CORRECT nutrition is crucially important for every aspect of your dog's life. It affects their health and wellness by offering a vital balance of proteins, fats, complex carbohydrates and the trace nutrients and minerals their bodies need for the growth and repair of their immune systems.
Nutrition is a vital part of your dog's ability to think clearly, lower his or her stress levels and a produce a calmer demeanour. The act of thinking takes a lot of energy. Dogs involved in a training programme expend a lot of mental energy focusing on the tasks they must learn.
If your dog starts with minimal nutrition, it will become lethargic, grouchy or hyper when asked to perform the simplest of tasks. They simply are not able to focus properly and lose concentration after a short period of time or they may become confused. If the dog is constantly being asked to do something it can't comprehend, its confusion can lead to an aggressive form of acting out.
In training dogs, the first thing I look at is the dog's diet. I work from the inside out. Training becomes less and less if the causes for the behaviours are not addressed.
Hyperactive, unfocused and out-of-control dogs and puppies often are eating foods that contain extremely high levels of cereal, such as wheat, corn, and-or corn meal.
Aggressive dogs eat food containing higher levels of incomplete proteins that do not digest well.
Shy and stressed dogs do not digest their foods well at all and often suffer from intestinal complications such as diarrhoea. Their coats are often extremely dry and shed heavily. One way to test the foods you are feeding is to soak the food in water for about 15 minutes. If it swells in size and becomes somewhat mushy, it is mostly cereal. Are you dog's stools often soft and loose or is the dog gassy? They are not digesting the food properly. By looking at their food, you will do more to help balance their behaviour, as well as contribute to their health and longevity.
Jeanne Perciaccanto has been a professional dog trainer for 20 years, at http://www.ultimatedogtraining.com, with an education degree in health. She has combined both disciplines and researches diet and nutrition as it pertains to canine behaviour. For more information go to http://www.healthydogfood.net