My lab has never refused any type of fruit or veg and we've given her everything you could think of including beetroot and kiwi fruit! Never give a dog grapes though as they can be toxic.She has carrot,apple and banana almost every day instead of fattening biscuity treats. She is really slim and fit and has a brilliant shiny coat. Her absolute favourite treat is a bit of yoghurt. My collie also loved her fruit and veg and lived until she was 17.
Snap Hettster, my old blind rescued poodle loved raw swede. The newfi would eat anything going but adored fresh strawberries, and my last dog - a rescued boxer could not get enough twiglets! Always had to share some of my marmite on toast too.
My dog would eat tomatoes, carrots, cucumber, apples with the core n pips, raisins, also grapes loads of them, never did him any harm...at the time didnt realise they were toxic !! He lived to 14....he never suffered arthiritis or anything even into his senior years...his teeth were perfect too! :)
We only feed raw human grade meat to our dopgs, this is supplemented with fruit ,veg, yoghurt and fish and plenty of raw bones, including chicken bones! and they have a whole apple each every day, complete with pips, very good for their teeth :-)
My first dog used to eat a bar of Yorkie chocolate every Friday. It was his treat for being good - not that he was ever good, just less of a pest than usual.
You hear of dogs eating almost everything - stones, underwear, toys, hamsters, walls, sofas, cars etc etc
Does anybody have a dog that eats little black and white tom cats?
I had a cocker spaniel who loved liver and rice - but only if there were onions in it.
Next was a crossbreed who was a vegetarian, then came Tara who could tell the difference between butter and marge on bread (wouldn't touch it). Sandy would sell his soul for a Malteser!
i was under the impression, that dogs could (and often did) eat anything that didn't move out of their way quick enough. They are afterall, biologically speaking, scavengers, are they not? I can't imagine in their dim and distant past they could afford to be fussy over what they quaffed.