Fii
Well-Known Member
If so why, what is the reasoning behind this?
OK, so they're not dogs, but in the wild and in captivity too, boa-constrictors tend to feed and be fed about once a month. Canines, and that includes Vulpine and Wolves too, generally only eat for 3 or 4 days in any week, and for our dogs which don't have to work for a living, an empty stomach for 24 hours is beneficial to them, I feel.
This feeding of dogs several times a day is of no benefit, and despite what many will claim (mostly those who sell the food!), it doesn't give the animals gut a chance to shrink.
Alec.
Alec ....... however I fail to see what boa-constrictors feeding patterns have to do with feeding patterns of dogs as one is warm blooded and the other cold so their digestive system and working bare no resemblance to each other.
.......
I'll admit that I did wonder, after I'd posted, if someone would ask what've snakes got to do with dogs!
What I'd intended to convey, and failed to do, was that taking one creature to an extreme, the boa-constrictor, most meat eating creatures (and that would include humans), actually benefit from giving their digestive system a rest, for a day.
I'm also not entirely convinced that wild or feral living carnivores actually do gorge themselves, not on a regular basis anyway. The opportunity probably wouldn't be there to do so, on a regular basis.
It is strange though, that as horses, so our domesticated canines come in many forms of Breed, and though there are no, or very few, original wild horses or dogs, both animals continue to breed true to their own canine and equine ancestry. Behaviour patterns seem to remain in place, too.
Anyway, yes you're right, it probably didn't make for much sense!
Alec.
surely they gorge every time they have a kill if they did not they would risk losing valuable food to opportunist feeders?
Many years ago, I read a book which was written by Winston Churchill's vet. He advocated starving dogs for one day a week but allowing them access to the "herb garden" where they were allowed to browse and choose what they wanted to eat. Churchill had a small poodle which was fed chocolate and was obese. The vet took it in for a few weeks and lectured Churchill on the error of his ways. The dog went home very much slimmer and healthier
Nope, I feed mine ad-lib.