|
BY Nature Pet Foods
By Nature Pet Foods
By Nature Pet Food |
|

|
|
Spratt's promotional dog bowl
circa 1900. |
|
By Nature Pet
Food |
|
Spratt's Patent Limited
(The following is reprinted from "The
Story of New Jersey - Volume IV" which was published in New
York, 1945) |
| Holding an
outstanding position in the promotion of the care and welfare of
domestic animals and birds, the House of Spratt’s, one of Newark’s
leading business establishments, has carried forward its interesting
work for three-quarters of a century. This particular industry was
founded , in the first instance, upon James Spratt’s love of dogs.
An electrician by profession, Mr. Spratt made a hobby of dog
breeding and raising, and it was out of this hobby that he gradually
shaped plans for improved diet and conditions that were destined so
to elevate the plane of dogdom throughout the world.
One of his early discoveries was that a
scientific dog food was not only desirable for canine well being,
but was absolutely essential to the promotion of health and stamina
in the dog world. His early experiments culminated in the creation
of the food - Spratt’s Patients, as it is known, which gained and
held first place in many guidebooks of correct dog feeding. Mr.
Spratt discerned at the outset that his invention would fill a
long-felt public need, and he set up a small business in Holborn,
London, England, for the sale of his product. His “Meat-Fibrine”
dog cakes, invented and patented by him in 1860, furnished the basis
upon which the Spratt industry developed thereafter. From a little
shop in Holborn his enterprise grew until it had ramifications
throughout the world. It is now recognized as offering every kind of
service to dogs and dog owners and guaranteeing the perfection of
the services it offers. Spratt’s were the original makers of dog
biscuit food and consequently are the oldest form in the world
manufacturing prepared dog foods. Although Spratts’s are primarily
known as manufacturers of dog foods, the company produces today a
wide range of other foods for foxes, game birds, poultry, and caged
birds, trout and aquarium fish. Mr. Spratt, the founder, born in
Cincinnati, Ohio, went to London, England, at an early age, and
there, while performing his regular duties as an electrician,
compounded his famous “Meat-Fibrine”, which stood every kind of
laboratory and practical test of dog feeding and went far toward
demonstrating the validity of his conviction that “food makes the
dog.” He continued his interesting work until his death in 1880.
It was not long after the London shop was started that activity
spread to America.
| pet food pet food dog
food dog food |
|
|

|
|
The company that started it
all - Spratt's Patent Limited, makers of "Meat
Fibrine." The building was erected in 1899 and is located in
East London.
(Photo by Jordi Martorell) |
|
by nature pet food
pet food dog food |
| At the
outset, the American work was centered in New York City, and it was
only later that the firm removed to Newark, New Jersey, and
established itself at the present sight, No. 18 Congress Street.
Since 1885, when the first American activity got underway, the
Spratt organization has grown and prospered. Development was a
remarkable and romantic story from the very beginning, down through
the time of establishment in Newark, and thenceforth to the present.
Through this period the care of dogs, cats and domestic animals and
birds has become evermore and more a scientifically based process,
so that, as people sometimes humorously note, some individuals give
practically as good care to their animals as to as to themselves and
members of their own families. The present treatment accorded dogdom
throughout the world is in itself a splendid memorial to James
Spratt, the founder of Spratt Patient Limited and Spratt Patient
(America) Limited, and the man who gave the earliest impulse toward
dog care and animal welfare.
The Spratt organization is now
nationally and internationally known. At Beddington, England, the
company has its own “Quarantine Station,” under the supervision
of the Ministry of Agriculture, where immigrant dogs may pass the
six-month detention period required by English Law. Other services
include the supply of collars and all kinds of combs, brushes and
appliances for dogs and every kind of animal and livestock; the
shipping of dogs, horses, cattle and all types of animals to all
parts of the world on an “all-in” service basis embracing
shipment, insurance coverage, and other costs in a single
transaction; boarding kennels where owners may leave their dog
during absence from home; show and exhibition services for all kinds
of animals, birds and fish. The major work continues to be, however,
the manufacture of foods. The carefully shaped biscuits, branded
with the familiar “Spratt’s” and “Trade Mark X,” are baked
in great ovens, fifty foot long and twelve feet wide, then carried
along with the aid of mechanical devices to drying bins where they
remain for forty-eight hours before being packaged for shipment to
the trade. Publications regularly prepared by the Spratt company
provide full instruction as too feeding and care of every kind of
dog and animal, with an account of the peculiarities of each. These
booklets even include a catalogue the ailments common to each breed
of animal and bird and fish, with special instructions as to
treatment and especially handling during treatment. Some of Spratt’s
original devices, such a glass tubes for feeding canaries the
medicines they need, with instructions as to how to apply these
medicines, further facilitate to the maximum degree the care of ill
of injured animals. From England come such beautiful publications as
“Everybody’s Dog,” “The Friend O’ Man,” and “Game and
Gun and the Country Estate” (a shilling quarterly).
Officers of the company are: J.W.
Openshaw, president; Thomas Young, vice-president and general
manager; F.S. Sanguine, secretary; M.B. Hamilton, treasurer; and A.P.
Ramsay, assistant general manager. |
|
by nature pet food
by nature pet food |
|

|
|
An ad from "The First
Annual Directory of Breeders and Exhibitors of Dogs in the United
States and Canada 1909" which contains the warning to
"Avoid: Sweetened, Soft or Medicated Foods, they cause
indigestion, loss of coat and other evils." |
|
|
|
The Pet Food Industry
Let The Buyer Beware! |
|
Dog
Food Dog Food By Nature By Nature BY Nature
Dog Food Demo Girl
|
|
In 1860, a young American
electrician made his way to England to sell lightening rods.
Saddened by his lack of success in this venture, he was forced to
look for other opportunities. Spending most of his time around the
docks, he noticed that the ship’s cooks routinely fed the stray
dogs left over biscuits. The young man, an avid dog lover, was
impressed by the convenience of this and the apparent fitness of the
dogs. Using more guesswork than science, he formulated the first dog
food biscuit from vegetables, wheat, beet root and whatever meat was
handy. In 1890, his company went public and James Spratt, in true
rags to riches style, became a very wealthy man.
Since these humble beginnings, dog food
has grown into $16.2 billion dollar industry (American Pet Products
Manufacturers Association - 2007) and offers more than 500 brands,
types, and formulations. While competition has lead to many, many
advances in over sight, regulation, overall quality, nutrition,
performance and pricing, it has also caused consumer confusion. How
DO you choose the right food for your canine companion? |
|
Dog Food Dog
Food By Nature By Nature Dog Food Demo Girl |
|
Advertising - The Good, The Bad,
The Even Worse |
|
Dog Food Dog
Food Dog Food Demo Girl BY Nature Pet Foods |
| According to
the Association of National Advertisers (ANA, www.ana.net),
advertising provides the consumer “with useful information about
features and benefits; helps them differentiate among competitive
choices; advises them of pricing information and promotional
opportunities; and - ultimately - saves them money by encouraging
competition that exerts downward pricing pressures.” This is all
true but the savvy consumer has to be aware of the other side of the
coin as well. Mary L. Azcuenaga of the Federal Trade Commission in
her speech entitled “The Role of Advertising and Advertising
Regulation in The Free Market” (1997), said that “markets may
not always produce the optimal amount of consumer information to
ensure that consumers will be fully informed before making their
purchasing choices” and further that “the FTC tries simply to
ensure that information provided by sellers to consumers is
accurate, not that it is complete.”
The fact that dog food advertising is
incomplete goes a very long way in the maintenance of consumer
confusion concerning purchasing decisions - but it is not the only
factor. Like the purchase of a infant/baby product, the purchase of
dog food is emotionally based and tied into the profound attachment
felt by the owner for the pet. Recognized by marketers, this has led
to advertising not based on features, benefits and function but
rather on “emotionomics,” a term coined by Dan Hill, author and
marketing guru. "Being on-emotion," Hill writes,
"means your advertising is more likely to be seen, read,
believed, remembered...When emotions get tapped, the ensuing
relationship between a company and that customer acts as a barrier
to conquest by competitors because loyalty is a feeling" (Emotionomics:
Winning Hearts and Minds, Adams Business and Professional,
2007). In short, the appeal is made to the heart and not the
head - something, to which, we all fall prey and is all the more
effective given the trend toward pet humanization and dog as family
member.
That advertising has done the pet food
consumer a great disservice there is no doubt. Given the highly
competitive nature of the industry, the lack of full disclosure, and
the playing to the emotional rather than the rational, it becomes
difficult, if not impossible, to make informed decisions concerning
pet food purchases based on an individual company's marketing
efforts. What is needed is thirty-party documented information,
understanding, and a willingness by the consumer to question
everything. |
|
Dog Food Dog Food
Dog Food Demo Girl By Nature Pet Food |
|
Reading the Ingredients
- Just the Basics |
|
By Nature Pet Foods |
| While it can
be stated inexpensive dog foods use less expensive, lower quality,
ingredients to maintain their price point, it can not be assumed
that an expensive dog food uses a better quality of ingredients.
Marketing, advertising, and packaging all have their cost and are
reflected in the price paid. It becomes the responsibility of the
pet owner to make sure that the food they are buying reflects the
price of quality ingredients and not the quality of the marketing
campaign. This can be accomplished by familiarizing yourself with
the ingredient information.
By law, all dog foods in the United
States must clearly list their ingredients. Further, and again by
law, these ingredients must be listed by weight in descending order.
It is this ingredient panel that first gives a clue as to the
suitability of a dog food.
Dogs are carnivores. This means that
they require meat protein and the amino acids that make up that
protein to be happy and healthy. Always choose a dog food that
lists a specified meat protein as the first ingredient followed
further down the ingredient panel by other meat protein sources. Multiple
meat protein sources guarantee that your pet is receiving all the
amino acids that he needs..
Reject any food that lists a grain as
the first ingredient. Grains do not contain and, therefore, can
not supply the complete package of amino acids required for the good
health of your pet. Additionally, they are difficult to digest which
leads to large stool volume and frequency as your pet tries to rid
itself of the undigested matter.
Reject any food who's ingredient
panel reflects the practice of "ingredient splitting." Usually
done with grains, "ingredient splitting" is the practice
of separating an ingredient into its component parts and then
listing the component parts by weight rather than the ingredient as
a whole. While legal under the labeling laws, it can serve to
disguise the aggregate amount of a particular ingredient and cause
the grain ingredients to fall below the desired first ingredient
named meat protein source.
Wheat, corn and soy are the grains most
predominantly used in dog food. They are readily available and very
inexpensive when compared to meat based protein sources. Low in protein
composition by comparison to meat based sources and incomplete in
the area of the essential amino acids , they also have the dubious
distinction of being the top three allergy response causing stimuli
for our canine companions. Best to stay clear of these ingredients
all together no matter where they show up in the ingredient panel!
Reject any food that uses
non-specified types of meat proteins. Many foods use “Meat
Meal” as an ingredient. This non-specified meat can be virtually
anything from rendered road kill to euthanized dog and cat. It is
unstable in it’s makeup, suspect in it ability to deliver the
required amino acids, and changes with the type of animal rendered.
It truly is “Mystery Meat Meal.”
Reject any food that uses any type of
by-products. By-products are the castoff and waste derived from
manufacturing food for human consumption. When you see that chicken
in the grocery store, the portions that are NOT in the package are
what is considered the by-products. While these are not strictly bad
for dogs, by-products rarely supply a complete amino acid profile.
Further, because they are considered waste, they are generally not
handled in such a way as to preserve their integrity.
Reject any food that lists a meat rather
than a meat meal as its first ingredient. Most of us are
familiar with the McDonald’s Quarter Pounder disclaimer which
states that their quarter pound hamburgers weigh in at a quarter of
a pound before cooking. This is due to the fact that cooking
releases the water out of the burger and it weighs significantly
less when presented on the bun. So it is with meat and meat meal.
A specified meat meal is nothing more or
less than a specified meat (i.e.. Chicken or Lamb or Beef or whatever!)
with its water removed and its size reduced. A specified meat meal
is a much more concentrated source of protein. Further, and knowing
that the ingredient labels are required, by law, to list ingredients
by weight in descending order, the use of a specified meat meal
gives a truer picture of the amount of meat protein contained within
the food. Water weighs a lot - one gallon is
approximately 8 pounds! To include this water weight when
calculating position in an ingredient panel could almost be deemed
deceptive as it does not accurately reflect the position of actual
meat protein in relation to the other ingredients after all the
water has been cooked away. |
|
By Nature Pet
Foods |
|
And What About
Preservatives?
|
|
By Nature Pet Foods |
|
Preservatives are a
necessary evil in all facets of food production - both animal and
human. Ingredients must be stabilized to withstand transport,
manufacture and processing , and then delivery to the end user via
distributors and retailers. This stabilization is achieved through
the use of various preservatives - some naturally occurring, some
man-made. All must be listed on the ingredient panels.
The current trend is away from man-made
(chemical) preservatives to those that are naturally occurring
...with very good reason! The man-made preservatives, while being
excellent at their job of food preservation, also carry a level of
toxicity.
Ethoxoquin, for example, is a Monsanto
made preservative. Originally used as a rubber stabilizer for the
making of tires, it found its way into the pet food industry . It
has a toxicity level of 3 out of 6 - six being so toxic that 7 drops
would kill a human - and has been implicated in birth defects, liver
failure, cancers and infertility.
BHA and BHT are also commonly used in
pet foods as preservatives. Listed as a poison by the American
Poison Control Center, both are known to neurological damage, and
kidney and liver dysfunction.
Propylene Glycol is another
preservative/flavor enhancer to steer clear of. A cousin to
anti-freeze (ethylene glycol), this sweet tasting preservative is
often used in moist treats as it helps retain moisture while
preserving the product. According to the SPCA, it is only 3 times
less toxic than its insidious cousin.
It is probably needless to say but
reject any dog food that uses Ethoxoquin, BHA, BHT or propylene
glycol as preservatives. Opt instead for food which use natural
preservation by the use of Vitamin C, Vitamin E (listed often as
Tocopherals), Rosemary, or a mixture of these. |
|
By Nature Pet Foods |
|
Natural, Holistic, Human-Grade,
and Organic |
| By Nature Pet Foods |
| The AAFCO
(American Association of Feed Control Officials) is an association
which acts as a intermediary between the feed control officers of
each state and the FDA. From their website - “A basic goal of
AAFCO is to provide a mechanism for developing and implementing
uniform and equitable laws, regulations, standards and enforcement
policies for regulating the manufacture, distribution and sale of
animal feeds; resulting in safe, effective, and useful feeds.” As
such, it is the AAFCO who annually publish the definitions of pet
food, feed ingredients and related terms. It is these definitions
that provide the background for what is seen on the dog food label
and allow the consumer to make a more informed decision about their
pet food purchase.
The definition of "Natural"
first appeared in the 2002 Official Publication and reads: “A feed or ingredient derived
solely from plant, animal or mined sources, either in its
unprocessed state or having been subject to physical processing,
heat processing, rendering, purification, extraction, hydrolysis,
enzymolysis or fermentation, but not having been produced by or
subject to a chemically synthetic process and not containing any
additives or processing aids that are chemically synthetic except in
amounts as might occur unavoidably in good manufacturing practices.”
They further go on to say that when using the term “Natural” on
a pet food label and in reference to the product as a whole, each
ingredient must meet the “Natural” definition with the exception
of chemically synthesized vitamins, minerals, and trace nutrients
for which a disclaimer is recommended. Even given this consideration, “Natural”
fares a lot better than it’s cousins “Holistic” and “Human
Grade.”
“Holistic” pet foods abound. It
seems everyone is using this word either descriptively or as part of
their brand name. The interesting thing about the word “Holistic”
is that the AAFCO neither recognizes it nor do they address it. In
feed and pet food circles, the term “Holistic,” due to its lack
of definition and standardization, is meaningless and misuse,
unenforceable.
“Human Grade” ingredients from USDA
licensed plants. You hear it quite a lot but, like “Holistic,”
“Human Grade” isn’t defined by the AAFCO and there is no
standardization. Further, all slaughter houses must, by law, be USDA
licensed as they are primarily servicing the human food industry.
You will never see “Human Grade” on a pet food bag - this
because once an ingredient leaves the USDA licensed slaughtering
facility and travels to the pet food manufacturer, it is no longer
considered fit for human consumption as there are no regulations in
place as to shipping and handling.
“Organic” is probably the best
defined term used in pet food as it’s definition by-passes the
AAFCO and has it’s roots in human industry. It encompasses not
only ingredient, but the agricultural methods and husbandry used to
produce those ingredients, the transport of those ingredients from
farm to factory, and the techniques used in every thing from
handling to processing. Each step is monitored before a third party
certifying agency deems the process worthy of “Organic
Certification” and allows its Seal of Certification to be
displayed on the pet food bag. Organic Certification is an arduous
but, when completed, provides the consumer with a food that is third
party guaranteed to be “produced by farmers who emphasize the use
of renewable resources and the conservation of soil and water to
enhance environmental quality for future generations. Organic meat,
poultry, eggs, and dairy products come from animals that are given
no antibiotics or growth hormones. Organic food is produced without
using most conventional pesticides; fertilizers made with synthetic
ingredients or sewage sludge; bioengineering; or ionizing radiation.”
(USDA Publication “The National Organic Program” Printed April
2002, Updated January 2007). Perhaps needless to say, but of great
significance, is the fact that the misuse of an Organic Seal carries
significant civil penalties (The Organic Food Production Act of
1990). |
|