What I Found In My Dog's Treats (And Why I Switched)
I’d Been Feeding My Dog These Treats for 3 Years. Then I Actually Read the Label.
The ingredient list on our “premium” supermarket chicken treats stopped me cold. Here’s what I found — and what I switched to.
It started with a boring Saturday afternoon and a bag of treats I’d been buying Cooper — my 5-year-old Golden Retriever — since he was a puppy.
They were the “good” ones. A bit more expensive. The packaging had a golden retriever on it that looked just like him. Natural. Premium. Wholesome.
Then, on a whim, I flipped the bag over and actually read the ingredients list for the first time.
I had to Google half of what I was reading.
- Meat and meat by-products — no species listed. Could be anything.
- Propylene glycol — a compound also used in antifreeze. Banned in cat food by the FDA, still legal in dog treats.
- BHA (Butylated Hydroxyanisole) — a synthetic preservative flagged as a possible carcinogen by the European Food Safety Authority.
- Artificial flavours — when real chicken is already the flavour, why does it need flavouring added?
- Corn syrup — sugar. In a dog treat. To make it more palatable because the real ingredients aren’t appealing enough on their own.
I’d been feeding Cooper this stuff multiple times a day. For three years. And I’d felt good about it because the front of the bag had a golden retriever on it.
I Started Connecting Dots I’d Ignored for Years
Cooper had always had bad breath. I assumed it was just... dog breath. Normal.
He’d occasionally have soft stools. I’d written that off as “sensitive stomach.”
His coat wasn’t dull exactly, but it wasn’t the thick, glossy fur you see on well-fed dogs. I figured he just wasn’t that type of dog.
I never once connected any of it to his treats. Why would I? The bag said healthy.
“When you’re buying something marketed as premium and healthy, you don’t think to investigate. You trust the label. That’s what labels are designed to make you do.”
A Friend Said Two Words That Changed Everything
I mentioned what I’d found to a friend who has two Border Collies. She wasn’t surprised.
“Just chicken,” she said. “Nothing else. That’s all you need.”
She’d switched her dogs to single-ingredient freeze-dried treats about a year earlier. Her older dog’s breath had improved within weeks. The vet had commented on his teeth at his last checkup. His energy was better.
I asked how freeze-drying worked. She explained it removes moisture at very low temperatures — which preserves the nutrients and natural flavour without any need for preservatives, artificial anything, or ingredients you’d need a chemistry degree to understand.
The ingredient list is one word. Chicken.
Compare that to what I’d been giving Cooper:
I Found Pet Snacks. And I Started With the Sample Pack.
I found Pet Snacks through a recommendation — they’re 100% Australian made and owned, which mattered to me, and they do a sample pack with four different chicken varieties: Chicken Necks, Wing Tips, Breast Strips, and Chicken Feet. Each one: a single ingredient.
The 320g pack is $44.99 — which is honestly less than I was spending on the supermarket treats every month.
The pack arrived in a few days. I opened the Chicken Necks first.
Cooper lost his mind.
I don’t mean he was enthusiastic in the way dogs are about food generally. I mean he did three full laps of the kitchen, sat without being asked — which he basically never does — and made the kind of eye contact that usually only happens at dinner time.
He ate it slowly. He savoured it. A dog that normally inhales his food in 3 seconds was taking his time.
Six Weeks Later — Here’s What I Noticed
I went in expecting nothing dramatic. I was just trying to do better. Here’s what actually happened:
His breath improved noticeably. Not completely odour-free — he’s a dog — but the sharp, unpleasant smell is gone. My partner noticed before I told him I’d switched anything.
His coat is softer and shinier. Three people have commented on it in the past month. My neighbour asked if I’d changed his grooming routine.
His digestion has settled completely. No soft stools since the switch. Not once.
Training has become significantly easier. He actually cares about the reward now. We’ve made more progress in six weeks than in the past six months.
“I didn’t change his food, his exercise, his routine. Just the treats. The difference has been noticeable enough that people around me have commented without me prompting them.”
I’m Not the Only One Who Had This Experience
After switching, I went and read through the Pet Snacks reviews. There are over 14,000 of them. A few that made me feel seen:
The One Thing I’d Say to Every Dog Owner
Just read the label on what you’re currently giving your dog. That’s it. I’m not here to tell you what to buy or make you feel bad.
But if you’ve been assuming the treats are fine because they’re marketed as “premium” or “natural” — actually check. Flip the bag over. Google the ingredients.
If you want to try something different, Pet Snacks do a sample pack with four varieties for $44.99. It’s a good starting point without committing to a big order. And they offer 60-day free returns if your dog doesn’t take to them — which I suspect tells you everything about their confidence in the product.
Cooper would write this himself if he could type. He definitely has opinions.
Try the Chicken Sample Pack
4 varieties · One ingredient each · 100% Australian made
60-day guarantee · Free returns if your dog isn’t obsessed