Miss Molly's Tasty Turmeric Treats - Purveyor of Fine Treats for Dogs

Miss Molly's Tasty Turmeric Treats - Purveyor of Fine Treats for Dogs Holistic Animal Nutritionist & Member of HATO (Holistic Animal Therapy Org)
We source our ingredient What are the nutritional requirements for dogs?

The six basic nutrients are water, proteins, fats, carbohydrates, minerals, and vitamins. These essential nutrients are required as part of the dog's regular diet and are involved in all of the basic functions of the body.

A must read for those who feed kibble... after reading Dr Karen Becker's article this morning which discusses toxins in ...
15/06/2026

A must read for those who feed kibble... after reading Dr Karen Becker's article this morning which discusses toxins in dog food and the damage that occurs cumulatively over years of feeding kibble, I felt that you really need to know what's in the bag and what you are feeding.... but only if you care about the health, wellbeing and the longevity of your dog.

Here's an excerpt from the salient points:

"A new study found commercial dog and cat foods contained multiple mycotoxins, including DON, zearalenone, fumonisins, and ochratoxins... read the full article below 👇

For those who feed kibble, news about how bad it actually is can be devastating to hear. Reading Karen Becker's article this morning, which discusses toxins in dogfood and the damage that occurs cumulatively, over years of feeding kibble -I felt that shudder of "oh no, not more..." despite the fact I agree, people do need to know what's in the bag. Here's an excerpt from the salient points:

"A new study found commercial dog and cat foods contained multiple mycotoxins, including DON, zearalenone, fumonisins, and ochratoxins.

Standard pet foods generally had higher levels of fungal toxins, phytoestrogens, and plant metabolites than some specialized diets

Although toxin levels remained below current regulatory limits, researchers emphasized concerns about chronic exposure to multiple contaminants over time."

Th article goes on to discuss the findings, explore some fo teh specific toxins and offer a solution - feed a home made fresh food, lowcarb raw diet. 👍🥩🥚🥦

I would add the word "nutritionally balanced" to this suggestion.

While its important to be aware of toxin exposure, it's equally important to consider nutrients, which are essentials and are chronically, consistently low or high in DIY home made recipes. I see an explosion of DIY cooked recipes offered online, and every single one of them is unbalanced - some very seriously so - that is not the solution for those who decide to make the switch to fresh food.
For those who need to use commercial foods, there are options aside from kibble. Rotating various foods is better overall than feeding the same food all the time. adding 10-15% fresh food toppers, thoughtfully chosen, is helpful. Let's not forget herbs, which are so useful for supporting the body under stress from toxin overload! And moving toward home prepared, properly balanced food is ideal. 🌈
Let me know how I can help - what holds you back from home-feeding, how the article affects you if you are a kibble feeder.

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15/06/2026

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For years, I’ve encouraged pet parents to ask themselves an important question when feeding their pets: What is this food doing to my pet’s body over time? A newly published study tested multiple brands of commercial pet foods and found mycotoxins, phytoestrogens, and other biologically active compounds in nearly every sample.
Cats appeared more vulnerable than dogs 😿. This is why I’m so passionate about rotating many brands and flavors/proteins of fresh, human grade pet foods. Most animals won’t suddenly become ill from eating one bag of food or one meal, but what’s happening meal after meal, year after year? Nutritional variety is not only crucial for a healthy microbiome, it reduces recurrent exposure of unwanted tagalongs from one brand’s supply chain, reducing the risks of repeated low grade contaminants from the same source.
In my latest article, I’ll show you why certain ingredients are more prone to contamination, the history of some major pet food recalls, and simple steps you can take to reduce your pet’s toxic burden and support lifelong health. Check out the link in comments 🐾💚

14/06/2026

🚨 7 FOODS I’D ADD TO HELP LOWER DOG CANCER RISK (SIMPLE, CHEAP, REAL FOOD).

If I wanted to lower a dog’s cancer risk through food, I’d start by adding small amounts of nutrient-rich whole foods to the bowl.

These foods can help support the immune system, lower inflammation, improve gut health, support healthy gene expression, and add nutrients many dogs are missing.

And no—you don’t need to make your dog’s entire diet from scratch. Even if your dog eats kibble, you can still improve the bowl.

Here are my top 7:

1) Liver (the budget superfood)
Rich in protein, B12, folate, vitamin A, iron, and choline.
Amount: 1 tsp per 10–20 lbs, 2–3x/week. Keep liver under 5% of the total diet.

2) Broccoli (or broccoli sprouts)
Broccoli contains sulforaphane, a powerful antioxidant compound.
Prep tip: chop/crush, let sit 5–10 min, then lightly steam if needed.
Amount: 1 Tbsp or 1 small floret per 20 lbs, 2–3x/week.

3) Carrots
Carotenoids + one dog study linked veggie feeding (including carrots) with lower bladder cancer risk in Scottish Terriers.
Amount: small safe pieces, 2–3x/week.

4) Berries (blueberries are easiest)
Flavonoids + anthocyanins for antioxidant support.
Amount: 1 Tbsp per 30 lbs OR 6–7 berries for small dogs, 2–3x/week.

5) Plain Greek yogurt (unsweetened)
A simple probiotic food to support gut and immune health.
Amount: 1 tsp per 10–20 lbs daily if tolerated.

6) Eggs
Excellent protein + choline.
Amount: 1 egg per 20–30 lbs, a few times weekly.

7) Omega-3s (EPA/DHA support)
Supports healthy inflammation response. Use salmon/sardines, fish oil, krill oil, or small amounts of olive oil.
Amount: olive oil ½ tsp per 20 lbs daily OR use a quality omega-3 supplement.

If I had to pick a simple trio to start: broccoli + liver (or eggs) + omega-3s.

So tell me—what’s the easiest “one food upgrade” you’d actually add this week?

What kibble is actually made from:Kibble looks simple, but it’s a highly processed food made from a mix of animal, plant...
13/06/2026

What kibble is actually made from:

Kibble looks simple, but it’s a highly processed food made from a mix of animal, plant, and added synthetic nutrients.

Main ingredients:

~Animal-based ingredients
Meat meals (chicken, beef, lamb, fish)
Fresh meat (mostly reduced after cooking)
By-product meals (organs, bone, skin, etc., depending on regulations)
Animal fats (like chicken fat or fish oil)
These provide most of the protein and fat.

~Plant-based ingredients
Corn, wheat, rice
Soy (in some formulas)
Peas, lentils, chickpeas (common in grain-free diets)
Potato or sweet potato

These mainly provide energy and form the structure of the kibble.

~Binders and fibres
Beet pulp, cellulose
Starches
Small amounts of gums or binders

These help hold the kibble together.

~How kibble is made (extrusion process)
Kibble is made through high-heat, high-pressure cooking:

Ingredients are ground into a mixture:
Water and steam are added
The mix is cooked under high heat and pressure
It’s pushed through a machine to form shapes
Then it’s dried and coated with fats and flavourings
This makes it shelf-stable for long periods.

What processing does to the food:

Proteins change shape (may affect digestion and amino acid availability)
Starches become easier to digest and give kibble its crunchy texture
Some nutrients are reduced due to heat (like certain amino acids)
Fats can degrade over time if oxidised
Some vitamins are destroyed, so they are added back in later

~Added nutrients
After cooking, kibble is usually fortified with:
Synthetic vitamins and minerals
Amino acids (like taurine in some formulas)
Preservatives to extend shelf life

Final takeaway
~ Kibble is not a “whole food” in the traditional sense. It’s a reprocessed, engineered food designed for convenience, long shelf life, and nutritional consistency.

~ It can still meet dietary standards, but it is very different from fresh or minimally processed diets in structure, nutrient availability, and moisture content.

~ Fresh food is medicine so do your dog a favour and feed real food, and if you can't..... don't get a dog!

13/06/2026

FOODS THAT CAN HELP YOUR DOG P**P BETTER 💩🐶

Every dog owner has had that moment.

You’re out on a walk, your dog is doing the “finding the perfect spot” routine, circling like they’re selecting real estate... and then absolutely nothing happens. Or what does happen leaves you wondering if their digestive system has gone on strike.

The good news? Sometimes small dietary tweaks can make a big difference.

Foods rich in natural fibre can help support healthy bowel movements and keep things moving comfortably. Pumpkin is probably the most famous example, and for good reason. Many dogs love it, and it provides gentle fibre that can help with stool quality. Leafy green vegetables can also contribute valuable fibre, while ingredients such as psyllium husk are sometimes used under veterinary guidance to support digestive health.

The important thing to remember is that every dog is different. What works brilliantly for one dog may not suit another, especially if there are underlying digestive issues, food sensitivities, or medical conditions involved.

And while social media is full of "miracle p**p fixes", there’s no substitute for a balanced diet, fresh water, regular exercise, and making sure your dog's digestive system is functioning as it should.

If your dog is regularly struggling with constipation, inconsistent stools, or digestive discomfort, it’s worth discussing at your next appointment so we can help determine what's actually going on beneath the surface.

Have you ever discovered a food that seemed to work wonders for your dog's digestion? Tell us below. We'd love to hear what your dog thinks is the ultimate tummy-friendly snack!

📍 1016 Stanley Street East, East Brisbane QLD
🕗 Mon–Fri 8am–6pm, Sat 9am–1pm (Closed Sundays & most public holidays)
📞 (07) 3393 1359
🌐 animalwellness.com.au

Want to explore what’s right for your pet? Book a consult - we’re here to help.

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12/06/2026

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🥦 More fresh vegetables. Less cancer.

In a peer-reviewed study published in JAVMA, researchers at Purdue University found that dogs🐶 eating vegetables several times per week had dramatically lower rates of bladder cancer. The more vegetables🥦🥕 dogs ate, the lower their risk appeared to be, even though the vast majority of dogs in the study were eating predominantly dry kibble. The study remains one of the most influential and widely discussed pieces of research examining diet and cancer risk in dogs.

One of the most surprising findings was that vitamin supplements did not show the same protective association as whole vegetables.

Why does that matter?

Because nutrition is more than nutrients.💊

Whole foods contain thousands of naturally occurring compounds that work together in ways we still don’t fully understand. Fiber nourishes beneficial gut bacteria. Polyphenols help regulate inflammation. Carotenoids, flavonoids, glucosinolates, and other phytochemicals support detoxification, cellular repair, immune function, and healthy aging.

Many of these compounds are absent from synthetic vitamin premixes because they aren’t classified as essential nutrients, even though they may play important roles in long-term health.

Meeting minimum nutrient requirements may prevent deficiency. But thriving may require much more than simply adding isolated synthetic nutrients to an ultra-processed diet.

Real food delivers far more than what’s listed on a nutrition label.

Miss Molly's Tasty Turmeric Treats - Purveyor of Fine Treats for Dogs™️ 🌿 is so much more than just a dog treat!After ma...
12/06/2026

Miss Molly's Tasty Turmeric Treats - Purveyor of Fine Treats for Dogs™️ 🌿 is so much more than just a dog treat!

After many years of research in animal nutrition, I created these healthy tasty treats as a delicious and easy way to include turmeric in your dog’s daily routine. Each biscuit is handmade with fresh, seasonal ingredients, medicinal herbs, and organic coconut oil—no ultra-processed or sugary ingredients.

✨ Holistic, functional nutrition
✨ Made by a qualified Holistic Animal Nutrition Practitioner 👩‍⚕️

🌿 Why turmeric?
Turmeric may help support:
🐕 Joint comfort & mobility
🦠 Immune, skin & digestive health
🧬 Healthy ageing & inflammation response
🥄 Prepared as golden paste (turmeric + black pepper + healthy fats) to support absorption.
🐾 Simple. Nutritious. Tasty.

Come and chat with me at the market to find out more💛

Miss Molly's Tasty Turmeric Treats - Purveyor of Fine Treats for Dogs™️ also offers all-natural tick and flea preventatives, non-toxic cleaning products, natural shampoo bars, and herbal supplements. The range also includes a beautiful selection of memorial items, including jewelry, urns, and Moving Sand Art—a DIY tribute for your pet’s ashes. Additional offerings include anxiety and thunder vests, mobility support splints, and harnesses.

Next door at The Little Market Boutique, you’ll find a fabulous range of reading glasses in various strengths, Vintage Boho earrings, copper magnetic bangles (on sale at $10 each), jewelry boxes, electronic jewelry cleaners and much more.

Miss Molly's Tasty Turmeric Treats - Purveyor of Fine Treats for Dogs™️ will be at the Yeppoon Community Market this Saturday
⏰ 6am–10am.

Come and say hello! If you’re looking for nutritional advice for your dog along with their treats, I’m always happy to chat 👩‍⚕️

🐾 Please note: sadly dogs are not permitted in the market grounds.

💲 EFTPOS available 💲

11/06/2026

⚠️ SHARE THIS. It could save a dog's life.
NEVER feed your dog a cooked bone.

Ever.

Not a roasted marrow bone.
Not a rotisserie chicken carcass.
Not a smoked bone from a pet store.
Not a bone left over from last night's dinner.
Not "just this once."
Not ever.

If you are new to raw or fresh-food feeding, this is one of the most important things you will read. If you are an experienced raw feeder, please share this for the pet parents who are just starting out. This information saves lives.

---
🦴 First: What Makes a Raw Bone Safe

Raw bone is a living tissue matrix. It is composed of two primary structural components working in concert:

1️⃣ Mineral crystals (primarily hydroxyapatite: calcium and phosphorus) which provide hardness and compressive strength

2️⃣ Collagen fibers which weave through and between the mineral crystals, providing flexibility, tensile strength, and the ability to absorb force without catastrophic fracture

This combination is what makes raw bone behave the way it does under chewing pressure. Rather than shattering, a raw bone compresses, bends, and splits along predictable lines producing fragments that are soft enough to be ground down further by the teeth, mixed with stomach acid, and digested.

A correctly sized raw meaty bone, fed to a dog who chews rather than gulps and is appropriately supervised, carries substantially less risk than a cooked bone. Raw bones have been part of the evolutionary diet of wild canids for millions of years.

---
🔥 What Heat Does to That Matrix: The Science

This is where the danger begins. Understanding the mechanism is what makes this rule non-negotiable.

When bone is exposed to heat, whether through roasting, boiling, smoking, baking, or any cooking process, something irreversible happens to the collagen component:
👇
The collagen denatures.

Collagen is a protein. Like all proteins, it is highly sensitive to sustained heat. At cooking temperatures, the triple-helix structure of collagen unravels and breaks down. The flexible, fibrous scaffolding that held the mineral crystals together and gave the bone its capacity to absorb force without shattering is destroyed.

What remains is the mineral crystal component, hydroxyapatite, without its structural partner.

The result is a bone that is:

🔴 Brittle
▪️ It has lost the flexibility that allowed it to compress under pressure

🔴 Unpredictable
▪️ It no longer splits along controlled lines; it fractures randomly

🔴 Sharp
▪️ The fracture edges are jagged, angular, and rigid rather than soft and rounded

🔴 Non-digestible
▪️ Stomach acid can partially dissolve bone minerals over time, but large, sharp fragments may likely persist long enough to cause injury before significant breakdown occurs.

This is not a matter of degree. It is not that cooked bones are slightly more dangerous than raw bones. The structural integrity of the bone has been fundamentally and permanently altered. There is no cooking method, no temperature, no duration that makes a cooked bone safe.

---
🏥 What Happens Inside Your Dog's Body

When a dog chews a cooked bone, it fractures into sharp, rigid shards. While some dogs may pass these fragments without incident, others can experience serious complications.

From there, the path of injury follows a predictable progression:

Stage 1: The Stomach
Sharp fragments enter the stomach. In some cases, stomach acid and muscular contractions of the stomach wall (peristalsis) may further fragment the shards. In others, particularly with larger fragments or denser bones, the pieces pass through relatively intact.

Stage 2: The Pylorus and Small Intestine
The pyloric valve between the stomach and small intestine is a narrow passage. Sharp bone fragments passing through can lacerate the pyloric mucosa. Once in the small intestine (a thin-walled, highly vascular structure), a sharp shard moving through peristaltic contractions can puncture or perforate the intestinal wall.

Stage 3: Perforation and Peritonitis
An intestinal perforation allows gut contents to leak into the abdominal cavity. This triggers bacterial peritonitis, a life-threatening systemic infection. Symptoms include sudden severe abdominal pain, vomiting, lethargy, fever, and collapse. This is a surgical emergency. Without immediate veterinary intervention, it is fatal.

Stage 4: Emergency Surgery
Surgical repair requires locating and closing the perforation, thoroughly lavaging the abdominal cavity, and managing the resulting infection with aggressive intravenous antibiotics. Even with prompt surgery, outcomes are not guaranteed.
Some dogs do not survive this.

‼️Other complications can occur even without perforation, including choking, esophageal obstruction, constipation from bone fragments, re**al bleeding, and intestinal blockage requiring emergency treatment.

---
📌 A Critical Note for Home-Cooked Diet Feeders

If you feed your dog a home-cooked fresh diet, which is a wonderful, nutritionally sound choice when properly formulated, please pay particular attention here.

The temptation when cooking for your dog is to treat mealtimes similarly to how you cook for yourself. A roasted chicken carcass looks like a perfectly natural thing to offer a dog. A pot of bone broth with softened bones looks nourishing and wholesome.

The bones from that carcass are cooked. They are not safe to feed.

Bone broth, where bones are simmered until soft, is actually a separate case worth clarifying: broth made by long-simmering bones until they are soft enough to crumble to powder can be safe, but only if the bones are fully dissolved into the liquid and not fed as intact pieces. Any bone that retains structural integrity after cooking, regardless of how soft it feels, can still splinter unpredictably when chewed under pressure.

NOTE: Bone broth itself contains very little calcium unless the dissolved bone material is actually consumed.

For home-cooked diet feeders, calcium supplementation should come from correctly dosed calcium hydroxyapatite, seaw**d calcium, calcium citrate, calcium carbonate, or finely ground eggshell powder, never from cooked bones.

This is one of the most important reasons why home-cooked diets need to be properly formulated. The substitutions matter. The sources matter. The details matter.

---
✅ What TO Feed: Safe Raw Bone Options

For dogs who can have raw meaty bones (RMBs), the following guide will help your dog stay safe:

✔️ Appropriately sized RMBs is vital. A bone should never be small enough to be swallowed whole.

✔️ Choose soft, meaty raw bones for beginners or small dogs. Raw chicken necks and feet (small dogs), raw chicken frames, raw duck necks and feet, raw duck frames, raw turkey necks (medium to large dogs), whole raw quail, for example.

✔️ Recreational raw bones for larger dogs include raw beef marrow bones (fed with supervision and limited chewing time to reduce the risk of tooth fractures); raw beef, pork, and lamb necks; raw brisket bones.

✔️ Always supervise❗️ No dog should be left alone with a bone, regardless of experience.

✔️ Know your dog. Gulpers, resource guarders, brachycephalic breeds, dogs with dental disease or prior GI surgery require individual assessment before raw bone feeding.

❌ No weight-bearing bones from large animals (beef femur, knuckle bones, turkey legs) for aggressive chewers. These are dense enough to fracture teeth even when raw

This is not a matter of preference or feeding philosophy. It is rooted in anatomy, physiology, biomechanics, and veterinary pathology.

The collagen matrix is either intact or it is not. There is no middle ground. There is no safe cooked bone.

Please share this post. Paste it in your dog groups. Send it to the friend who just started home cooking for their dog. Tag the person who offered their dog a leftover bone at Christmas dinner.

This information is free. It costs nothing to share it 🙏.
And it could save a dog's life tonight. 🐾

— The Holistic Canine 💚

🐾 For raw and home-cooked diet formulation built to NRC standards:
👉 theholisticcanine.us

📖 Fresh-Food Feeding Explained — the science of feeding fresh food correctly:
👉 theholisticcanine.us/ebook/

Toxic Poison ALERT! This morning at Yeppoon Esplanade...Please be aware that this morning during our daily walk, Hugo an...
11/06/2026

Toxic Poison ALERT!

This morning at Yeppoon Esplanade...

Please be aware that this morning during our daily walk, Hugo and I witnessed Council spraying herbicide on the lawns at the Yeppoon foreshore carpark area for bindii.

When I asked the worker, he confirmed it was a “poison.”

This is concerning because these lawns are heavily used by the public—families with young children sit and play here, and many people (including myself) walk their dogs across these same areas daily.

I understand the need to manage w**ds like bindii, but it raises real questions about safety, exposure, and transparency in shared public spaces.

It would be helpful to know:

What product is being used
Whether there is a safe re-entry period for people and animals
Whether warning signs are required after spraying

There are also lower-toxicity and non-chemical approaches available for w**d control, and I hope Council is considering all options when treating high-use recreational areas.

Posting this to raise awareness and encourage open information, not to attack anyone—but I do think the community deserves clarity about what is being applied in spaces we all use every day.

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