Fruits for Cats & Dogs

Fruits for Cats & Dogs

Fruits Are High in Antioxidants & Vitamin C

The following are fabulous for your animal’s body.  Let them choose what they need, they know.  Fruit should ideally not be fed with meat but as a snack on an empty stomach.  Dried fruit is very high is sugar and may be coated with unknown substances, so please only feed fresh – this is ideal or dehydrated by yourself at home.  Nothing in plastic!

Berries
  • Blueberries
  • Blackberries
  • Cranberries
  • Raspberries
  • Strawberries
From the Tree and Along the Ground, no pits
  • Bananas, make sure very ripe, no peel
  • Apples
  • Apricot, no pit
  • Avocados, no pit
  • Dates, not pit
  • Figs | Note:  Dried five times higher in calories than fresh
  • Mango, no pit
  • Melons, ideally no seeds
  • Nectarines, no pit
  • Olives, no pit
  • Oranges
  • Papaya, no seeds
  • Pears
  • Peaches, no pit
  • Pineapple
  • Pomegranate
  • Plums, no pit
  • Tangerines, my dogs loved these – sitting outside peeling one after another sharing the wedges between each, really fun!
  • Watermelon, this is LOVED in the summer months and fabulous for the kidneys
From the Vine
  • Tomatoes
  • Kiwi fruit with seeds, ripe, no skin | This is very high in Vitamin C which is very good for all carbon-based bodies.
About Grapes

There is a lot of fear around grapes.  The challenge with information – is where does this come from?  I imagine grapes are not good for our animals only because they are sprayed with pesticides specifically with glyphosate.

If nature grows them, then they will serve a purpose as the skin on red grapes are high in antioxidants. But none of us – animals or humans are designed to eat this highly sprayed toxic fruit.

So, this is something to dig into to find the real raw data about this, as this maybe either fraud science or just a few instances when something else was also going on with the animal health wise which was not shared. Only the “grape hurt the animal” repeated over and over again with a lot of fear which humans then picked up and ran with.

My dogs happily ate red grapes, chopped of course, – and loved them. Dowsing says they are not toxic to the animals. When in question, muscle test or dowse to know what is true and what is not.