Meet and Greet with Royal Canin – NY / NJ #sponsored #RoyalCanin

Royal Canin invites you and your cat and dog to an in-store meet and greet!



What could be more fun for you and your pets than meeting other pets and their people? Where will someone fully appreciate the importance of a solid purr or what makes for a good round chase? Visit during the Royal Canin in store give away event.

Royal Canin

If you are what you eat, then so is your pet, and a proper diet is critical to life-long health and well-being. Factors such as age, activity level, and breed all contribute to a pet’s nutritional needs, and Royal Canin formulas are based on established scientific research and keep in mind the different needs of different kinds of animals. Whether your pet is an Indoor Adult Cat or hole digging Mini Puppy, Royal Canin can meet their nutritional needs. All formulas are well-researched and based on the needs of your pets.

A fun afternoon for the entire family is yours when you join the Royal Canin Meet and Greet fun!
November 2nd at

Hoboken Pet: 524 Washington St, Hoboken, NJ 11/2 from
11-3pm

Beasty Feast: 630 Hudson St, NY, NY 11/2 from 10 – 2pm

And on November 9th Royal Canin Representatives will be at the following locations:

Corrado’s: 600 Getty Ave, Clifton, NJ 11/9 from 12-4pm
Petopia: 29 Avenue A, NY, NY 11/9 from 10-2pm

There are actually 32 stores participating with Sample Giveaways but only 4 with in store reps. Even if you are not near one of the stores you can still visit the site to receive a $3 off coupon.
Types of Formulas available from Royal Canin for cats and dogs.

Cat: Indoor Adult 27, Indoor Light, Indoor Intense hairball, Special and
Kitten
Dog: Mini Puppy, Mini Adult, Yorkshire Terrier Puppy, Yorkshire Terrier
Adult, Chihuahua Puppy and Chihuahua Adult

Bring your little someone shopping and learn more about our extensive line of nutritionally balanced dog and cat foods. Loving your pets is your specialty. Helping to keep them healthy with feline and canine nutrition is ours at Royal Canin.

I am blogging on behalf of BlogPaws Pet Blogger Network and Royal Canin. I received compensation for my time from Royal Canin for sharing the information in this post, but the views expressed here are solely mine.

Royal Canin Royal Canin Image 2




I am blogging on behalf of BlogPaws Pet Blogger Network and Royal Canin. I received compensation for my time from Royal Canin for sharing the information in this post, but the views expressed here are solely mine.


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Comments

  1. Royal Canin has bragged about their brilliant move in using chicken feathers as a protein source, and describing that as simply “chicken byproduct” so that us silly dog owners won’t balk at it. They can take their food to the landfill, where it belongs.

    And what the heck is a “Mini Puppy,” anyway? They can’t use prevailing common terms?
    Lis Carey recently posted..The Sound and the Furry (Chet and Bernie #6), by Spencer QuinnMy Profile

    • The only food that I know of that they use Chicken feathers in is a very specific diet for dogs that cannot process animal protein and they say right on the packaging what it is made from. I am not a scientist so I don’t claim to understand how chicken feathers are a source of protein. I do know that the food with chicken feathers is for dogs with severe and adverse reaction to protein. This is not for a dog that just cannot tolerate a protein source but for one where protein is literally killing them. The food is called Anallergenic and can only be purchased through a vet and fed while under veterinary supervision. This is something that dogs like Louie might have been able to eat.

      As for the mini formula it is quite literally for dogs that are much smaller then their breed standard and cannot eat regular small sized kibble.
      Felissa Elfenbein recently posted..Meet and Greet with Royal Canin – NY / NJ #sponsored #RoyalCaninMy Profile

      • Feathers aren’t food, and if they can’t explain clearly how feathers are a source of protein, it’s most likely because they’re not.

        Most adult toy breeds can handle regular (not small breed) kibble just fine. I have difficulty envisioning the dog so small that small breed kibble wouldn’t be small enough. Or cat kibble, which might be an appropriate choice because the smaller dogs really do need more calories per pound.

        I’m just not impressed with Royal Canin, for a variety of reasons, of which the feathers are only one.
        Lis Carey recently posted..The Sound and the Furry (Chet and Bernie #6), by Spencer QuinnMy Profile

  2. A good friend of ours is a food rep for them in Germany. She told us they have different formulas over there than they do here. Interesting.
    emma recently posted..A New Leash | GBGV | Fitdog FridayMy Profile

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