🐾 Module 1
Feeding Your Puppy (AKA: The Bottomless Pit)
Your puppy is growing at a ridiculous rate.
Not slowly.
Not politely.
Ridiculously.
Bones, muscles, organs, brain — all under construction at once.
Which means nutrition isn’t just important right now…
It’s critical.
Get this stage right, and you’re setting your dog up for a healthier, easier adult life.
Get it wrong, and you may spend the next decade paying for it.
No pressure.
🦴 What Your Puppy Actually Needs (And Why It Matters)
Puppies are not small adults.
They are high-speed growth machines with very specific nutritional demands.
Your puppy needs food that is:
✅ Formulated Specifically for Puppies
Puppy food is designed to:
- Support rapid growth
- Fuel brain development
- Protect developing bones and joints
Adult food simply does not do this well enough.
✅ Higher in Protein
Protein supports:
- Muscle development
- Organ growth
- Immune system strength
A growing puppy uses protein constantly.
If protein quality is poor, growth suffers.
✅ Higher in Calories
Growth takes energy.
Puppies burn calories:
- Growing
- Playing
- Learning
- Existing
Feeding adult food too early often means too few calories, even if the bowl looks full.
✅ Balanced Calcium & Phosphorus
This part is extremely important, especially for larger breeds.
Calcium and phosphorus control:
- Bone growth
- Joint development
- Long-term skeletal health
Too much or too little — especially in big puppies — can cause:
- Abnormal growth
- Joint issues
- Lifelong problems
This balance must come from proper formulation, not guesswork.
🧠 Translation (In Plain English)
Adult dog food is not good enough yet.
Not because it’s “bad.”
Because it’s wrong for the job.
No matter how:
- Natural
- Premium
- Fancy
- Cute the packaging looks
Puppy food exists for a reason.
🕒 How Often to Feed Your Puppy
Puppy stomachs are small.
Puppy energy demands are enormous.
That’s why multiple meals per day matter.
🐕 Feeding Frequency by Age
8–12 weeks
- 3–4 meals per day
- Tiny stomach, massive needs
3–6 months
- 3 meals per day
- Growth still rapid, digestion improving
6–12 months
- 2 meals per day
- Transition toward adult routines
Small meals help:
- Stabilise energy levels
- Improve digestion
- Reduce accidents
- Prevent “I’m starving” meltdowns
🍽️ Real-World Puppy Feeding Examples
🐶 Example 1: The Vacuum Cleaner Puppy
Your puppy inhales food like it might escape.
✔ Use measured portions
✔ Slow feeding bowls help
✔ Don’t assume fast eating means underfeeding
Speed ≠ hunger.
🐶 Example 2: The “I Forgot to Eat” Puppy
Your puppy eats, gets distracted, and wanders off.
✔ Leave food down 15–20 minutes
✔ Pick up leftovers
✔ Offer the next meal as scheduled
Healthy puppies don’t starve themselves.
🐶 Example 3: The Growth Spurt Monster
Your puppy suddenly seems hungrier and taller overnight.
✔ Slight portion increases are normal
✔ Adjust gradually
✔ Monitor body shape, not begging
Growth spurts happen. Panic feeding is optional
🍗 Treats (Yes, We’re Talking About Treats)
Treats are:
- Fine
- Fun
- Excellent for training
Treats are not meals.
Even tiny treats add up quickly in small bodies.
🧮 The 10% Rule (Non-Negotiable)
Treats should make up:
Less than 10% of your puppy’s daily intake
That includes:
- Training treats
- “Just one more” treats
- “They were so good” treats
Yes — even if they sit beautifully.
🎓 Smart Treat Strategies
- Break treats into tiny pieces
- Use part of their meal for training
- Reduce meal portions slightly on heavy training days
Your puppy won’t notice.
Your vet will approve.
⚠️ Common Puppy Feeding Mistakes
- Switching foods too often
- Overfeeding during growth spurts
- Using treats to replace meals
- Feeding adult food “because they seem big enough”
Slow, steady, consistent feeding wins every time.
🧠 Key Takeaway for Puppies
Feeding your puppy well means:
- Choosing the right food
- Feeding the right amount
- Sticking to a routine
It does not mean:
- Bigger bowls
- Endless snacks
- Panic-driven decisions
Your puppy will still act hungry.
That’s normal.
They’re growing.
They’re learning.
They’re also very persuasive.


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