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    Raw feeding a Pointer and Vizsla together

    This is a specific conversation about Raw dog food — what to know before you start — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A Pointer and a Vizsla on the same raw plan — that's actually a sensible goal, and these two breeds are similar enough in build and energy that it's very doable. Raw feeding done well can be excellent, but done badly it creates nutritional gaps that cause real harm over time, and the difference is balance and sourcing. Before I point you in the right direction: roughly how much does each dog weigh, have you fed raw before, and are you looking for a complete ready-made food or are you planning to mix and source ingredients yourself?
    The Pointer is about 28kg and the Vizsla is 22kg. We've never done raw before, so something ready-made would be much easier to start with. Both are pretty active — we do a lot of running and field work with them.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — that tells me a lot. Both are lean, active working-type dogs, so they need a raw food with strong protein and a good fat level to sustain that output. For first-timers, complete ready-made is absolutely the right call — no guessing about balance, no sourcing bone and organ separately. What protein do they currently eat on, and have either of them had any digestive sensitivities or skin issues?
    They've both been on kibble with chicken as the main protein, no real issues with either of them. The Vizsla gets a bit itchy in summer but we've never pinned it down to food.
    inparticular.ai
    That summer itch on the Vizsla is worth keeping in mind — Vizslas as a breed do have a tendency toward skin reactivity, and while it could be environmental, rotating away from chicken isn't a bad idea regardless. Here's my recommendation: Natures Menu Country Hunter Raw Nuggets. They come in several proteins — I'd start both dogs on the rabbit or duck variety rather than chicken, which gives you a cleaner protein rotation and may help the Vizsla's skin over time. The nuggets are fully complete and balanced, frozen in small portions so you can defrost exactly what you need, and the format makes it simple to feed the right amount for each dog separately despite the size difference. For your Pointer at 28kg you're looking at roughly 560g a day for maintenance with that activity level, and for the Vizsla at 22kg around 440g — adjust slightly upward on heavy field days. The bags come in 1kg, so it's easy to manage across two dogs without waste.
    View Natures Menu Country Hunter on Amazon
    That sounds really manageable. Do we need to add anything on top, or is it genuinely complete as-is?
    inparticular.ai
    Genuinely complete as-is — that's the whole point of a product like this. It has the right meat-to-bone-to-organ ratio already calculated, so you don't need to add calcium or organs or anything else. The one thing I would suggest, especially for the Vizsla given the skin question, is a good fish oil supplement — something like Grizzly Pollock Oil. It's not correcting a gap in the food, it just gives an extra omega-3 push that supports skin and coat, and working dogs at that intensity genuinely benefit from it. But the Country Hunter nuggets alone are nutritionally complete. Give it four to six weeks before you judge it — the transition from kibble to raw sometimes produces a loose day or two, which is normal gut adjustment, not a problem.
    View Grizzly Pollock Oil on Amazon
    Really helpful, thank you. We'll start with rabbit and see how they both get on.
    inparticular.ai
    Good choice to start there. Rabbit is a lean, easily digestible novel protein — it's a solid transition protein for dogs coming off kibble and it sidesteps any chicken sensitivity for the Vizsla from day one. Defrost in the fridge overnight, feed at room temperature, and keep the portions consistent for the first few weeks so you have a clear baseline. If the Vizsla's coat starts looking better in six to eight weeks, that's your signal the food is working. You've got two great dogs for this — Pointers and Vizslas both thrive on high-quality raw when it's done right.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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