Feeding & Watering
Choosing Feeds
Sled dog sports today include a wide variety of dogs and
activities and are practiced in almost every kind of
climate. There is no one perfect diet that will meet the
requirements of every sled dog under every condition
because the right diet for a dog depends upon its
genetic makeup, environment, age, physical state,
training regimen, and the food sources that are
available.
Sled dog diets usually consist of
commercial dry food, meat-based food, or a combination
of the two. Dry foods are convenient to store and feed
and, if formulated for working dogs, may not require
supplementation except when the dogs are working several
hours a day. Fresh meat products are usually more
difficult to store because they require freezing, and
they contain a lot of water (most contain around 75
percent water) and therefore take up more space per
calorie fed than dry food.
Meat feeds are, however,
extremely palatable to dogs, and they may help maintain
hydration because they contain so much water. Dry foods
may experience some nutrient loss due to processing,
although manufacturers usually compensate for this,
while meat products are more susceptible to spoilage.
High-quality feeds from both categories are readily
available in all but the most remote locations.
Meat-based products should be
dried, canned, or kept frozen until they are used.
Commercial dry foods should be used within six months of
the milling date and should contain adequate
preservatives so that their fats and vitamins do not
spoil in storage. Keeping dry products in cool, dry,
pest-free environments will help keep them fresh, and
once a bag has been opened, it should be kept away from
heat, light, and air. Cleanliness in food preparation is
also very important. Clean food and water containers
help to reduce the risk of diarrheas caused by bacteria.
When choosing a product or
combination of products to feed your sled dogs, remember
that a sled dog's nutrient requirements change
significantly depending on its age, environment, and
physiological state. You may wish to choose one product
that will meet your dogs' requirements for all of these
situations, or you may choose a feed that will act as a
base that you can supplement as the need arises. In
either event, choose a product that is relatively high
in fat (15 percent minimum), relatively high in protein
(25 percent minimum), fresh, and of the highest quality
available. (Note that low-quality commercial foods will
not maintain a working sled dog.)
Determining a Working
Dog's Dietary Needs
The very best way to monitor your
dog's nutritional status is to run your hands over it.
Perform this examination at least every two or three
days. (In extreme conditions, it is important to keep an
even closer watch on a sled dog's weight.) The ribs,
spine, and hip bones should not be buried under an inch
of fat, nor should they protrude, but they should be
easy to feel. A well-conditioned sled dog should be lean
and muscled, not skinny. If you are unsure of what the
ideal appearance and feel of your individual dogs should
be, solicit the help of an experienced musher or
veterinarian. Also, take every opportunity to feel and
look at the dogs that are doing well in your particular
mushing activity.
It is important to note that
there is no formula or table that will tell you how much
you should feed your dogs. Formulas and tables will give
you a place to start, but they should not be relied upon
for long-term feeding guidelines. There is too much
variation in metabolism among dogs and the environments
they live in, let alone the workloads they perform, to
rely on an "average" requirement. However, an "average"
44-pound husky living on its chain in the summertime
will require around 30 calories per pound of body
weight. An average 30 percent protein, 20 percent fat
dry dog food (on an as-fed basis) contains about 2,050
calories per pound. Therefore, this "typical"
maintenance dog will require about 101/2 ounces of dog
food per day. If a dog is genetically more "husky," it
may require less food; if it has more hound in its
background, it may require more. Again, monitor your
dogs' nutritional status with your hands.
Meeting the Demands of
Training
As you gain experience in feeding
your dogs, you will find that you will frequently need
to change the amount you feed them in order to maintain
them at their optimal weight. When you begin training
and each time you increase the workload, your dogs will
require more food. During cold or wet periods, they will
need more food just to maintain their normal body
temperature. One of the most difficult periods of time
to maintain a dog's body weight is during the fall when
the weather is often cold and wet and the training miles
are increasing. During such periods, anticipate your
dogs' increasing nutritional needs and begin to feed
them more before they start to lose weight. During the
most demanding periods of time, a sprint dog may require
two to three times what it was eating during the
off-season, and a long-distance racing dog may require
three to six times its off-season requirement.
Adding Fat
It may be difficult-if not
impossible-to get your dog to eat enough of a standard
30 percent protein, 20 percent fat commercial dry food
to meet its needs during Alaska winters or under racing
conditions. This problem can be overcome by feeding the
first 2,000 to 3,000 calories in commercial food and
meeting the remaining caloric requirement with a fat
supplement. This amount of commercial food will usually
meet a sled dog's vitamin, mineral, and protein
requirements, and the fat supplement will satisfy its
need for extra calories. If you choose to feed meat as
the basic portion of your dogs' diet, balanced
commercial frozen meat products are available.
Keep in mind that there are
limits to the amount of fat that can be supplemented.
Working dogs will do very well on diets where up to 60
percent of the calories (35 to 40 percent of the dry
matter) comes from fats. When fat intake is raised to 80
percent of the calories (about 55 to 60 percent of the
dry matter) for periods of longer than seven days, dogs
can become anemic and suffer a decline in appetite and
performance.
Mixing Your Own Rations
Some mushers prefer to mix their
own meat ration and add some commercial dry food to it
as a source of vitamins, minerals, and carbohydrates. If
you choose this route, be sure to enlist the help of an
experienced musher or nutritionist, as it is not always
easy to balance a ration this way. Recently a few
commercial dry products designed to be fed with meat
have become available. These products are enriched with
vitamins and minerals and take some, although not all,
of the guesswork out of feeding non-commercial
meat-based diets.
Feeding During the
Off-Season
Most domestic dogs spend most of
their adult life in the state known as maintenance. This
is also the nutritional state of most sled dogs during
the off-season. During this time, there is a tendency to
feed rations that are poorer in quality than those fed
during the working season. Recent research results
indicate that dogs maintained through the off-season on
high-quality rations are better prepared to resume
training because their bodies are more able to mobilize
and burn fat during exercise. It also seems to take
several weeks for a dog's metabolism to adapt to a
high-fat diet. The drawback of feeding premium dog food
year around is that it can be easy to put extra weight
on a dog in the off-season, so watch your dogs closely
and adjust their portions as necessary.
Life Stages
In addition to changes in weather
and training, dogs will experience different nutrient
requirements during pregnancy, lactation, growth, and
old age, and you will need to adjust their diet and food
intake during these times.
Pregnancy and lactation. A female
should be maintained on a performance-type ration
throughout pregnancy and lactation. She can be fed at
maintenance levels for the first four weeks; however,
from the fifth to the ninth week, her intake should be
increased by 10 percent each week so that when she
whelps, she is getting about 11/2 times what she was
eating in the maintenance state. As a rule of thumb, her
food intake should be increased by 30 percent of
maintenance for each puppy she is nursing. Thus, if she
only has one puppy, she should be fed 130 percent of
maintenance. These suggestions are just
guidelines-remember to run your hands over her every day
or so and adjust her food intake as needed. A lactating
dog should be neither skinny nor obese.
Puppies: Puppies
usually weigh between 10 and 14 ounces at birth and
should gain weight every day after the third day of
life. Weight gain is an excellent way to monitor the
nutritional and overall health status of a litter of
pups. If supplemental feedings are required due to a
health problem with the mother or pups, slow or negative
weight gain is often the first noticeable sign. Enlist
the help of a veterinarian or other experienced person
the first time you attempt to raise orphan pups or even
supplement nursing ones.
Puppies can begin to eat solid
food at 3 weeks of age. Puppy food is recommended for
the first 4 months of their lives. A flat pie pan with
soaked dry food or a meat ration is a good way to entice
them to start eating. As they walk through the food,
they will lick their paws and realize it is something
good to eat. Over the next three to four weeks, they
will consume more food, so they can usually be weaned
between 6 and 7 weeks of age. Before, during, and after
weaning, be sure that less aggressive pups are
maintaining a normal rate of growth (since there is no
standard rate, compare the growth rates of the less
aggressive pups and their littermates).
After 4 months of age, pups
should be fed a premium food at a rate that keeps them
in optimal body condition but not so much that they
become fat or grow too fast (maximum growth rate of 21/2
pounds per week for huskies, 3 to 31/2 pounds per week
for larger Northern breeds). Puppies from lines free of
bone diseases may be fed free choice but should still be
monitored for normal weight gain.
Studies in Labradors and Great
Danes have shown that puppies that are overfed are at
higher risk of developing diseases of their bones,
cartilage, and ligaments. There tend to be fewer
problems with hip dysplasia, osteochondrosis (a problem
involving cartilage and bone maturation), and
panosteitis (an inflammation in the long bones) in the
Alaskan husky than in most other working breeds. These
problems are, however, still fairly prevalent in some
lines of Siberians and malamutes. The potential for
these problems can be greatly reduced by restricting
food intake during the most rapid periods of growth.
Such mild restriction will not prevent a puppy from
reaching its normal full size, but it may take it a bit
longer to do so.
Puppies from lines where these
diseases have been observed should only be fed free
choice during the first 3 to 4 months of life. From 4
months through the time they reach their adult size,
they should be fed a mixture of 50 percent puppy
food/performance ration and 50 percent adult maintenance
ration or 100 percent adult ration. The adult ration
used should be intended for maintenance of adult animals
but shown to meet puppy requirements (this information
will be on the label).
Older dogs: The
aged dog has a slightly decreased ability to digest and
absorb nutrients. It also takes an older dog longer to
move a meal through its gastrointestinal tract. Some
nutritionists have suggested that older dogs be fed
diets lower in protein than their younger counterparts
on the assumption that all older dogs have some degree
of kidney disease. Recent studies have failed to support
this theory. Most older dogs will do well on the same
ration you use to feed your younger dogs in the
off-season. Occasionally a dog will have trouble
digesting all the fat in this ration or may become
constipated on it. If these problems arise, try feeding
a diet lower in fat or higher in fiber, respectively.
Water
Water is the most essential
nutrient. While deficiencies in protein, fat, vitamins,
or minerals will affect a dog's health, it may take days
or months before such problems are noticeable. In
contrast, dehydration affects an animal's health
immediately and in severe cases can even lead to death
within hours if left untreated.
A dog gains water by drinking it
directly, by eating foods that contain water, and by
generating water through metabolism. Water is lost each
day through urine, feces, and water vapor in the breath.
A non-working dog requires about 1 ounce of water per
pound of body weight per day. An "average" 44-pound
husky thus requires around 11/2 quarts of water per day.
Anything that increases a dog's
daily water loss will increase its daily requirement.
When a dog exercises, it exhales more air per minute
than when it is at rest. The exhaled air contains water,
and the colder and drier the outside air, the more water
that is lost. Dogs also lose significant water through
panting when the weather is warm. Increased food intakes
associated with exercise lead to increased fecal output
and increased amounts of metabolic waste, which must be
filtered through the kidneys. Exercise thus leads to
increased water loss not only through the breath, but
also through the stool and urine. A dog's water
requirement may thus increase twofold if it participates
in open-class sprint racing, for instance, and three to
fivefold if it participates in long-distance racing.
Keep in mind that symptoms such as diarrhea and vomiting
also increase water loss.
It is difficult to estimate a
dog's water requirement exactly, but it is important to
understand how environment, training, and illness may
affect it so that you can anticipate these changes and
offer your dogs more water when they need it. During
warm weather, it is best to have clean, fresh water
available at all times. When the temperature drops below
freezing, water consumption can be encouraged by
offering warm, baited water. The bait can come from any
source that will increase palatability (such as dry
food, meat, cooked fish, or garlic powder). The bait
should mix well in water and must not be spoiled or
soured.
About 11/2 quarts of water should
be offered two to three hours before training. Some dogs
will not drink this amount all at once but will readily
consume several smaller portions offered within a short
period of time. Small amounts, such as a pint, can be
offered immediately after exercise to help cool the dogs
down. More, about a quart, can then be offered when they
have completely cooled down. Water intake can be further
encouraged by offering 1 to 11/2 quarts of baited water
before feeding or mixed in with a dog's food.
These recommendations are
intended as a starting point and should be adjusted
according to the needs of your dogs. You can monitor
your dogs' hydration status by observing their hunger
for snow and by examining their skin and gums. In a
well-hydrated dog, the tent made by lifting up the skin
on the shoulder blades should disappear within one to
two seconds, and the white spot made by pressing on a
pink area of the gums should disappear in one second or
less. If either of these processes take longer, the dog
is probably dehydrated and, depending on the severity of
the problem, may need subcutaneous or intravascular
fluid supplementation.
Watching Your Dogs
Remember that these guidelines
are only intended to help you begin your feeding and
watering programs. Your best feedback on how well you're
doing will come from the dogs themselves. Watch them
carefully and learn as much as you can from experienced
mushers whom you respect.
Proper dog nutrition is a blend
of science and art-you can get a brain-full of science
by reading, but you can only develop the actual skills
by practice. So keep your eyes and ears open, and go
have fun with your dogs!