✅ What it is & What’s inside
It’s an air‑dried (not kibble, not wet) dog food.
The main protein sources are grass‑fed lamb, venison, lamb liver, and salmon.
The formula also includes gut‑healthy vegetables and fruits (like sweet potato, pumpkin, carrots, broccoli, blueberry), seeds (like flaxseed, chia), and other nutrients — all designed to support digestion, coat/skin, overall wellness.
Importantly: no corn, soy, wheat or fillers — which many cheap dog foods rely on.
Guaranteed Nutrients (for this Lamb & Venison variant)
Protein (min): 30%
Fat (min): 30%
Crude Fiber (max): 5%
Moisture (max): 15%
Calorie content: ~ 4090 kcal/kg or ~ 425 kcal per cup
The product is meant to be “complete and balanced” — meaning a dog can be fed this as a full diet.
Because it’s air‑dried using a “low and slow” method (instead of high‑heat kibble processing), it retains more nutrients and the ingredients are closer to whole foods.
✅ Pros (What’s Good about it)
High-quality animal proteins (lamb, venison, salmon, organ meats) — good for muscle, overall dog health.
Contains veggies, fruits, seeds — provides fibre, antioxidants, vitamins, minerals, not just protein.
No cheap fillers (corn, soy, wheat) — reduces risk of allergies/food sensitivities associated with fillers.
Air‑dried method helps keep nutrients and makes it closer to whole‑food quality than regular kibble.
Good for digestion, coat/skin, overall wellness; many dog‑owners report better stool, improved energy and better health after switching to this kind of food.
⚠️ Cons / What to Watch Out For
It’s more expensive than typical dry kibble (like many premium or raw-style foods).
Because calorie density is high (air-dried foods often are), you’ll feed less by volume, but you also need to monitor portion sizes carefully — otherwise your dog may gain weight.
As with any diet change, some dogs may take time to adjust, or some may not like the texture or taste (especially if used to kibble).
Although formulation meets nutritional guidelines, I couldn’t find publicly available data from full feeding‑trials (which test long-term health outcomes) — something big commercial brands sometimes publish.
🐶 For Whom It’s Good
This food is a strong option if:
You want high‑quality protein and balanced nutrition for your dog (adult).
You prefer a “whole food / air-dried” diet instead of standard kibble.
Your dog has sensitivities to fillers (corn/soy/wheat) or you want to avoid cheap fillers.
You don’t mind spending a bit more for better quality and you feed the right portions.













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