just guidelines-remember
to run your hands over her every day or so and adjust her food intake
as needed. A lactating dog should be neither skinny nor obese.
Puppies:
Puppies usually weigh between 10 and 14 ounces at birth and should
gain weight every day after the third day of life. Weight gain is
an excellent way to monitor the nutritional and overall health status
of a litter of pups. If supplemental feedings are required due to
a health problem with the mother or pups, slow or negative weight
gain is often the first noticeable sign. Enlist the help of a veterinarian
or other experienced person the first time you attempt to raise
orphan pups or even supplement nursing ones.
Puppies can
begin to eat solid food at 3 weeks of age. Puppy food is recommended
for the first 4 months of their lives. A flat pie pan with soaked
dry food or a meat ration is a good way to entice them to start
eating. As they walk through the food, they will lick their paws
and realize it is something good to eat. Over the next three to
four weeks, they will consume more food, so they can usually be
weaned between 6 and 7 weeks of age. Before, during, and after weaning,
be sure that less aggressive pups are maintaining a normal rate
of growth (since there is no standard rate, compare the growth rates
of the less aggressive pups and their littermates).
After 4 months
of age, pups should be fed a premium food at a rate that keeps them
in optimal body condition but not so much that they become fat or
grow too fast (maximum growth rate of 21/2 pounds per week for huskies,
3 to 31/2 pounds per week for larger Northern breeds). Puppies from
lines free of bone diseases may be fed free choice but should still
be monitored for normal weight gain.
Studies in Labradors
and Great Danes have shown that puppies that are overfed are at
higher risk of developing diseases of their bones, cartilage, and
ligaments. There tend to be fewer problems with hip dysplasia, osteochondrosis
(a problem involving cartilage and bone maturation), and panosteitis
(an inflammation in the long bones) in the Alaskan husky than in
most other working breeds. These problems are, however, still fairly
prevalent in some lines of Siberians and malamutes. The potential
for these problems can be greatly reduced by restricting food intake
during the most rapid periods of growth. Such mild restriction will
not prevent a puppy from reaching its normal full size, but it may
take it a bit longer to do so.
Puppies from
lines where these diseases have been observed should only be fed
free choice during the first 3 to 4 months of life. From 4 months
through the time they reach their adult size, they should be fed
a mixture of 50 percent puppy food/performance ration and 50 percent
adult maintenance ration or 100 percent adult ration. The adult
ration used should be intended for maintenance of adult animals
but shown to meet puppy requirements (this information will be on
the label).
Older
dogs: The aged dog has a slightly decreased ability to
digest and absorb nutrients. It also takes an older dog longer to
move a meal through its gastrointestinal tract. Some nutritionists
have suggested that older dogs be fed diets lower in protein than
their younger counterparts on the assumption that all older dogs
have some degree of kidney disease. Recent studies have failed to
support this theory. Most older dogs will do well on the same ration
you use to feed your younger dogs in the off-season. Occasionally
a dog will have trouble digesting all the fat in this ration or
may become constipated on it. If these problems arise, try feeding
a diet lower in fat or higher in fiber, respectively.
Water
Water is the
most essential nutrient. While deficiencies in protein, fat, vitamins,
or minerals will affect a dog's health, it may take days or months
before such problems are noticeable. In contrast, dehydration affects
an animal's health immediately and in severe cases can even lead
to death within hours if left untreated.
A dog gains
water by drinking it directly, by eating foods that contain water,
and by generating water through metabolism. Water is lost each day
through urine, feces, and water vapor in the breath. A non-working
dog requires about 1 ounce of water per pound of body weight per
day. An "average" 44-pound husky thus requires around
11/2 quarts of water per day.
Anything that
increases a dog's daily water loss will increase its daily requirement.
When a dog exercises, it exhales more air per minute than when it
is at rest. The exhaled air contains water, and the colder and drier
the outside air, the more water that is lost. Dogs also lose significant
water through panting when the weather is warm. Increased food intakes
associated with exercise lead to increased fecal output and increased
amounts of metabolic waste, which must be filtered through the kidneys.
Exercise thus leads to increased water loss not only through the
breath, but also through the stool and urine. A dog's water requirement
may thus increase twofold if it participates in open-class sprint
racing, for instance, and three to fivefold if it participates in
long-distance racing. Keep in mind that symptoms such as diarrhea
and vomiting also increase water loss.
It is difficult
to estimate a dog's water requirement exactly, but it is important
to understand how environment, training, and illness may affect
it so that you can anticipate these changes and offer your dogs
more water when they need it. During warm weather, it is best to
have clean, fresh water available at all times. When the temperature
drops below freezing, water consumption can be encouraged by offering
warm, baited water. The bait can come from any source that will
increase palatability (such as dry food, meat, cooked fish, or garlic
powder). The bait should mix well in water and must not be spoiled
or soured.
About 11/2 quarts
of water should be offered two to three hours before training. Some
dogs will not drink this amount all at once but will readily consume
several smaller portions offered within a short period of time.
Small amounts, such as a pint, can be offered immediately after
exercise to help cool the dogs down. More, about a quart, can then
be offered when they have completely cooled down. Water intake can
be further encouraged by offering 1 to 11/2 quarts of baited water
before feeding or mixed in with a dog's food.
These recommendations
are intended as a starting point and should be adjusted according
to the needs of your dogs. You can monitor your dogs' hydration
status by observing their hunger for snow and by examining their
skin and gums. In a well-hydrated dog, the tent made by lifting
up the skin on the shoulder blades should disappear within one to
two seconds, and the white spot made by pressing on a pink area
of the gums should disappear in one second or less. If either of
these processes take longer, the dog is probably dehydrated and,
depending on the severity of the problem, may need subcutaneous
or intravascular fluid supplementation.
Watching
Your Dogs
Remember that
these guidelines are only intended to help you begin your feeding
and watering programs. Your best feedback on how well you're doing
will come from the dogs themselves. Watch them carefully and learn
as much as you can from experienced mushers whom you respect.
Proper dog nutrition
is a blend of science and art-you can get a brain-full of science
by reading, but you can only develop the actual skills by practice.
So keep your eyes and ears open, and go have fun with your dogs!