A pet owner recently provided concerning images of a large bone fragment in Farmina canned dog food.
The pet owner reported the issue to the pet store she purchased the food from, who in turn put the pet owner in touch with Farmina. Farmina provided the following statement regarding the piece of bone:
“While we have many procedures to ensure the highest quality product possible, natural materials such as bone or bone fragments attached to the high-quality muscle meat we receive from regional suppliers can be accidentally missed.”
Not an acceptable response.
This was a large piece of bone that could have caused a serious – potentially fatal – injury if the pet owner had not seen and removed it. ‘Accidents’ like this should not occur.
Further, pet food regulations confirm “accidentally missed” bones in a lamb pet food would mean the pet food is mislabeled.
Per the pet food legal definition of the ingredient lamb – which is “meat” – bone is not allowed. “Meat is the clean flesh derived from slaughtered mammals and is limited to that part of the striate muscle which is skeletal or that which is found in the tongue, in the diaphragm, in the heart, or or in the esophagus; with or without the accompanying and overlying fat and the portions of the skin, sinew, nerve, and blood vessels which normally accompany the flesh. It shall be suitable for use in animal food.”
If bone is included, the listed ingredients on the label should include “bone” or the lamb ingredient would need to be stated as Lamb By-Products (instead of Lamb). Lamb By-Products includes bone, Lamb does not.
On the other hand, if this was a poultry pet food (chicken or turkey), bone is allowed in the legal definition. “Poultry is the clean combination of flesh and skin with or without accompanying bone….”
Knowing the regulations can help.
This pet owner resides in Canada, which unfortunately does not allow her any options to report this issue to regulatory authorities. But, if a pet owner in the US finds a piece of bone in a beef, lamb, or pork pet food – you can report the issue to FDA reminding them that bone fragments are not allowed in a meat pet food. Accident or not, bone in a meat (excluding poultry) pet food would mean the product is mislabeled.
Let us hope that Farmina takes a different attitude about these bone fragments. They are dangerous and they are not allowed per legal definitions of pet food ingredients.
Wishing you and your pet(s) the best,
Susan Thixton
Pet Food Safety Advocate
Author Buyer Beware, Co-Author Dinner PAWsible
TruthaboutPetFood.com
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Fifitrixiebelle
September 4, 2024 at 1:25 pm
And that food is soooo expensive! Was just contemplating getting more of it for my picky senior dog as a backup to her raw food. So glad I read this.
Sandy
September 4, 2024 at 4:01 pm
We are one of those pet owners who have to feed commercial. So . . . until our government does a better job for us, we will have to do the checking for them. We never just scoop dog food from the can and into the dish. We feed our dog her food by the fork fulls! Thank you Susan for all you do and for sharing this.
kay
September 5, 2024 at 11:56 am
Thank you Susan for the information. I have put my cat on my own meat, with supplements, PEA, and different veggies…. home made food for a month now. I will never by commercial pet food ever again!!!! I had spent over $1400 in two separate Vet visits. Once you are awake to the problems of all pet foods, its much better to make your fur baby home cooked, all natural foods. I grind my own fresh meats, no bones, and change up with different proteins, fiber. I know you have a list of trusted pet food companies, but nothing is a guarantee. It is all production selling.
Jeff N Gibbs
September 5, 2024 at 2:22 pm
Farmaina products are made in SERBIA!
Edwin Thaves
September 19, 2024 at 12:17 am
Farmina’s ongoing failure to address a serious quality issue in their pet food is unacceptable. In 2021, I discovered bone fragments in Farmina’s Quail cat food and immediately reported this to the FDA and state agencies. At the time, I was told there weren’t enough complaints to prompt action, underscoring how critical it is for every pet parent to report these dangerous findings to regulatory authorities.
Before filing my complaint, I reached out to Farmina, who initially dismissed the fragments as coconut flakes. After my vet confirmed they were bone fragments of unknown origin, I contacted Farmina again—this time, they chose to ignore me completely. This is a brand that markets itself as a premium option, but in reality, their neglect of safety and quality is alarming. For the sake of your pets’ health, I strongly advise against feeding them anything made by Farmina. We cannot afford to stay silent when the safety of our pets is at risk.