In the choice of vegetarian and meat food, Border Collie is an out-and-out carnivore, but when living in the wild, they occasionally eat plants such as grass and fruits. However, under the supervision of the owner, there is still a big difference between the eating habits of domestic pet dogs and those living in the wild. Pet owner can make the Border Collie have more reasonable and acceptable eating habits through cultivation and training from an early age.
To train Border Collie’s dietary habits must start at an early age, and start training after the dog is successfully weaned. Before formal training, Pet owner should choose a reasonable diet plan for the border herding dog, formulate a healthy and scientific diet plan, and then feed and train step by step. In the long-term feeding and training, let the Border Collie develop healthy eating habits.
For domestic pet dogs, Pet owner generally choose professional dog food, fresh vegetables, canned dog food, dog biscuits and other foods for feeding. In addition, you can choose some lean pork, beef, mutton and other foods with less fat content in your leisure time, and feed them to the border herding dogs after processing. In order to balance the nutrition of Border Collie’s food and meet its growing nutritional needs, many Pet owners will choose more foods, then make a reasonable combination, and feed regularly and quantitatively every day. While cultivating good eating habits for dogs, it can also ensure the healthy growth of Border Collie.

In addition, training Border Collie to have good eating habits, in addition to choosing healthy and reasonable food before feeding. Pet owners should also feed it regularly, quantitatively, and at fixed points every day, and don’t simply and completely change food for it. And every time you need to change food, you need to make a gradual change, complete the food change in about 7-10 days, so that the border collie has enough time to adapt to the new food, avoiding the burden of gastrointestinal digestion and harming Border Collie.