Yes, soak the kibble in warm water, mash it up, stuff the kong and freeze it. It can be a bit frustrating tho for a small puppy to get working on a frozen kong, you could try, soak, mash and refrigerate first.
My 9 week old puppy won’t eat any of his dry kibble. I have tried to wet it as well but he won’t have more than a few pieces. He is currently on IAMS...
I pretty much think kibble is kibble (leaving aside the bottom of the range or obvious rubbish) - it's all heavily processed food, and made with relatively large amounts of carbohydrate (which is necessary for processing).
Re: When to stop soaking Kibble? Penny's breeder weaned the litter onto soaked kibble only, no wet food, so she came to us on soaked kibble. I continued this for a week or toe and then gradually reduced it. I started soaking it again when she got urine infections as a way to get more liquid into her, but since those cleared up I never do now.
Mixing kibble and raw and getting the right mix of nutrients for a puppy can be tricky. Hopefully your breeder is very proficient and well read on nutrient values of raw food and can advise you if increasing one component might be detrimental.
Puppy kibble amounts Discussion in ' Labrador Puppies ' started by Crumbs, .
But my question is how much of dry and how much of wet should she be having? She will be 10 weeks on Thursday. So the guide lines of the kibble is 270kg - 470kg daily The wet food pouch is 6-7 pouches daily and they 150kg per pouch The wet food tray is 1 1/2-5 trays daily and they are 395kg per tray Alexandrea Nwakwubei, #1