Transition Guide

Transition is a phased workflow, not a simple food swap. Each stage introduces one controlled variable and pauses for stability before moving forward.

Key idea
Transition works best when each phase is stable before the next begins. Stability comes before diversity.

Choose Your Path

If you prefer a DIY approach, follow the structured phases below carefully and in sequence. If you prefer guided support, our prepared transition meals for puppies and adults follow the same phased logic — helping reduce uncertainty and making the process easier.

You do not need to aim for perfection in the first week. A steady, controlled pace makes the process calmer for both you and your dog.

Transition Workflow Overview

Phase 1 — Foundation Introduce one single muscle protein only. No organs. No rotation.
Phase 2 — Bone Calibration Add edible meaty bone gradually. Observe stool structure.
Phase 3 — Stabilise Introduce nothing new. Confirm predictability.
Phase 4 — Second Protein Add one new protein. Keep bone stable.
Phase 5 — Liver Introduce very small amounts. Progress slowly.
Phase 6 — Other Organs Add kidney or spleen gradually.
Phase 7 — Controlled Rotation Expand protein diversity over time.
Phase 8 — Plant Matter (BARF only) Introduce pulped vegetables only after full stability.

What to Watch

Smaller stool: Raw feeding often produces less waste because nutrient use is more efficient.

Hard, chalky stool: Often a sign of excess bone.

Soft stool after liver introduction: Liver was added too quickly.

Reduced water intake: Raw food contains more moisture. Monitor overall hydration signs rather than bowl volume alone.

Puppy Discipline

Puppies need slower progression. Growth increases mineral sensitivity. Move through phases conservatively and avoid rapid rotation.

When to Slow Down
If instability continues over several days, simplify and return to the last stable phase before progressing again.

Unsure about something during transition? You do not have to troubleshoot alone.