This is a specific conversation about Dog food — finding the right one — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A one-year-old Cockapoo in a house with young children — that's a setup where the food really does matter beyond just nutrition. Wet food and raw diets tend to smell, splatter, and attract small hands, which is a real daily problem when you've got kids around. Cockapoos at one year are still technically juveniles finishing their growth, but most are close enough to adult size that an adult complete dry food is fine. What are you currently feeding, and have you noticed any digestive issues, skin flare-ups, or itching? Cockapoos can be prone to sensitivities, so it's worth knowing before I point you anywhere.
We're on a supermarket wet food at the moment, the pouches. She's fine health-wise but the smell is awful and my toddler keeps trying to touch the bowl. No known allergies or anything like that.
inparticular.ai
That tracks — pouch food tends to be the worst offender for smell, and with a toddler nearby it's genuinely hard to manage. Switching to a quality dry food will solve both problems immediately. No odour, no slop, and the bowl looks the same before and after she eats. For a healthy one-year-old Cockapoo with no known sensitivities, you don't need anything specialist — you need something nutritionally complete, made from decent ingredients, and reliably low-mess. Can I ask roughly how much you're spending per month at the moment on the pouches, just so I can give you a realistic comparison?
Probably around £20 to £25 a month on the pouches.
inparticular.ai
Good to know — my recommendation will land in a similar range or slightly under. I'd go with Millies Wolfheart Countryside Mix. It's a cold-pressed dry complete food made with 60% British meat and vegetables, and it genuinely has almost no smell — even when the bag is open, which is rare. Cold-pressed kibble is also denser than extruded kibble, so portion sizes are smaller and there's very little dust or crumble. For a Cockapoo of around 8–10kg you'd be feeding roughly 120–140g a day, which makes a 5kg bag last about five to six weeks. It's around £25–£30 for 5kg on Amazon UK, so comparable to what you're spending now. Ingredients are clean, no added sugars, no artificial preservatives. It's not trendy or heavily marketed — it just does the job well, and the low-odour point is the real differentiator here.
That sounds perfect actually. Is it easy to transition her onto it from wet food?
inparticular.ai
Yes, though it's worth doing it gradually over about ten days rather than switching overnight. Start with roughly 80% her current food and 20% the new kibble, and shift the ratio every few days. Some dogs switching from wet to dry also drink more water initially, which is completely normal — just make sure the bowl is always topped up. Cockapoos are generally easy to transition, and because Millies Wolfheart is naturally moist from the cold-pressing process, it tends to be palatable even for dogs used to wet food. If she turns her nose up at first, a small splash of warm water over the kibble can help bridge the gap for the first few days.
Great, I'll give it a go. Thanks.
inparticular.ai
You're welcome. It should make your mornings noticeably less chaotic. If she has any digestive upset beyond the first week of transition, or if you notice itching or loose stools settling in after a few weeks on it, come back and we can look at whether a grain-free or single-protein option makes more sense. But for a healthy dog with no flags, this is a solid starting point.