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Your Labrador Retriever is a large dog averaging around 32 kg. Chicken is accessible and digestible, making it a solid muscle-meat base for a BARF diet. Its balanced profile fits most adult dogs. Note: chicken is one of the most common triggers for canine food allergies — watch the skin and stool during introduction. Use the calculator below to get the exact daily ration in grams, adapted to age, activity level, and neuter status. For a large dog like the Labrador Retriever, raw meaty bones provide natural joint support through cartilage and glucosamine. In large-breed puppies, controlled growth is essential — caloric excess promotes osteoarticular problems (FEDIAF guidelines).
| 🥩 Muscle meat (70%) | 560g |
| 🦴 Raw meaty bones (10%) | 80g |
| 🫀 Liver (5%) | 40g |
| 🫁 Other organs (5%) | 40g |
| 🥦 Vegetables/Fruits (10%) | 80g |
📖 Modern BARF community standard, inspired by Dr. Ian Billinghurst's work (1993)
If your dog needs to lose or gain weight, base the diet on the ideal weight.
Don't know your dog's weight?Check our breed guides →Toxic / forbidden foods
☠️ Deadly:
Chocolate, grapes/raisins, xylitol (gum), onion, garlic, avocado (pit+skin), macadamia nuts
⚠️ Avoid:
Cooked bones (splinters), raw potato, wild mushrooms, walnuts, raw bread dough, caffeine, alcohol, excess salt, hot spices
What your dog actually eats
Raw feeding provides more animal protein, zero grains, and natural hydration — at a comparable cost.
Based on average premium kibble composition (FEDIAF) vs raw feeding.
Le passage des croquettes au cru doit se faire progressivement sur 4 semaines pour habituer la flore intestinale de votre chien.
⚠️ Consultez votre vétérinaire AVANT de commencer si votre chien :
💡 Nous recommandons de donner croquettes et cru à des repas séparés pour une digestion optimale.
Les temps de digestion sont différents et les séparer aide à éviter d'éventuels troubles digestifs.
Source : Dr. Karen Becker
Objectif : ~90% viande blanche (Poulet, Dinde) + ~10% os charnus souples (cous/ailes de poulet). Pas d'abats.
Commencez par de petites portions. Les os souples aident à former des selles fermes dès le début. Observez les selles — elles peuvent être différentes les premiers jours.
Objectif : Introduire les os charnus souples (Cous de poulet, ailes).
Les os charnus doivent toujours être crus. Ne jamais donner d'os cuits — risque d'esquilles.
Objectif : Introduire 50% de viande rouge (Boeuf, Porc) et le Foie (très riche).
Le foie est très riche en vitamine A — ne pas dépasser 5% de la ration totale.
Objectif : Ajout des autres abats, légumes/poisson. Le régime est complet.
Félicitations ! Votre chien est maintenant sur un régime cru complet. Variez les protéines chaque semaine.
An adult Labrador Retriever on a normal activity level eats around 800–960 g per day, or about 5.6 kg per week. That baseline represents 2.5–3% of body weight and should be adjusted for age, activity, and neuter status. Weigh your dog weekly and fine-tune the ration if you notice unexpected weight gain or loss. The calculator below factors in all these parameters automatically.
Yes. Chicken is a moderate-fat protein that works well as the muscle-meat base (70% of the ration in classic BARF, per Dr. Billinghurst's methodology). Rotate protein sources across the week — ideally 3–4 different proteins — for complete amino-acid and micronutrient coverage. Introduce each new protein gradually over 3–5 days to monitor for any digestive sensitivity.
Aim for 10% of the daily ration as raw meaty bones — roughly 80 g per day for an adult Labrador Retriever. Choose raw bones sized to the dog's jaw and never feed cooked bones (they splinter into dangerous shards). As recommended by FEDIAF, raw meaty bones provide calcium and phosphorus in a naturally balanced 1.2:1 ratio.
Large breeds like the Labrador Retriever are predisposed to joint issues (dysplasia, arthritis). BARF helps naturally: raw meaty bones provide cartilage (a natural source of glucosamine and chondroitin) and oily fish delivers anti-inflammatory omega-3s. For large-breed puppies, control growth by limiting the ration to 3–4% of body weight — caloric excess accelerates too-rapid growth, as recommended by FEDIAF guidelines.
Chicken provides excellent raw meaty bones for BARF: necks, carcasses, and wings are the safest options. Avoid weight-bearing bones from adult birds (leg bones). Offer bone-in pieces for main meals and boneless breast for variety. Remove the skin if your dog is overweight, as it is high in fat. According to BARF methodology (Dr. Billinghurst, 1993), chicken is the ideal introductory protein for raw feeding.
Chicken is a fat-rich protein — thaw it completely in the refrigerator and serve at room temperature for better digestibility. Fats oxidize faster, so consume within 24 hours of thawing. Frozen at -18°C, chicken keeps 2–3 months without significant nutrient loss. Pre-portion into individual bags to streamline daily meal prep and avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
Food storage container
Optimal raw meat storage in the freezer
⚖️Precision kitchen scale
Weigh portions to the gram — essential for BARF
🐟Fish oil Omega-3 supplement
Recommended supplement for coat and joint health
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