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Corso doesn't eat dry food

teodora

Well-Known Member
anyone else who has a Corso that simply doesn't like and won't eat dry food?
What do you feed them?
 

Zeus and I

Active Member
Have you mixed the food? wet and dry? Is he being stubborn because he likes the wet food better. Or has he never liked the dry food?
 

kguitarchic18

Well-Known Member
haha... sorry I laugh because its mainly them being a spoiled dog. Zola LOVED kibble until about 7 months. And after battling, and her going DAYS without eating I gave in and started adding canned food mixed with kibble. She then got picky to that, and I found that its easier and healthy to make a huge batch of stew (meat, broth, water,brown rice, veggies, etc) and I mix about 1 cup of that with each meal and she gobbles everything up. As long as you don't mind adding wet food or canned every day then its worth it.
 

teodora

Well-Known Member
Zeus and I - he never liked it.
kguitarchic18 - i add canned food/topping/treats now and this is how he survives (and hand fed, it takes hours!). Cooking his food is the last solution...
musicdeb - thank you, i responded there.
irina - I think so, he is spoiled and it is my mistake.
What worries me is the fact that he didn't eat for days if we didn't offer him anything else (than Orijen with no topping). He would prefer to eat rocks, grass or pretty much anything, not kibble. He's a puppy, and growing.
I'll just try again with a new brand of kibble he seemed to accept, and I'll take him back to vet if it doesn't work.
 

irina

Well-Known Member
Have you tried soaking the kibble in warm water. We do that, even though Ajax would eat it anyway. But we were told it is better for the digestion. Probably BS, but it cannot do anything bad anyway.
 

BlackShadowCaneCorso

Super Moderator
Staff member
I agree and a spoiled pup that could cause problems should he ever get sick. We soak all our dogs food in water to give it a bit of a brothy type appearance but unless there is a medical reason I don't add extra stuff to the food for just the reason, it breeds fussy dogs and I don't deal well with them.
 

teodora

Well-Known Member
irina - thank you, I will soak the food if the dry food test fails again.This morning he had probably 10 pcs of his new dry food, each of them carefully selected (?!) and that was it: more than nothing, anyway... The new food is mixed with the old one for a smooth transition, but he picks up the NEW food only.
BlackShadowCaneCorso thanks, I added top ups and wet food and treats and I totally own it, but I want to fix it now. :-( He was well under the standard weight when i brought him home. Now he's in standard but we're having these problems. I also changed his food too quickly. His tummy is resilient though.
 

BlackShadowCaneCorso

Super Moderator
Staff member
The one thing about dogs is that they have a strong sense of self-preservation and will not allow themselves to starve. So while you hate seeing the dog not eating, it is a game of wills and so far he is winning. I don't mean to come off like I am paying the blame game, that isn't the case. We had the same issue when we had rotties it is a learning curve to it all but it really is a battle of wills and when you are dealing with a breed that is know for their strong, independent wills it is never easy.

When switching food add yogurt and pumpkin to ease the upset belly and keep the colon and stools under control.
 

irina

Well-Known Member
Teodora, just to let you know, it's obvious I know, but the hotter the water and the longer you soak, the more the kibble will fall apart. So for your picky eater, I would try adding boiling water, covering the bowl with a lid and letting it soak until the mixture cools to warm, half an hour or so. By then it will be mush and might as well be wet food. Let us know how it goes.
 

teodora

Well-Known Member
BlackShadowCaneCorso -I try to figure out who I'm dealing with.. so to speak. Jack is such a loving and gentle boy and he would eat his food from my hand only. Obviously, he eats all treats or wet food from his bowl. Another interesting part is that now he begs for our food - we never shared our food with him. I just ignore him. I don't want to tell him sit and wait, because then, well, he waits - and I know i am not gonna give him anything.
They're pretty good at training their humans.

irina, thanks - great idea. This is my backup plan. Now i try to make him eat his dry food, and see if it works. I will add water just in case he won't and won't eat. I'm thinking about adding plenty of hot water in the beginning, then gradually reduce the amount of water so he won't feel the difference.
 

DennasMom

Well-Known Member
Yes! They certainly are good at training their humans!! HA!! :)

How big of a deal do you make meal time?
I'm wondering if he's being influenced by your energy around meal time - the less importance you put on him eating, the more relaxed he should be, and, hopefully, the more likely he'll be to eat it.
Just a thought...

You say he does eat his treats... can you use his regular kibble as treats, too?
Get him working... then throw a handful into his dish for him to "finish" - prime his hunger/eating juices with some training work, then let him consume his rewards (and dinner) from his food dish.
If that works, you can hopefully wean him off the process, and just fill the dish as a "reward" for being cute. :)
 

teodora

Well-Known Member
DennasMom - I try not to make it a big deal, we eat then he gets his kibbles and he smells them and he's just like "thanks, but no thanks". And he keeps looking at our table. This morning he had very few kibbles - and that was it for today. I left the food in his dish all day, and he didn't want it.
He drinks water and he is searching everywhere (for his treats?) including our bedroom, under the pillows, but otherwise he's okay.
I didn't do any training with him today, as he was waiting for his rewards instead of his food and i want to get him eat his food. He would probably eat some kibbles as reward, because he eats from my hand, but that's not the point: to hand fed a Corso with kibbles, one by one...lol, that's a full time job!
 

Young347

Member
I feed my cc raw meat diet 130lb male and 14 week old female puppy and she loves it do some research it is not for everyone but I take the extra time and make sure my animals have a great diet and they love it!!
 

musicdeb

Well-Known Member
This is my experience with the raw diet with my boy, Titan.

Ok, first of all, the basics. Raw diet is 80% meat, 10% raw meaty bone and 10% organ meat. The pup is fed 2-3% of their expected weight. Expected weight is based on parent’s weight, usually take the average of the parents. For example, the pup is expected to weigh 100 lbs., you would feed the pup 2-3 lbs of meat per day. For simplicity, you feed the pup 2 lbs of meat per day. You then would feed him approximately 1.5 lbs of meat + 2 ozs of raw meaty bone and 2 ozs of organ meat.

Organ meat is not started until at least 2-3 weeks on raw diet. Organ meat is liver, kidney, spleen, etc. Hearts and gizzards are meat because they are muscle.

The best meat to start raw diet is chicken legs, leg quarters, chicken breasts, and/or chicken necks (use these sparingly due to the high bone content). The chicken legs and leg quarters are pretty close to the 80% meat and 10% raw meaty bones.

Raw chicken feet are a great source of glucosamine. Titan eats his raw chicken feet frozen.

The pup will chew the bones once or twice and swallow, do not be alarmed that is normal. Pups will regurgitate, that is normal.

You will notice the pup will drink less water and the poop will dramatically reduce in size and occurrence. Titan’s poop is about the size of a cat’s poop and he usually poops every other day.

Do the chicken for about 2-3 weeks and then you can slowly introduce other meat and organ meats. Other meats are any meat you can buy at a grocery store or coop.

If the pup starts to have diarrhea after starting new meat or organ meat, reduce the amount of meat you are giving them until the diarrhea subsides.

I have fed Titan raw diet since 2012 because he had severe skin allergies and chronic yeasty ear infections due to the chicken and grains in dog food. It took 8-12 months to notice a difference but he no longer has skin allergies or chronic yeasty ear infection. I went the route of the vet prescribing antibiotics, steroids and special shampoos. It would clear up for a couple of weeks and start again.

FYI: Although pups are allergic to chicken in dog food, they seem to be ok with fresh chicken. However, be aware that some pups are allergic to chicken and/or all poultry.

Hope this helps. Let me know if I can help you further with feeding your pup raw diet.

Check out the Raw Diet sub forum in Health & Nutrition with a wealth of information re: raw diet.

“Do your research, form your own opinion and go with gut. Do what is best for your pup and your budget.â€
 

teodora

Well-Known Member
i know this can be a stupid question: but we live in an area with farms. There are chickens, lambs and all kind of living creatures all around: would the raw diet have any impact on his "hunting" impulse? Would Jack be more tempted to consider them "food"?
 

musicdeb

Well-Known Member
Feeding them raw does not cause them to chase small animals because they see them as food. If they have a high prey drive, they will chase small animals. Does he chase them now? If not, he probably does not have a high prey drive but it could develop as he matures.
 

teodora

Well-Known Member
nope, now he doesn't. He's just looking at them.
Good that raw food wouldn't change anything .