🥗 Elevate Your Pup's Dining Experience!
Dr. Harvey's Veg-to-Bowl Dog Food is a human-grade, dehydrated base mix designed for dogs, offering a grain-free, holistic solution. This 3-pound bag provides 28 one-pound meals, rich in calcium and essential minerals, while being free from synthetic ingredients, chemicals, and preservatives. Ideal for weight management and digestive health, it’s the perfect choice for health-conscious pet owners.
L**I
Good for your dogs and natural
This food is great and easy to mix with any protein
I**A
Healthy food for any dog
I highly recommend this brand , easy to use, i combine with my own protein choice and voila. No preservatives, whole food for your dog.
M**I
A time saver veggies for dogs! My 3 dogs LOVE it!
We feed our 3 little dogs chicken and blue berries chows, and we used to cook veggies to add. This is such a fantastic time saver and extremely healthy for the dogs. It takes about 7-10 minutes to hydrate, but I am preparing the chows so it works out great. The dogs loved it, from their first bite.
V**A
Great product; easy to make!
My senior labrador was diagnosed with stage 2 CKD. The vet recommended I put her on the prescription dry food. I had done the research and wanted to find a different kind of food for my beloved pet. I found Dr. Harveys. It comes with directions for all types of diets. I can control my pets protein intake, which is important in a kidney diet. It is very easy to make, measure out water and measure out the mixture. Combine and let it sit to rehydrate. I make my pets food fresh every morning, with eggs and either chicken or salmon. I do not feed raw but I guess you can do it with this mixture. Funny thing, my vet didn't know anything about this food. After my dogs last blood test, my vet said her kidney levels have really improved, she is very surprised and suggested I keep doing what I am doing. Oh and my dog loves this stuff, she never has an issue eating!
P**N
Still eating after several months
Pros: I have one dog age 13 with kidney disease and tried Veg to Bowl and Raw Vibrance after reading several people on FB KD groups using it. I have another healthy dog age 8 who needed to lose a couple of pounds. After several months, both dogs still eat Dr. Harvey's with clean, cooked protein added. I think it's the protein that peaks their interest, but I am impressed that they have not lost their appetite for Dr. Harvey's. In the past, they have gotten bored with every food I've tried after a couple of months. My KD pup's kidney values are still getting worse but have slowed down considerably. The other pup has trimmed down nicely. I feel like they are getting more nutrition than if I was feeding KD and diet kibble.Cons: The carrots don't seem to get digested and Dr. Harvey's is a bit pricey, especially considering you need to add protein.
A**L
Expensive!
Great product! Way too pricey to purchase regularly.
P**Z
Healthy filling meal
This food is great for picky dogs that like vegetables. I moisten it and add additional ground meat.if any is left over, I give it to my other dogs. I don't let it go for more than 12 hours in refrigerator.
�**�
Beautiful, high-quality dehydrated veggies -- but didn't digest well (A comparison of 3 canine veggie bases)
This is a lengthy review that offers a comparison of three options, so if you want to skip that and just quickly read my opinion of Dr. Harvey's Veg-to-Bowl, you'll find it in the third paragraph which begins, "For starters,..."My two dogs (a huge German Shepherd and small, aging terrier) have been on a homemade mix of meat/fish/egg proteins and a grain-free vegetable base for the past four years. I've been using Honest Kitchen's Preference Base-Mix with good results during that time. However, when it was time to reorder, I decided to try a couple of other options that are highly rated: this Dr. Harvey's Veg-To-Bowl and Sojos Grain-Free Dog Food Mix.For starters, let me just get to the point about this particular product, Dr. Harvey's Veg-To-Bowl. I would have given it an enthusiastic 5-star rating if not for the fact that my German Shepherd didn't seem to digest it much at all and our little terrier only marginally better. How do I know this? The Veg-To-Bowl is gorgeous, brightly-colored chunks of high-quality vegetables (carrots, sweet potatoes, potatoes, beets, peas, green beans, broccoli, etc.). Less lovely, though, when you're poo-scooping. Yep, every bright orange, red, green, and white vegetable chunk made its "exit" pretty much unscathed (and still brightly colored!). So now, after soaking the veggies as recommended, I have to run each batch through my food processor to make it digestible for my beasties. (This is why I'm lowering my rating to 3.5 stars since I have to go through this inconvenient step.) If I decide to reorder this otherwise high-quality Dr. Harvey product, I'll choose their Veg-To-Bowl Fine Ground Dehydrated Vegetable Pre-Mix next time in order to avoid extra time-consuming steps and assume that it would have a 5-star rating from me. My dogs did well on the Veg-to-Bowl (once I ground it). The bag contains a little booklet that gives full instructions on ratio of vegetables to protein for various sizes/ages/activity levels of dogs as well as amount of oil to add (I used a combination of salmon, coconut, and flax oils)._______________________________________Okay, the comparison:APPEARANCE------------------------- Dr. H's Veg-to-Bowl is by far the nicest looking with the previously mentioned brightly-colored, identifiable chunks of human-grade looking vegetables.- Honest Kitchen's Preference is, when hydrated, a fresh-looking green mush with a few chunks that are hard to identify.- Sojos is a white and beige-ish powder with tiny chunks of unidentifiable veggies which hydrates to a brown mooshy stuff that almost takes on a bit of a slick doughy consistency after it's been in the fridge a day (but it IS grain-free).TASTE------------------------Although I did taste a few of Dr. H's veggies (they're chewy), this category is according to my dogs' opinion of the taste. Besides observing their overall interest in their meals over many weeks, I also once set out bowls of each hydrated mix without any meat added in to gauge their reaction to each.- Sojos was the winner by far when it came to taste. While unappetizing in appearance to me, my dogs LOVED it! Unlike the fresh veggie smell of the other two brands when hydrated, Sojos actually smells a bit like the too-wet Thanksgiving dressing that my great aunt Jen used to make. And, in fairness, in a dog taste comparison of ONLY the base mix, Sojos is bound to win since it also contains eggs, oils, and flax seed meal and contains 14.3% protein over Dr. H's 2% and HK Preference's 6%. Fat content is considerably higher, also. In a taste test of only base mixes (minus meat), the considerably higher fat and protein of Sojos is bound to be more enticing to most dogs.- Dr. H's Veg-to-Bowl and HK's Preference were both received unenthusiastically. Both of my dogs are fully accepting of either vegetable base when mixed in with the appropriate amount of meat, fish, eggs, and cottage cheese; however, they had little interest in my vegetable "taste test."CONVENIENCE----------------------- HK's Preference is by far the easiest IMO. Hydration only takes a few minutes (they recommend at least 3) so I usually hydrated for each individual meal, so that the veggie mix was room temp rather than cold from the fridge.- Dr. H's Veg-to-Bowl takes at least 8-10 minutes to hydrate (but much longer since I needed to grind in food processor). I prepared enough for 2-3 days and kept in fridge.- Sojos recommends that you soak overnight (in fridge) for best digestion, but *at least* for 15 minutes. I prepared enough for 2-3 days in fridge.NUTRITION----------------------While considerably different in make-up, all three offer balanced canine nutrition once you've added the recommended quantity of protein and oil to them. I won't list all the nutrition facts (protein, fat, etc.) since the final nutrition (with proteins/oils added) is the important part and each product recommends varying amounts of additions to meet the nutrition requirements. So the fact that one base contains less protein only means that a higher amount of added protein will be recommended for that product. And less fat contained in the dehydrated base will just mean that you're instructed to add oil.Honest Kitchen's products are all human-grade; and, while Dr. Harvey's website doesn't seem to specifically say that it's human-grade, it looks like something I'd eat.I will say that, while my shepherd did fine on the Sojos, my little terrier did not. She's 15 years old and struggles with some aging issues. She'd been prone to yeast problems in the past before we switched them to a raw diet and we're careful with her food choices because of that. Yeast infections became a problem for her again while on the Sojos so we discontinued using it for both dogs and won't be buying again.COST----------This is a tough call since so many factors go into the final cost of producing a "meal" for your dog(s). In other words, it's not just the pound-for-pound cost of the dehydrated mix, but rather the amount of it required for your dog's size and ESPECIALLY the amount of meat proteins you must add to make it a complete, nutritious meal. The cost of the added proteins is usually the highest cost by far and may vary considerably based on type used and availability of low-cost options in your region.- Because of its higher protein/fat, Sojos required less meat in order to make a full meal. While this means that you may go through the Sojos a bit faster than you would the other two, you'll probably be buying less meat and other proteins. I found this to be the least expensive of the three for that reason.- As an example with HK's Preference mix, I hydrate 3/4 cup of dry base and add about 1.5 cups of chicken/fish/beef/eggs/cottage cheese for my large German Shepherd twice daily.- In my experience, we ended up with higher expense with Dr. H's Veg-to-Bowl because it required/recommended the highest protein additions. For our large shepherd this was nearly 3 pounds of meat and over 8 oz for our terrier daily.While I would consider buying the ground-up version of Dr. Harvey's Veg-to-Bowl in the future, the higher expense of meeting its meat ratio for our big pooch will likely mean that I stick with using Honest Kitchen's Preference mix from now on. We've had good results with it.Just a reminder -- as with any time you change out a dog's food, do it gradually to reduce stomach upset and gas.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 month ago