Nutrients in BARF: What the Components Provide

Nutrients in BARF: What the Components Provide

NATURE FIRST · NUTRIENTS

Nutrients in BARF

What each component provides and why variety matters so much.

Behind the simple idea of raw feeding lies a well thought out interplay of nutrients. Once you understand what each building block provides, you can put the ration together more safely and see why variety is so important.

The nutrient sources

  • Protein and fat provide energy
  • Bone provides calcium
  • Organs provide vitamins and trace elements
  • Oils provide essential fatty acids

The building blocks and what they provide

Protein

Muscle meat

High quality animal protein and most of the energy. The base of every ration.

Calcium

Raw meaty bone

The most important calcium source and the counterpart to the phosphorus from meat. Only ever offer it raw.

Vitamins

Organ meat

Liver provides plenty of vitamin A, other organs provide trace elements. Use sparingly and with variety.

Fibre

Vegetables & fruit

Pureed as the plant portion, providing fibre and secondary plant compounds.

Fatty acids

Oils & supplements

Salmon or linseed oil add omega fatty acids, small amounts fill typical gaps.

Fresh raw meat

Variety fills the gaps

No single type of meat provides everything. That is exactly why variety is the key: different animal species, different cuts of meat and rotating organs ensure a broad spectrum of nutrients over time. Liver is valuable, but because of its high vitamin A content it should only be fed in small amounts.

If you are unsure whether your ration is truly well covered over the long term, a nutrition consultation or your veterinary practice can check it, especially when there are special needs.

Supplements in moderation

Supplements such as oils or algae can be useful to fill typical gaps. More is not automatically better. Use supplements purposefully and discuss any concrete suspicion of over or undersupply with your veterinarian, rather than supplementing on a hunch.

From knowledge to practice

How the components come together and how much your dog needs.

Sources & further reading

  • Ian Billinghurst: Give Your Dog a Bone.
  • Kymythy Schultze: Natural Nutrition for Dogs and Cats.
  • Tom Lonsdale: Raw Meaty Bones.

Note: This article is for general information and does not replace veterinary or clinical nutrition advice. If you suspect a nutrient deficiency or have special needs, please consult your veterinarian.

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