These are old pictures...
My parvo pup, not too long after she was released from the vet hospital, cleaning up after her dinner. (That's right, I put a parvo pup on a raw diet!!!)
My other dog gnawing on some meaty pieces.
This is my senior cat (RIP) who was converted to raw at 12 years of age. I need to double check my dates, but I think she was 17 years old when I took this picture. (I swear I have a picture of her as a kitten dated 1991, and she was put to sleep in 2011 about a month before what I thought was her 18th birthday, but may actually have been her 20th birthday.)
Raw fed! I'm just sharing because I think it's a great picture. Not to say a non-raw fed dog can't be athletic (because we all know they can be!), but I love showing what great shape my dogs are because there are a lot of naysayers out there.
Another bone-gnawing photo. (Note for anyone not familiar with raw: She doesn't get bones like this except as a rare and supervised treat... these heavier weight bearing bones can cause teeth to chip or crack, especially in over-zealous dogs. Better bones to feed are non-weight bearing bones. Even those can sometimes cause chipped or cracked teeth, again especially with over-zealous dogs, but are less likely to do so than the heavier and harder bones.)
This freezer has since been replaced with something bigger. The bigger freezer now has the bottom 3 shelves dedicated to pet food, with the top 2 shelves dedicated to people food, and the door shelves a mix of both (pet food on the bottom door shelves, people food on the top, reason being I do sometime get non-human grade food, such as green tripe, and I don't want to risk any dripping onto human food, just in case). This freezer was entirely dedicated to pet food (with human food relegated to the tiny freezer attached to the ridge).
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