Compare Dog Foods for the Racing Dogs
Working hounds perform better with an appropriate diet. Compare dog foods to find the perfect diet for your racing dogs.
  Buy at AllPosters.com
Every whippet dog breeder, racer and hound aficionado seem to have a different view on what a racing dog should eat.Some have their homemade dog food recipe, some prefer commercial food, be it dry, moist or semi moist. Some add supplement to their dog’s diet, some frown upon them. At the end of the day what your dog should eat is what works best for him. Every dog is different and the way to the perfect diet is paved of trial and errors. Nevertheless, thanks to the popularity of greyhound racing, trainers collected data and experience about the ideal diet for their dogs and their closest relatives, the whippets. In fact whippets and greyhounds share the same running style, they are sprinters, best suited for short bursts of energy not marathon runners build for long distances and of great stamina like the borzoi or saluki. Years of trials and errors have developed a collective wisdom about greyhound diet and these are the points of universal agreement.
A racing dog diet should be high in fat and protein. Dogs don’t metabolize carbohydrates like humans. The grains and fibers keep the kibble together and help digestion but working dogs thrive on fat and proteins, the real source of nutrients and energy. Read the dog food composition In the dog food analysis the ingredients are listed in order of percentage with the main ingredients first. Within the first components there should be proteins of animal origin like poultry, beef, lamb, fish of eggs. The proteins in a racing diet should amount to 25-30% and the fat to 15-20% of the total content. It is useless to compare dog foods of the dry and moist kind because they have different percentage of water. You should compare only the percentage of dry nutrients. Never feed before a racing event Whippets are not prone to bloats but everybody agrees that a hound should never run on a full stomach. It also makes sense from an evolutionary point of view. A wild predator doesn’t need to hunt if he is full. After a hunt and a meal he will probably take a good nap, just like the kings and queens of our sofas.

Back to nutritious food for whippets
Back to Homepage from Compare Dog Foods for Racing Dogs

|