Naming Names: We’ve Updated Our Approved Dog Food List

This year, weโ€™re not just telling you how we select the best dog foods, weโ€™re identifying some of our top picks.

0

For years, Iโ€™ve told you what attributes to look for (and look out for) when choosing a food for your dogs. This often leads people to ask me what companies or products I like best, or what I feed my dogs. Iโ€™ve always declined to answer, because whatโ€™s right for my dogs (and time and budget), may not suit you or your dogs at all. But to heck with it: This year, Iโ€™m naming names โ€“ not the names of what I feed, but what foods and companies I admire the most, and what products I would point you toward if I accompanied you to the pet supply store (see โ€œWhatโ€™s the Best Dry Dog Food?โ€). Of course, you have to select what works best for your dogs โ€“ just like us, they canโ€™t all eat the same thing and still thrive โ€“ but I hope it helps you understand how I use WDJโ€™s food selection criteria to narrow down the abundant options.

Speaking of the wealth of options: There are more than 1,100 good dog foods represented on our list of โ€œApproved Dry Dog Foods for 2023,โ€ which is available to subscribers only. This is a far cry from the couple-dozen products that met the same selection criteria when WDJ was launched 26 years ago. Itโ€™s a great thing to have so many healthy options today, even if it can be overwhelming.

Also in this issue: When I first read trainer Kathy Callahanโ€™s article (โ€œDonโ€™t Bring Your Dog to Every Gathering!โ€), I immediately thought of something that happened shortly after I graduated from high school. My parents once threw a big country barbecue party. There was an entire pig cooking in a pit in a firepit, a band playing in a tent in the pasture, and hundreds of people all over the property. At the time, I had a Kelpie-mix named Tavi, who had the run of the place thanks to his training and usual good behavior. But late in the afternoon, I heard a bunch of people yelling and the unmistakable sound of a dog fight. I ran straight for the ruckus, where three or four people, including a family friend who was a professional musician, were trying to separate the combatants: Tavi and our next-door neighborโ€™s dog, who had gotten into our pasture somehow. In the melee, my musician friend got bitten โ€“ a redirected snap that punctured the back of his hand. This not only led to a trip to the emergency room, but several return visits to a doctor, because the bite (which got infected) damaged a nerve in my friendโ€™s hand, and left him unable to play the guitar for about a year.

Talk about guilt; I feel terrible about it to this day. Why hadnโ€™t I locked up my dog for the party? The answer is partly that I was young and dumb and confident in my dogโ€™s training โ€“ but the real answer is that I had never heard of trigger-stacking. Read Kathyโ€™s article, and avoid my mistake!