Shop Raw North Devon

Shop Raw North Devon Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Shop Raw North Devon, Pet Supplies, Unit 4, Venn Valley Winery Building, Blakeshill Road, Landkey.

Shop - Holistic Care for our Companion Animals - species appropriate, minimally processed raw and cooked food for dogs and cats, natural treats, chews and supplements.

Pure Green Clay is a must-have for your natural first aid kit. Green Clay has excellent drawing properties so can be use...
03/06/2026

Pure Green Clay is a must-have for your natural first aid kit.

Green Clay has excellent drawing properties so can be used for drying up wet eczema and hot spots and helping control infection in minor wounds and abscesses. Green Clay is so versatile and can be used for dogs, cats, horses, sheep and other livestock. It forms a protective layer over injuries and also naturally repels insects. It has a calming and soothing effect on a dog’s itchy or traumatised skin, breaking the itch, scratch cycle. It is completely safe should your dog accidentally lick or consume it.

Green clay can be made into a thick paste with a little water and spread onto the affected area. This acts as a protective barrier for minor sores and as the clay dries, moisture is drawn away from any wet areas of skin.

This product should not replace veterinary treatment if it is needed or if serious infection is present in a wound.

https://www.shoprawnorthdevon.co.uk/

A fantastic aid for all canine professionals. Thanks Dogs First
02/06/2026

A fantastic aid for all canine professionals. Thanks Dogs First

Dog trainers, this will help with your work - ensure they have the foundations in place BEFORE your visit. It will greatly improve your success rates. I have free resources here to help you:

I was a trainer, back in the day. Came out of college and went straight into Guide Dogs. Best job ever. Started as a pup supervisor in Ireland and ended up a Guide Dog Trainer in Australia. I was doing a little training on the side, as you do.

Everything was fine until I started looking into nutrition. Once I saw the difference in the trainability of Brisbane Guide Dogs fed fresh food, I knew I had to apply this approach to every dog in my care - both guide dogs and the guys on the side.

Easier said than done, in both cases. First, the Guide Dog School I was working with couldn't grasp the point of it (not helped by the fact they were in a contract with Mars pet food and needed the paltry cheque such candy companies gives these cash-starved charity organisations).

But the dogs in my care were another battle entirely. You all know the story. They wanted me for an hour and in that hour, as well get to the bottom of the issue, explain a little about dog behaviour, correct some of the nonsense from the previous trainer(s) and then get all members in the house singing off the same hymn sheet, I now had to explain to them how utterly fundamental a good diet and gut health as a whole was to good behaviour.

We all know the story here - 90% of your serotonin is produced by the gut flora. But they also produce tryptophan and GABA.

That last one is crazy important. GABA is one of your chief calming neurotransmitters. It reduces nerve activity, helping regulate anxiety, stress, sleep, muscle relaxation, seizure control, and overall nervous system balance.

When you're gut sick, you make less of it, and on you go the IBS / poor behaviour wheel.

Your body makes most of your GABA but to do it, you need LOTS of glutamine. Glutamine is best sourced from meat. There's little to none in plants (and cooking kills it) but as glutamine is only "conditionally essential" for dogs (like taurine!) vegan diets (and high-carb kibble diets as a whole) will contain virtually none for the poor animals trying to exist on it.

Studies show the faeces of raw-fed dogs have much more GABA in there. That's a great thing for behaviour.

So, lots of good-quality protein is essential. The importance of fresh fats cannot be understated (your brain is 20% omega 3). Of no chemical preservatives. Of fresh vitamins and minerals (2/3 of kibble fail to provide the minimum nutrients to the pet, nutrient-deficient animals are more reactive). Of all the bioactive comounds in many food ingredients. On and on.

Now, I'm already losing the crowd here, I know I am, so imagine trying to get this message across in the kitchen of a few people expecting you to get their dog to be less reactive on the lead!!

Over time, though, you learn the best way to reach them, so I instead run with the kids' birthday party analogy - you know when they bring the crap food out at birthday parties? Everything was going fine until all the brightly coloured sweets, cakes and fizzy drinks go in and then KABOOM, they're bouncing off the walls. You have to hoosh them out, lock the doors and close the curtains.

You DON'T take out their homework and try get them to focus.

THIS they can understand "that's what kibble is doing to your pet, or in the very least, it's not helping".

There are so many people out there trying to train out the poor behaviour in a dog when there may be one or two key foundational stones missing. The poor dog hasn't a hope.

It's imperative that your clients make the switch to real food (ideally raw as it takes care of so many of the above in one fell swoop).

So a tip from me to you is that you email the clients in advance of your arrival. Use the kids' birthday party analogy in the first paragraph or two and then tell them to do two things before you arrive:

1. They need to direct message Conor here on the Dogs First page and request their FREE Canine Nutrition Masterclass. It's the most popular course I have. 3hrs of content broken into 30 short vids. It will convert them for you.

2. They need to get their pets on to good food for a week BEFORE you arrive - ideally a complete raw or even one of the cooked jobs.

This will save you a heap of time and set you all up, most importantly the dog, for a good visit.

If you're a trainer and you're unsure just how important nutrition is for behaviour, please comment BEHAVIOUR below and we'll send you over a free masterclass on that very topic.

One of the most damaging ideas ever introduced into the dog world is the belief that dogs are constantly trying to domin...
28/05/2026

One of the most damaging ideas ever introduced into the dog world is the belief that dogs are constantly trying to dominate each other and humans........

Great post Holistic Dog Behaviour - thank you.

One of the most damaging ideas ever introduced into the dog world is the belief that dogs are constantly trying to dominate each other and humans. The “dominance theory” model taught people to view behaviour through the lens of control, hierarchy, defiance, and power struggles. Growling became a challenge. Avoidance became manipulation. Reactivity became an attempt to “be alpha.” Instead of asking what a dog was experiencing emotionally or developmentally, the focus became how to suppress the behaviour and regain control.

The problem is that this theory was built on a misunderstanding from the very beginning.

Much of dominance theory came from early captive wolf studies, where unrelated wolves were placed together in artificial environments with limited space and resources. Under stress, conflict naturally emerged, and researchers interpreted these interactions through rigid hierarchical structures. But wild wolf families do not function like this. Modern wolf research has shown that wolf packs are primarily family units.

The “alpha wolf” idea itself was later rejected by the very researchers who originally popularised it.

Yet the dog world continued building entire training systems around outdated ideas of power and submission.

What is often missed is that dogs are not entering our homes trying to outrank us. They are mammals born into a nervous system that is seeking safety, connection, regulation, and belonging. Behaviour is not driven by a desire for dominance. It is driven by survival, emotion, genetics, developmental experiences, attachment, and the state of the nervous system.

This is where the work surrounding social characters becomes incredibly important.

At the Wolf and Dog Development Centre, the understanding of canine behaviour moves far beyond simplistic ideas of dominance. Their work explores the reality that dogs are born carrying innate social tendencies and emotional predispositions that would historically have served a purpose within a social group or survival structure. Not every dog is designed to move through the world in the same way. Some dogs are naturally orientated towards environmental awareness and scanning. Some are more socially driven and relationship-focused. Some are naturally cautious, investigative, nurturing, or highly responsive to movement and pressure.

These are not “bad traits.” They are social characteristics that, in a natural setting, would contribute to the survival and balance of the group.

When we misunderstand these traits through the lens of dominance, we pathologise normal canine behaviour. A vigilant dog becomes “controlling.” A sensitive dog becomes “stubborn.” A dog struggling with emotional regulation becomes “disobedient.” But often the dog is not trying to dominate anything at all. They are expressing an ingrained survival system colliding with an environment they cannot cope with.

This is one of the reasons punishment-based approaches can be so damaging. If behaviour is rooted in stress, fear, developmental conflict, or nervous system dysregulation, suppressing the outward behaviour does not resolve the internal state. In many cases, it simply drives the stress deeper into the system. The dog may appear “calm” while internally remaining overwhelmed, hypervigilant, or emotionally shut down.

The work of Shaun Ellis and Kim Ellis has also helped challenge many of the myths humans have projected onto wolves and dogs. Shaun Ellis became known for his immersive work living alongside wolves, seeing their communication, relationships, social structures, and behaviour in ways that differed dramatically from traditional dominance narratives. Rather than seeing constant aggression and battles for status, the picture that emerged was one of deep social cooperation, communication, emotional sensitivity, and role-based functioning within the group.

Their work highlights something the dog world still struggles to fully accept: social mammals survive through connection far more than conflict.

Wolves do not spend their lives attempting to overpower one another at every opportunity. Stable groups rely on trust, communication, and cooperative functioning. Young wolves are guided through development. Adults can adapt behaviour according to the needs of the group. Emotional signals matter. Social harmony matters. Relationships matter.

Dogs have inherited these deeply social mammalian systems, even though domestication has shaped them in unique ways over thousands of years.

This is why behaviour cannot be reduced to obedience alone.

A dog pulling on the lead doesn’t need “leadership.” A reactive dog doesn’t need harsher correction. A dog growling over food is not “challenging authority.” Often these dogs are communicating emotional conflict, insecurity, developmental deficits, chronic stress, or survival responses that humans have failed to understand.

The tragedy of dominance theory is that it taught generations of people to see communication as confrontation.

It encouraged owners to overpower signals instead of listening to them.

It framed trust based relationships as weakness.

And in doing so, it disconnected people from the emotional reality of the animal standing in front of them.

When we move beyond dominance theory, we begin to see dogs differently. We stop asking, “How do I control this dog?” and start asking, “What is this dog experiencing?” We begin looking at development, attachment, nervous system regulation, social needs, genetics, emotional safety, and relationship dynamics. We begin recognising that behaviour is not about winning power struggles. It is about understanding the mammal underneath the behaviour.

And perhaps most importantly, we stop forcing dogs into a constant battle for rank that never truly existed in the first place.

27/05/2026

a space has come available in the next PUPPY class......

Please contact Heart and Hound. The Professional Dog Care Service. directly...

Thank you Billinghurst Institute
27/05/2026

Thank you Billinghurst Institute

You buy the "premium" kibble. But they're still itchy.

What if the problem was in the bag itself — not the brand?

25/05/2026

Spent the morning at this wonderful event - FEAST Food and Drinks Festival, at Tapely Park. Lots of lovely local produce and stunning views.

Spotted our awesome neighbours Green Man Cider. Great weather for their refreshing beverages.

Put this event in your diary for next year - highly recommend.

Thank you Dr. Karen Becker
24/05/2026

Thank you Dr. Karen Becker

A new peer-reviewed study in Frontiers in Veterinary Science found that 2 out of 3 dogs with lymphoma were exposed to benzene at DNA-damaging levels, and nearly 9 out of 10 were exposed to xylene. But here’s what most people miss: over half of healthy dogs had similar benzene exposure, and nearly all dogs had xylene exposure too.

This isn’t rare, it’s everyday life. These chemicals, released from products like cleaners, air fresheners, candles, paints, furniture, and even gas stoves, are commonly found in indoor air and can damage DNA in lab studies. Most dogs are living in a constant background of exposure we rarely think about.

The good news is you can reduce it.🙌 Focus on your indoor air, improve ventilation, use an air purifier with activated carbon if possible, avoid synthetic fragrances, switch to simpler low-toxin products, and eliminate smoke exposure. It’s not one big toxin that matters, it’s the constant low-level exposure over time.

And while reducing exposure is step one, supporting your dog’s ability to handle what they’re still exposed to matters just as much.

If you want a science-backed detox support option, Liver Lift™ is a daily, multi-pathway formula designed for pets living in today’s chemical world. It supports liver detox and bile flow, kidney filtration, lymphatic movement, gut binding, antioxidant regeneration, and nervous system regulation.

👉 Comment CLEANUP and we’ll send a link your way.

SUNDAYS - we are open from 11:30am - 3:30pm.We stock minimally processed food for dogs and cats, both raw and cooked, na...
23/05/2026

SUNDAYS - we are open from 11:30am - 3:30pm.

We stock minimally processed food for dogs and cats, both raw and cooked, natural supplements, treats and chews, Eco Toys, Y-shaped harnesses and 3 meter leads.

We also deliver throughout North Devon on Wednesday evenings.

https://www.shoprawnorthdevon.co.uk/

another great post from Heal the Dog - thank you
23/05/2026

another great post from Heal the Dog - thank you

“Maybe I should just castrate him so other dogs leave him alone”

I hear this regularly from clients - and as the owner of a young intact male myself, I get it. Being targeted by castrated males is frustrating and stressful for everyone involved. The logic seems simple: intact males get targeted because of their hormonal scent profile, so remove it, remove the problem. However, castration isn’t a guarantee that other dogs will respond positively; targeting behaviour isn't exclusively purely hormonal, and if your dog has suffered socially due to this, removing testosterone can further reduce confidence, potentially worsening social interactions.

Younger, intact males tend to fare worse. Peak testosterone combined with limited social experience means they’re both more provocative to other dogs and less equipped to defuse the situation. This may improve with maturity.

The subtle pressure of constantly justifying your choice to other guardians is exhausting. At some point, “if you can’t beat them, join them” can start to feel tempting - not because it’s the right decision, but because it’s the path of least resistance. Is that a good enough reason for such an irreversible, impactful procedure?
Knowledge is your best defence - both for making the decision and for fielding the opinions. The evidence base for keeping males intact has grown significantly, with links between early castration and joint disease, certain cancers, and increased anxiety. The more informed you are, the less those conversations will wear you down.

Before committing to surgery, consider:
Better situational management: avoiding situations where conflict is likely isn’t a defeat; it’s sensible.

Advocating for your dog - taking a front seat when others won’t recall their dog, and in interactions - an off-lead castrated male repeatedly targeting your dog is their recall problem, not your dog’s existence problem.

Working with your dog (maybe with a professional) to help him stay calm and better able to defuse moments of tension is worth prioritising - a dog who doesn’t mirror or amplify (often inadvertently) the other’s intensity is much less likely to turn a tense encounter into a full confrontation.

Some guardians use odour-masking products with mixed results - probably not a reliable solution, but a low-risk thing to try in the meantime.

If all else fails, a temporary hormonal implant lets you assess the effect of castration before committing to anything permanent (results are not always an accurate predictor though).

Your intact dog isn’t the problem, even if others may treat him as though he is.

Address

Unit 4, Venn Valley Winery Building, Blakeshill Road
Landkey
EX320NN

Opening Hours

Wednesday 10am - 4pm
Thursday 10am - 4pm
Friday 10am - 4pm
Saturday 10am - 4pm
Sunday 11:30am - 3:30pm

Telephone

+447394088223

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