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Is there not a risk of bone shards doing damage to a dogs intestines? Chicken bones especially are prone to splintering.

mine regularly get raw chicken carcasses as part of their diet,never had a problem yet,same with everything iv ever given them game wise just always raw cooked bones become hard and then may well splinter causing problems as you mention :thumbs:

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Is there not a risk of bone shards doing damage to a dogs intestines? Chicken bones especially are prone to splintering.

 

Correct. :thumbs:

Its important, that you mince it well first threw a good mincer.

Feeding a good quality working complete, stops this from happening, but, if rabbits are minced raw, as well as chickens ect, it will be fine.

Avoid big heavy weight baring bones, they will crack a dogs teeth.

I know wild dogs wolfs ect eat them all the time ect, but a lot die in the wild too, far more then dogs that are fed properly. :thumbs:

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I feed lamb ribs and chicken carcases whole: these animals are reared to die young so the bones aren't hard like a mature adult's bones. Rabbits I only feed whole if they are quite young: even rabbit leg bones can be very hard in old animals. I generally mince whole rabbits then freeze for three weeks to kill tapeworm cysts. General rule is don't feed leg bones (weight bearing bones)

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Is there not a risk of bone shards doing damage to a dogs intestines? Chicken bones especially are prone to splintering.

 

Correct. :thumbs:

Its important, that you mince it well first threw a good mincer.

Feeding a good quality working complete, stops this from happening, but, if rabbits are minced raw, as well as chickens ect, it will be fine.

Avoid big heavy weight baring bones, they will crack a dogs teeth.

I know wild dogs wolfs ect eat them all the time ect, but a lot die in the wild too, far more then dogs that are fed properly. :thumbs:

 

Utter bollocks!

 

Edited to add, the bit about weight bearing bones is correct the rest is anti-raw properganda

Edited by Born Hunter
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