This is a specific conversation about Dog food for sensitive stomachs — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Switching from a supermarket brand to a premium sensitive food is one of the most common reasons dogs' digestive issues finally start to clear up — so you're likely on the right track. Sensitive stomach problems usually fall into a few categories: food intolerance to a specific protein or additive, a broader ingredient sensitivity, or a gut that simply needs a cleaner, simpler diet. Identifying which one your dog is dealing with is the key to picking the right food. To point you in the right direction — what breed and age is your dog, what symptoms are you seeing (loose stools, vomiting, gas, or something else), and what supermarket food have they been on?
He's a 6-year-old Bloodhound. He's been on Pedigree Adult for a couple of years and he gets really bad gas, loose stools most days, and he sometimes vomits bile in the morning. Never thought much of it but a friend said I should try a better food.
inparticular.ai
Your friend gave you good advice. Those three symptoms together — chronic gas, consistently loose stools, and morning bile vomiting — are a classic picture of a dog whose gut is struggling with low-quality ingredients and fillers. Pedigree Adult contains cereals, derivatives, and various additives that are fine for many dogs but frequently cause exactly this pattern in sensitive dogs, especially larger breeds like Bloodhounds who already have slower, more sensitive digestive systems. Before I recommend a food, a couple of quick questions: has he been checked by a vet recently? And is he on any medication or supplements at the moment?
He had a checkup about four months ago and the vet said he was generally healthy, just a bit of a sensitive tummy. No medications. The vet mentioned diet but didn't really specify what to change to.
inparticular.ai
That's a really helpful baseline — healthy dog, no underlying condition, just a gut that's been coping with the wrong food. For a 6-year-old Bloodhound with those symptoms, I'd recommend Canagan Grain Free Dry Dog Food, Turkey for Country Dogs. Here's why it fits your situation specifically: it uses a single named protein source (free-run turkey) as the primary ingredient, it's completely grain-free which removes the cereal fillers that are almost certainly driving the gas and loose stools, and it has a short, clean ingredient list with no derivatives or artificial additives. Bloodhounds do well on moderate-fat, easily digestible formulas, and Canagan sits in that range. The morning bile vomiting is usually linked to an empty stomach or slow digestion overnight — once his gut settles on a cleaner food, that often resolves on its own within a few weeks. One important thing: switch slowly. With a dog coming off a low-quality food, go even more gradually than the packet suggests — 10 days to two weeks, starting with 80% old food and moving in small increments. His gut needs time to adjust.
That makes sense. How much should I be feeding him? He's about 45kg.
inparticular.ai
At 45kg, Canagan's feeding guide puts a moderately active adult dog in the region of 320–360g per day, split across two meals. Bloodhounds are deep-chested and at risk of bloat, so two meals rather than one is important — don't let him eat once a day. Because he's coming from a lower-calorie, higher-filler food, his portion might feel smaller and he may seem unsatisfied for the first week or two. That's normal — premium food is more calorically dense, so he's actually getting more nutrition for the same or less volume. Keep his meals consistent, same times each day, and avoid exercise for at least an hour after eating given the bloat risk in the breed.
Brilliant, thank you. I'll order the Canagan and take it slowly with the switch. Really helpful.
inparticular.ai
You're in a good position — healthy dog, clear symptoms, and a straightforward dietary cause. Most dogs with this profile see a real improvement within three to four weeks of being fully switched. If the loose stools haven't improved significantly after six weeks on the new food, it's worth going back to the vet to rule out a specific protein intolerance, in which case a novel protein food like duck or venison would be the next step. Good luck with him — Bloodhounds are lovely dogs and deserve a gut that works properly.