How much food do I need?
By following the directions on packaged BARF DIET™ products, your dog can enjoy high quality,
nutritious and healthy food.

The BARF DIET™ packaging is designed to protect the flavor, color, moisture content and nutritional
value from the freezer climate. All natural ingredients are selected at their peak and processed under
optimal conditions. The resulting product is flash frozen and kept in a consistent subzero temperature
to prevent moisture migration. Holes placed on the side of the packaging allows for trapped air to
escape when placing product into the outer cases.

Preparation
A raw pet food diet will spoil if left unrefrigerated for an extended period of time. To thaw, remove
required patties from the bag, place in a container with lid and defrost in the refrigerator. We
recommend using stainless steel dishes. Any excess food not eaten should be discarded.

Safe Handling Instructions
Raw meat products may contain bacteria that could cause illness if mishandled. Keep raw meat
separate from other foods; wash working surfaces, utensils and hands with hot soapy water after each
feeding. Treat as you would any raw meat product. Dr. Billinghurst's BARF DIET™ should be used
within 2-3 days of thawing. Do not re-freeze once it has been defrosted.

How Much to Feed?
No two dogs are alike in their metabolic rates, age, or activity levels but do remember that a lean dog
will be healthier in the long run. You can feed more or less of the diet in order to keep your dog at its
optimum weight.

Feeding Directions...
Feed normal active dogs 2% of their body weight per day. For example, a 50 pound dog may do very
well on one pound of food per day, a 100 pound dog, 2 pounds of  food per day. A highly active dog may
require 3% of their body weight per day. In the case of a 50 pound dog, they would then require about
one and a half pounds of food per day, a 100 pound dog, 3 pounds per day.

Dr. Billinghurst's BARF DIET™ Feeding Guide
  2% body weight                               4% body weight                                                6% body weight
12 lb. dog          ½ Patty/day          12 lb. dog            1 Patty/day                      12 lb. dog          1 ½ Patty/day
25 lb. dog          1 Patty/day           25 lb. dog            2 Patties/day                  25 lb. dog          3 Patties/day
50 lb. dog          2 Patties/day       50 lb. dog            4 Patties/day                  50 lb. dog          6 Patties/day
100 lb. dog        4 Patties/day       100 lb. dog         8 Patties/day                100 lb. dog          12 Patties/day





Making The Switch To Better Nutrition
T
here are several ways to switch to a natural raw diet .The following general guidelines and specific
ideas should get you thinking in the right direction and help you make a decision as to how you will go
about the switch with your pet(s).

The switch can be rapid, straightforward and trouble free. An important factor to consider is the diet you
are switching your pet from. Where a pet has some experience of eating a variety of home produced
foods, both cooked and raw, there is usually more acceptance and less likelihood of gastrointestinal
upset on the part of the pet. With kibble fed pets, the change is much more dramatic for their system.

There are two general methods of making the switch to better nutrition, "Rapid " and "Slow."

Rapid Switch
This is the simplest way to make the switch. You simply go ahead and do it! Yesterday you fed your pet
kibble or canned pet food, today you begin to feed the BARF DIET™. Before using the rapid switch, you
need to consider whether your pet is suited to a quick transfer of diet. The general experience and
consensus is, that the rapid switch is the preferred, simplest, most trouble free and most successful
method for dogs particularly young and healthy dogs with a relatively normal gastrointestinal system.
The rapid switch with pets that are older, pets with digestive problems or impaired immune systems
may not be appropriate. Many older pets that have been kibble fed all their lives (and some younger
ones for that matter) cannot tolerate both raw food and kibble together in their digestive tract. That
combination can result in diarrhea or vomiting or both. In this case we have no choice, it has to be the
rapid switch.

It can be helpful to allow your pet a one or even a two-day fast prior to making the transfer. This allows
for a small amount of detoxification and also brings to your assistance a mighty ally, hunger! When you
begin feeding the BARF DIET™, you may divide the daily amount into two or three small meals.

Slow Switch  
This method of switching your pet can take from one to four weeks, or up to six months, depending on
the circumstances. Some pets never make the switch completely, as many pet owners leave their pet
suspended between kibble and raw, "just to be sure they don’t leave any important nutrients out." Not a
great idea!

There are four basic ways to go about the slow switch.
1) You can offer one meal of the BARF DIET™ followed by one meal of the old food, and gradually feed
fewer meals of the old type. If your pet accepts this method with no problems it is a fair indication that
he has a very robust digestive system and would have handled the rapid switch extremely well.

2) The second way to go about it is to offer both types of food at the same time, and gradually offer less
and less of the old food and more of the new food. E.g. some kibble and a chicken wing in the same
bowl. Twenty five percent of the new food for a few days, fifty percent for a few days, seventy five percent
for a few days then one hundred percent. On the other hand, some pets may develop gastrointestinal
upset as they cannot tolerate these two vastly different types of food in their digestive system at the
same time.

3) The third slow switch method is to physically break the old and new food down and combine the two
foods into a homogeneous mass. This way you can start out with small amounts of the new and
gradually decrease the old over time. This works well with a pet that is reluctant to try the new fare.

4) Those pet owners who have always fed a home made but cooked diet may decide to introduce the
new food in a cooked state, and gradually feed it in a more raw state. Dog owners whose dog is
suffering from some an immune deficient state can cook the BARF DIET™.
Cooking is not
recommended for normal, healthy dogs.
How do I make the switch from my current food to the BARF diet?