Below are our top reasons to consider excluding dry pet food, also known as kibble, in your pets’ diet. However, we also understand that kibble may be the only option that fits into your budget or lifestyle, and as such, at Off the Leash, we provide a variety of meticulously curated dry pet foods that we feel are the best options in our current market.

These options include Carna4, an air-dried kibble alternative that is convenient, contains fifteen ingredients or less, and is shelf stable; Nature’s Logic, which is currently the only kibble on the market that uses whole food ingredients in place of synthetic vitamins and minerals; and Open Farm, a certified B-Corp that only sources proteins from Certified Humane and GAP-rated farms.

We'd love for you to drop in our shop and check out some of the brands we carry and show you different ways to supercharge your pets dry food! 

The Downsides of Dry Food

  • As Dr. Juliet Decaestecker writes in her book, “50 years from today, the cancer rate was 1 in 100 dogs. Today, according to studies, dogs have the highest rate of cancer occurring in any mammal on our planet …. This year, i.e. 2019, the numbers say that 1 in 1.65 dogs will succumb to cancer.”1 

    This 50-year period coincides with the rise of dry food diets being developed, manufactured and fed to dogs as it has become the convenient normalcy in households today. 

  • Kibble creates tartar, plaque and bad bacteria build-up between teeth that can lead to a slew of dental and gut issues. Imagine your dentist telling you to eat potato chips every day to clean your teeth!

  • Feeding a high protein diet means nothing if the body cannot digest it.  Many brands of kibble get most of their protein from fillers like corn or beans that have a low biological value of about 34, compared to a raw egg that has a value of 100 or raw beef that has a biological value of 78.

  • Kibble is so processed that it lacks digestive enzymes, forcing your pet’s pancreas to create them instead. Unfortunately, our pets have a limited capability of producing these enzymes which is why our dogs and cats start to see health issues around six to eight years of age when they can no longer produce them and, therefore, no longer absorb vital nutrients.

  • Carbs usually make up 25-45% of kibble, sometimes more.  Carbohydrate-based diets cause inflammation in the body leading to obesity, diabetes and cancer. ”Dogs and cats do not have an absolute dietary requirement for carbohydrates...” 2

  • Artificial vitamins and real vitamins are very different. Like humans, pets cannot absorb synthetic vitamins as easily as vitamins from real, whole, fresh foods.

  • Most kibble is made with animal protein that can even sometimes include 4D livestock (dead, downed, diseased, or destroyed), euthanized animals, roadkill or grocer and restaurant waste. We prefer to feed our pets whole, fresh foods with no by-products. 

  • When kibble contains an abundance of Omega-6 fatty acids and and an insufficient amount of Omega-3 fatty acids, it leads to inflammation in the body. Omega-3s are essential for brain development, healthy skin and coat, coordination and balance, sight and hearing, and much more.

    They are also unstable and almost impossible for kibble manufacturers to safely put in dry food without them spoiling.  This is why we feed our dogs a raw diet that has balanced fats in stable conditions.

  • The ancestral diet of canines and felines consisted mostly of prey animals that were about 70% water.  Historically, our pets have obtained most of their moisture from their food.  Kibble contains less than 11% moisture on average. This puts your dog or cat at risk of chronic dehydration because they don’t have a strong thirst drive like humans. Additionally, cats’ tongues are not designed to lap up water like that of a dog. Dehydration can negatively impact every organ in the body. It’s specifically taxing on the renal system, which is why we now see so many pets with conditions like kidney disease, bladder stones, and urinary tract infections.

  • Kibble that is extruded at high temperatures (230-350 degrees) can create carcinogens such as heterocyclic amines. Artificial preservatives such as BHA, BHT and Ethoxyquin have also been linked to cancer. We prefer our pets’ food to be free of carcinogens and artificial preservatives.

  • Aflotoxins are toxic compounds produced by fungus found in grains, peanuts, peas and legumes. They cause immune suppression, parasite infestations, liver damage, reduced growth rate, cancer, and even death – in humans too! More alarming is that a study found that out of eight pet foods tested, all eight tested positive for mycotoxins. 3

  1. Dr. Juliet Dacaestecker, Healthy Dog, Happy You: Secrets to a Thriving Life with Your Best Companion

  2. Michael S. Hand, Craig D. Thatcher, Rebecca L. Remillard, Phillip Roudebush, Lon D. Lewis, Small Animal Clinical Nutrition, 4th Edition (Mark Morris Institute; 2000)

  3. Susan Thixton, The Pet Food Results, 2015. TheTruthAboutPetFood.com