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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Cita: | No entiendo. ¿Tu vecina se molestó porque pensó que alimentabas mal a tu perro, o que lo alimentabas demasiado bien?
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Lo que la molestó; que habiendo gente muriéndose de hambre diera de comer a mis perros de forma exquisita,, mas o menos como el cometario que ha hecho Valentín.
Se zanjo enseguida, porque la dije algo tajante que no viene a cuento decir... solo me faltó decirla, que lo que se gasta en vino su marido podía alimentar mejor a su hija..
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Ah...
De acuerdo, el meollo es que los huesos ya cocinados es cuando se vuelven un peligro para los chuchos.
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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...pos yo...les doy los guesitos del pollo desde hace mas de 5 años y todavia no se mueren...
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Se recomienda que a los perros hay que darle todo cocido, por beneficio del perro como para sus dueños.
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Al parecer, es un riesgo, aunque también dice que hasta con croquetas se pueden ahogar. Igual que uno, que con sólo una uva y ya no la cuentas.
Yo digo que al menos en parte hay una cultura que pretende espantar a la gente para que no bajen mucho las ventas de las croquetas.
¿Qué comieron los chuchos por siglos y milenios a nuestros pies antes de que se inventaran las croquetas?
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Cita: |
¿Qué comieron los chuchos por siglos y milenios a nuestros pies antes de que se inventaran las croquetas?
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Comieron los chuchos las sobras de nuestros antepasados,, por eso la longevidad de los antepasados humanos como la de los chuchos era por entonces mucho menor que la actual.
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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...el perro de Matusalen vivio 655 años...
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Supongo que todos Vds. respetan el derecho de sus vecinos a descansar y a dormir en paz, no como los hijos de p.ta que tengo a mi lado.
Ya me compré mi resortera profesional para darles con todo a la próxima que ladren a las 4 de la madrugada. Lo malo es que el ángulo está medio complicado.
Comencé arrojándoles amoniaco y sí ha ayudado un poco, pero como a los dueños no les importa mi sueño, tendré que pasar al siguiente nivel.

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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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morpheus142
No respeté a los vecinos que he tenido porque han sido todos unos hijosdeputa que por eso me hizo pensar hace años de vivir sin comunidad vecinal,.
En la actualidad vivo en espacios abiertos, con vecinos al lado que no les molestan mis perros porque les he acostumbrado a no ladrar de noche... no porque moleste al vecino de al lado, que me importa un huevo, es porque me pueden multar en mi localidad si los perros ladran de noche..
Justo en la puerta de entrada de mi casa hay un letrero del ayuntamiento explicando que se multa si no se recogen las heces del perro, con 600 € de multa.
Pues si, los que tenemos perros tenemos que ser responsables de lo que hagan, según marque la Ley, porque si alguien se salta la Ley con mis perros, suelo responder con la misma moneda.... y ya sabes que estas cosas son interpretativas..

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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Cita: |
Comieron los chuchos las sobras de nuestros antepasados,, por eso la longevidad de los antepasados humanos como la de los chuchos era por entonces mucho menor que la actual. |
De hecho es al revés: antes la comida era más sana, nutritiva y natural. Es ahora que las enfermedades degenerativas resultado de las porquerías que comemos nos matan como moscas. Hace tan sólo un par de generaciones, la diabetes por ejemplo, era una rareza entre adultos de por si enfermos, mientras que hoy hasta en los niños es epidemia. Ya nacemos predispuestos.
Yo me atrevo a especular que los perros del siglo pasado comían mucho mejor que mucha gente hoy día.
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Me encontré este muuuy interesante artículo:
Cita: | By Dr. Becker
Commercially prepared pet food in the U.S. has a relatively short (less than 100 years), but interesting history. Believe it or not, the only food made exclusively for pets prior to the early 1920s were dog biscuits!
During the 1920s and '30s, the pet food market began to expand a bit. Americans with enough money to purchase their pet's food could find dehydrated, pelleted and canned formulas made from meat and grain mill scraps. But most pets were still fed primarily raw meat and table scraps, plus whatever food they hunted for themselves.
The Great Depression of the 1930s and early '40s had a significant impact on the growth of the commercial pet food market, however, lack of industry regulation invited anyone who wanted to make a buck to produce a can or bag of pet food. During that period, canned pet food accounted for over 90 percent of the market.
During World War II (1939 to 1945), not only was metal rationed, but pet food was categorized as "non-essential" by the U.S. government. The combination spelled death for the canned pet food industry. In addition, food rationing led to fewer table scraps. Pet owners who could afford to bought dry pet food or dog biscuits – the only commercially available products at the time.
Byproducts of WWII: Dry Pet Food and Processed Human Food
Unfortunately, the American pet owner's love of dry pet food has endured well past the end of World War II. The war also sparked the processed food revolution in the U.S. Spam and similar products were developed in the 1930s to feed the troops abroad and to help with food rationing restrictions at home. All the factors that made processed food attractive to humans ultimately had a significant impact on the pet food industry as well.
The period after the end of WWII was a time of enormous economic growth and expansion in the U.S. Jobs were plentiful and more Americans were able to buy their own homes. As more families moved out of cities to suburbia, giant supermarkets replaced small grocery stores. Consumer demand for processed foods, for fast food – for food in general – kept pace with increases in educational and employment opportunities, individual wealth, and ever-expanding lifestyle options.
In responding to the tremendous increase in U.S. consumer appetites, the human food industry created vast quantities of agricultural scraps from slaughterhouses, grain mills, and processing plants. Pet food manufacturers immediately understood the unlimited opportunity of human food waste to their industry.
By 1960, Pet Food Companies Were Able to Mass-Market Kibble
It's absolutely true -- our pet population provides a place for recycling waste from the human food industry. Grains that fail inspection, uninspected pieces and parts of waste from the seafood industry, leftover restaurant grease, deceased livestock, and even roadkill is collected and disposed of through rendering -- a process that converts all sorts of human food industry waste into raw materials for the pet food industry.
In the late 1950s, a U.S. pet food company developed a way to create kibble from boiling cauldrons of meat, fat and grain scraps – it's called extrusion. The raw materials are purchased by pet food manufacturers who then blend the rendered fat and meat with starch fillers. They add bulk vitamin and mineral supplements, and then they extrude the mix at high temperatures, creating all sorts of toxic reactions including advanced glycation end products and heterocyclic amines. This is what passes for pet food and it's sold to consumers at a tremendous profit.
This "advancement" in manufacturing allowed pet food companies to capitalize on the popularity of kibble. Now, they were able to mass-market the type of pet food most popular with U.S. pet owners due to its convenience and low cost.
Today, there are hundreds of kibbles, canned and semi-most dog and cat foods to choose from. This is remarkable, given that not quite 60 years ago, commercial pet food was almost unheard of.
Have We Chosen Convenience Over the Health of Our Pets?
No one really argues with the fact that in order for optimal health to occur, animals – including humans -- must consume the foods they were designed to eat, and preferably whole, fresh and unadulterated. This is known as species-appropriate nutrition. For example, vegetarian animals must eat vegetation for optimal health. Carnivores must eat fresh whole prey for optimal health.
Carnivorous pets have not evolved to digest and assimilate foods like corn, wheat, rice or potatoes – yet these are the very foods the vast majority of pet food manufacturers use as primary ingredients in their formulas. Fortunately, dogs and cats are extremely resilient creatures. Not only do they not die immediately upon eating biologically inappropriate foods, but it often takes years before the significant physical degeneration that occurs from a lifetime of eating the wrong foods becomes noticeable.
One of the reasons we're able to deceive ourselves into believing convenience pet foods are good for dogs and cats is because the changes to a pet's health and vitality brought on by a dead, processed diet are usually not immediate or acute.
For over a half-century, our pets have been fed inappropriate diets that have kept them alive, but not thriving. In fact, we've created dozens of generations of animals that suffer from degenerative diseases linked to nutritional deficiencies.
Optimal Nutrition for Your Dog or Cat
Dogs and cats need quality protein, fats, and a small amount of vegetables and fruits, which provide antioxidants and fiber to animals that no longer hunt whole prey.
Natural sources of trace minerals, vitamins, and fatty acids must be added, since the soils in which foods are grown are depleted of many of the nutrients pets need. Also, food storage, whether it's in a freezer or a pantry, decreases critical essential fatty acid levels in foods.
Pets need unadulterated, fresh, whole foods that are moisture dense. They don't need grains, fillers, artificial preservatives, colors, additives, chemicals, byproducts, or processed foods. Although animals can eat some processed foods, they aren't designed to consume a lifetime of dry or canned diets. |
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Cita: | It's absolutely true -- our pet population provides a place for recycling waste from the human food industry. Grains that fail inspection, uninspected pieces and parts of waste from the seafood industry, leftover restaurant grease, deceased livestock, and even roadkill is collected and disposed of through rendering -- a process that converts all sorts of human food industry waste into raw materials for the pet food industry.
In the late 1950s, a U.S. pet food company developed a way to create kibble from boiling cauldrons of meat, fat and grain scraps – it's called extrusion. The raw materials are purchased by pet food manufacturers who then blend the rendered fat and meat with starch fillers. They add bulk vitamin and mineral supplements, and then they extrude the mix at high temperatures, creating all sorts of toxic reactions including advanced glycation end products and heterocyclic amines. This is what passes for pet food and it's sold to consumers at a tremendous profit. |
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Cita: | Carnivorous pets have not evolved to digest and assimilate foods like corn, wheat, rice or potatoes – yet these are the very foods the vast majority of pet food manufacturers use as primary ingredients in their formulas. Fortunately, dogs and cats are extremely resilient creatures. Not only do they not die immediately upon eating biologically inappropriate foods, but it often takes years before the significant physical degeneration that occurs from a lifetime of eating the wrong foods becomes noticeable. |
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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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Por eso hay esas multas: por inquilinos a los que les importan un huevo sus vecinos.
Y no estés tan seguro de que los ladridos no molestan al vecino que se compra su pizza y apaga su celular para disfrutar de una buena película en la tarde en su casa... y el cuadrúpedo empieza con su show.
Vds. los dueños de perros no entienden que hay gente nerviosa que no soporta un ladrido; no saben lo que es dormir tres horas y tener que ir a trabajar al día siguiente (o sea el mismo). Impedir el sueño de una persona es de hecho una agresión bastante grave, mucho peor que un insulto. Hay que defenderse.

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Publicado:
Ene 19 2017 Título:
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magionne:
No le veo el problema a alimentar un gato.
El simple hecho de que abras una lata de atún lo induce a acercarse a ti, por huraño que sea.
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