I am coming from the perspective of switching cats and ferrets, not dogs. So I compleatly forgot about the fact that different dog breeds might have different capabilities when it comes to bone. Keep that in mind.
I also am a member of a raw forum where I made the switch under a mentor. Since then I have done 4 switches on my own. The forum is for ferrets but cats and ferrets have the same nutritional needs where dogs are a little different. I will ask them for you if they have a mentor that also has experience with dogs willing to mentor you, of if they know of a mentor they can connect you with. I found a forum for dogs, but it was pretty dead.
Just want to stress again that while this is for obligates, I will note where I think the information should be different for dogs.
To start the switch, you start with soupies. The soupies are to help them get used to the taste and recognize raw as food without having to worry about different textures. You can spoon feed them if they are having trouble accepting it. You can dab it on their nose so they lick it off first. Just keep offering every 1/2 hour or so the first day if they are resisting.
Soupie recipe:
8oz chicken meat
1 oz heart (~1-2 chicken hearts) *I don't know if dogs have the same requirement for heart that cats and ferrets do.
1 oz liver (~1/2 chicken liver)
1/2-3/4 tsp powdered eggshell
Water- enough for desired texture.
This is for a small animal so you are going to quadruple it at least. I suck at math so I will let you do that. Freeze into individual portions.
Once they are eating the soupies with no problems you can start adding chunks of meat into the soupies. Start off small and the make them larger.
When introducing bone, start off with chicken wing tip and smash them with a hammer before adding to the soupies. Then try non smashed and increase size over the next few days. Chicken feet into the soup is also a good introduction to bone. I have always has a lot of success with smashing neckbones with a hammer.
Or you could always stick to a full soup diet, but I find that is more work in the long run.
So after they get used to eating the the soupies you just follow their lead on when to introduce more. Some will take to it right away and you will have them eating full raw by the end of the day, others it takes weeks.
I also am a member of a raw forum where I made the switch under a mentor. Since then I have done 4 switches on my own. The forum is for ferrets but cats and ferrets have the same nutritional needs where dogs are a little different. I will ask them for you if they have a mentor that also has experience with dogs willing to mentor you, of if they know of a mentor they can connect you with. I found a forum for dogs, but it was pretty dead.
Just want to stress again that while this is for obligates, I will note where I think the information should be different for dogs.
To start the switch, you start with soupies. The soupies are to help them get used to the taste and recognize raw as food without having to worry about different textures. You can spoon feed them if they are having trouble accepting it. You can dab it on their nose so they lick it off first. Just keep offering every 1/2 hour or so the first day if they are resisting.
Soupie recipe:
8oz chicken meat
1 oz heart (~1-2 chicken hearts) *I don't know if dogs have the same requirement for heart that cats and ferrets do.
1 oz liver (~1/2 chicken liver)
1/2-3/4 tsp powdered eggshell
Water- enough for desired texture.
This is for a small animal so you are going to quadruple it at least. I suck at math so I will let you do that. Freeze into individual portions.
Once they are eating the soupies with no problems you can start adding chunks of meat into the soupies. Start off small and the make them larger.
When introducing bone, start off with chicken wing tip and smash them with a hammer before adding to the soupies. Then try non smashed and increase size over the next few days. Chicken feet into the soup is also a good introduction to bone. I have always has a lot of success with smashing neckbones with a hammer.
Or you could always stick to a full soup diet, but I find that is more work in the long run.
So after they get used to eating the the soupies you just follow their lead on when to introduce more. Some will take to it right away and you will have them eating full raw by the end of the day, others it takes weeks.