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Yeah, thank you very much Russ. I was just thinking about dogs and food and stuff like that. We've gone both ways, dog food and then people food. America asked, well, she never got any people food at all. It was just hard, dried food. She seemed to run into a lot of problems with teeth, you know, cavities, so forth like that. We had her for like 14 and a half years before she passed. And then when we got our Chihuahuas, you know, they're really small dogs, so we decided we were going to go the other route. So we looked up where we could feed them. So basically what we do is we'll cook them chicken or turkey. Maybe once in a while. This is for Peter Station's Hilo Kilo 7, November Quebec November. But there's no seasoning. No bones in it, no grease. And that seems to work pretty good. And for carbs, we give them either white rice or just plain pasta. Once in a while we'll do the oatmeal thing. And then she can do carrots and green beans, teas, cucumbers, zucchini and broccoli. Dogs seem to like that quite a bit, at least my two dogs do. And then fruits, I don't really feed them fruits. You can't do apples or bananas or blueberries or watermelon seeds. The sea bus watermelons. Watermelons that are sea bus. There we go. And even pumpkin, as a matter of fact, that's good stuff for them. And then we've got to watch your calorie count. So you've got to look up what your dog consumes in calories. With my one dog, it's roughly 300 calories for the one, and the other one's like half the size of her. And we do right at 200 calories. They pretty much keep their weight and maintain their weight. And as we do, it's totally inexpensive to do. We usually get a package for the turkey meat or whatever. We use the pot. We don't cook it in a frying pan or anything like that.

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