This is a specific conversation about Puppy food — getting the foundations right — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A Husky puppy and a rabbit living together — that's a lovely combination, and you're asking exactly the right questions. Keeping food separate and stored safely matters a lot in a mixed-pet home, both for your rabbit's safety and to make sure your puppy is actually getting the nutrition they need. Puppy nutrition is one of the most important investments you'll make — the right food in the first year sets the foundation for long-term health, and the differences between puppy foods are more significant than most people realise. To point you in the right direction: what breed size is your Husky (standard or a mini?), how old are they right now, and what are they currently eating?
She's a standard Husky, just turned 5 months. She's currently on Royal Canin Medium Puppy but I'm not totally happy with it. The rabbit free-roams in the evenings and I'm worried about him getting into her food bowl or storage bags.
inparticular.ai
That's a really valid concern. Rabbit digestive systems are extremely sensitive — high-protein kibble, even just a few pieces, can cause serious gut upset in rabbits. So keeping things properly separated isn't just tidy housekeeping, it's genuinely important. Before I get into storage, can I ask — what's making you unhappy with the Royal Canin? Is it ingredients, cost, her energy levels, coat condition, or something else? That'll help me suggest the right alternative.
Honestly the ingredient list — it's got a lot of maize and fillers in it. She seems fine but I feel like she could be on something better. Her coat is decent but not amazing.
inparticular.ai
Your instincts are right. Huskies are working-breed dogs with a metabolism built for high protein and moderate fat — maize-heavy foods aren't doing her any favours, and a dull coat at 5 months is often the first sign the diet isn't quite right. For a 5-month Husky, I'd point you straight to Acana Puppy & Junior. It's a large-breed-appropriate, high-meat recipe — around 65% animal ingredients — with no maize, wheat, or artificial anything. It's grain-inclusive but uses whole oats and chickpeas rather than cheap starches. The protein and fat ratios are well suited to active, fast-growing breeds like Huskies, and owners consistently report coat improvements within 4–6 weeks of switching. It's available in a 2kg or 6kg bag on Amazon UK, which brings me neatly to your storage question.
Yes please — how should I store it so the rabbit can't get near it, and is there any risk of cross-contamination between their foods?
inparticular.ai
Good news: if you store them properly, the risk is very low. Here's what I'd do. First, decant Acana into a hard-sided, airtight container with a clip-lock lid — something like the Vittles Vault or any sealed pet food bin — and keep it on a high shelf or inside a cupboard the rabbit can't reach or nudge open. Rabbits are surprisingly persistent foragers. Second, don't leave the puppy's bowl on the floor when she's not eating — pick it up between meals. That single habit eliminates most of the risk in a free-roam household. For the rabbit's pellets and hay, keep those in a separate area entirely. There's no meaningful cross-contamination risk from smell or proximity — the concern is purely physical access. One more thing: when you transition her off Royal Canin, do it over 7–10 days mixing old and new food gradually. Husky puppies can have sensitive stomachs during switches even when the new food is better.
That's really helpful. Is Acana suitable all the way through puppyhood or will I need to switch at some point?
inparticular.ai
Acana Puppy & Junior is formulated for puppies up to about 12–18 months depending on the breed. For a Husky, I'd transition her to an adult formula around 12 months — Huskies reach skeletal maturity earlier than giant breeds, so you don't need to drag out the puppy formula. Acana do an adult range that's a seamless continuation, so you won't need to change brands or go through another adjustment period. You're in a good position — sorting her diet at 5 months means you've got the whole growth phase ahead of you to do it properly.