
CityDog: Tea Time
San Diego-based The Honest Kitchen has launched two new herbal teas for pets, Easy Peesy Tea and Quiet Tea. Easy Peesy helps support normal healthy functioning of the urinary tract, including bladder control and the alleviation of urinary irritation. Quiet Tea helps promote calmness and alleviate anxiety during stressful or over-stimulating situations. Both can be purchased at select Whole Foods stores and thehonestkitchen.com.Paw Magazine: Green Issue
THE HONEST KITCHEN DEHYDRATED RAW FOOD
“There’s an endless list of reasons to love The Honest Kitchen,” says Beatty, “including their packaging, their ingredient sourcing, their manufacturing practices and the fact that they always choose sustainability over costs.” And that doesn’t even include their tastiness!
These gently dehydrated, human-grade whole foods are made with love and the highest quality standards from handpicked farmers, all details of which can viewed on their website. Use them as a complete meal or whole food topper to your ‘regular’ pet food.
Zeal Awarded Dog Product of the Year
Fennville, MI (PRWEB) January 25, 2011, PupLife.com has chosen Zeal, a specially crafted dog food for pets with food allergies as their 7th Annual Dog Product Of The Year. Social media played a part this year, since for the first time in history, PupLife.com visitors nominated their favorites for eligibility. The PupLife staff chose The Honest Kitchen’s Zeal based on customer feedback, product review information, overrall sales and staff input.
PupLife Co-Founder and President Eric Houtkooper remarked, “Honest Kitchen’s Zeal was an easy choice for our Product of The Year this time around. Pet owners finally have an easy-to- prepare, healthy, delicious, dehydrated raw food for their dog with allergies. Zeal is a winner for pets and pet owners.”

Lucy Postins, President of The Honest Kitchen commented on Monday, “We’re thrilled to have had Zeal chosen as PupLife’s dog product of the year! Zeal was actually created in really close collaboration with our customers via virtual focus groups using Facebook and other social media, so this award is a real tribute to all those pet owners who shared their opinions and whose values and preferences for special needs and allergy pets, are reflected in the finished ingredient lineup.”
Zeal is the perfect blend for dogs with allergies, food intolerances and delicate stomachs. What was left out of this diet is almost as important as what is in it. Zeal, like all Honest Kitchen diets, does not contain corn, soy, rice, beet pulp or wheat. It is also grain-free, gluten-free and free of flaxseed and white potatoes. “PupLife’s customers have spoken loud and clear – this is a smart choice for pets with sensitive stomachs or food allergies. We are proud to carry it on our web site and we hope it helps pets live happier, healthy lives.”
Since 2003, PupLife’s promise has been to offer the finest dog supplies, the most reliable pet information, and superior customer service so pet owners can care for their dog’s health and well-being. PupLife.com also enjoys widespread readership of its blog, the Pup Life Dog Blog, a place for dogs and their people to read up on the latest information in the canine world.
PupLife.com was recently named “one of the fastest growing online retailers in the pet supply industry” by eCommerce-Guide.com. Focusing on healthy, safe and holistic dogs supplies, PupLife.com provides customers a one-stop shopping site for all their dog care needs. In addition to the best selection of dog food and treats, natural grooming products, designer dog carriers and training tools, PupLife.com offers information and articles including positive reinforcement training tips, health care guides and interviews with leaders in the pet care industry.
For more information, contact PupLife President, Eric Houtkooper, at 773-620-0050 or visit PupLife.com (http://www.puplife.com).
My Business Has Gone to the Dogs
See article here: FIDO Friendly visits with Lucy Postins, founder of The Honest Kitchen®
The Honest Kitchen® is known for superb dehydrated pet foods and being well-respected pawlanthropers in this doggy gone world. Recently FIDO Friendly had the opportunity to sit down with founder, Lucy Postins, and unleash the nitty gritty.
FIDO Friendly: What made you start your business?
Lucy Postins: I started the business in 2002. I had been preparing homemade raw diets for my Rhodesian Ridgeback puppy, Mosi, and found it to be really time consuming and messy. With a kitchen covered in pureed broccoli, beef and all sorts of other things, I began to think of a way to make fresh, healthy meals for him that would still be the same quality as those in my own kitchen—but more simple and easy to prepare. That’s where the idea for dehydration came from: real, whole food ingredients with only the water removed!
FF: How did you come up with the name?
LP: Our name, The Honest Kitchen® , really came about to emphasize the human-grade nature of our products, that they are the very same ingredients you’d find in your own kitchen. Our foods are actually produced in a human food facility, right alongside foods people eat. There are no ingredients in our foods that are not fit for human consumption, and we buy them right from the human food chain—though of course they are formulated for pets to eat! We’re committed to honesty, transparency and integrity of both ingredients and production methods.
FF: What type, if any, research did you do in assessing the consumer market?
LP: I honestly did no research whatsoever, which goes completely against what all the business textbooks will tell you! I started The Honest Kitchen® not as a money-making venture but purely out of a need to solve a problem. Right from the beginning and to this
day, instinct guides us rather than too much market research—though as time’s gone on, we have really strengthened connections with consumers and focused on them to guide us for many projects, like new products.But in the beginning, I just did my own thing because I saw a need, and I found people were receptive to it as soon as I told them. The company was originally intended just as a small cottage industry that I would run from home. In chatting to a friend at my local dog park, I explained what I had developed, and she immediately wanted to carry the food in her local, natural pet market. I’d set up a website with Paypal as our payment method and placed a pretend order to make sure it was all working. When I logged in to the back end to make sure the order had gone through, there was already an order from a customer in Virginia! I have been so fortunate in the company really having a life of its own and chartering its own course.
FF: What were the biggest hurdles in marketing your products?
LP: We remain a small, family-owned business so we definitely don’t have the big budgets of the main players in our industry and that can be a hurdle. This has meant we’ve relied to a large degree on grassroots marketing rather than lots of advertising, to get the word out. But this has served us very well and actually helped us to grow at a more manageable, organic rate. Word-of-mouth has been tremendous, especially when people see their friends’ pets with dramatically improved skin and coat or energy levels after starting on our foods, so that has been key to our growth. Our Facebook page is alive with interactions, sharing of ideas and wonderful photos of our customers, so that’s a fantastic link for us. We’ve also been very fortunate with some wonderful media coverage including CNN, various magazines, CNBC and Food Network.One hurdle is that our food is so different from most others in the industry, and that we’ve been the pioneer for out category. It does take a lot of explaining to people what the product is and how it’s better than conventional feed-grade foods. Dehydration itself is a new concept for many people, so the education piece is key for us in marketing.
FF: What is on the horizon for your company?
LP: We have several exciting product developments planned for the next 18 months or so including two new medicinal teas, a grain-free food for dogs made with beef, and a new grain-free cat food recipe. We’re also working on a very exciting new patent-pending system that’s really going to further revolutionize the way people feed their pets. More news will follow on that in the New Year.
Black Friday blues on the pet front
Now that the Thanksgiving Day tryptophan infusion has worn off (perhaps I’m assuming too much), it’s time to get down to the business of shopping for the December holidays. I mean, we live in America (many of us, anyway), so consumerism is a cultural touchstone, is it not? And now that you’re clustered with family members (whether you like it or not), shopping is probably on your agenda this Black Friday.
To that end, I’ve been trying hard to get together a reasonable list of fun items that you, my Fully Vetted readers, might appreciate. The USA Today people got one list, my Miami Herald readers, another. You, however, are the toughest crowd. Most of you already know all the cool new toys, tasty treats and funky duds that are on offer.
Me? I’m a little late to the party. “I’ve been busy,” is my excuse. But I do have some ideas. Here’s my very non-traditional list, just for you (though I am stealing some items from my other Black Friday columns … just because I’m so in love with them):
1) Pet food upgrade (almost home-cooking)
You’ve been meaning to start home-cooking for your pets but you just can’t get there. It’s not the money, really (though that may be a factor), it’s more to do with the time and effort of it. And I get that. Though I have a penchant for laboring over the stove and a liking for the slowest kind of food imaginable, I understand that it’s not for everyone.
To that end, I’ve identified the closest thing to home-made food: The Honest Kitchen. I’m sure there are other outlets for almost-home-cooked pet foods, but this is one I happen to trust on the basis of its recommendation by my BFF, Gina Spadafori over at PetConnection. If Gina loves it after visiting the HK facilities … I’ve gotta be a big fan, too.
2) Commitment to animal exercise through toys
Are you getting or giving the X-Box Kinect thing this year? I am. (I hope my 12 year-old doesn’t read this post.) In case you don’t know about this great new X-Box 360 add-on, it’s the motion-sensing gadget you can exercise to, dance with, or play games on — without the widget-y thing the Wii requires. I, for one, am looking forward to it, seeing as I’ve been wanting a Wii forever but have been wedded to the Microsoft platform. (Assassin’s Creed be damned!)
But I digress … because this post is definitely about pets — and not about your own [or your offspring's] personal fitness. Pet fitness, however, is the issue. It’s time, whether you can fess up to it or not, to accept the fact that your pets need more exercise.
OK, so you K9 agility devotees, lizard-hunting cat owners, and otherwise-athletic animal people get a pass. Everyone else listen up, because you NEED to do something, longevity being correlated with exercise and all (in humans anyway, so extrapolate with me if you will).
So what do you do? Invest in animal toys; all kinds. Though the doggie hamster wheel thing is indeed a doable thing if you’ve got 350 bucks to burn, I strongly recommend you go old-school and stick to the promise of one play-inciting, five-dollar toy every week for the rest of the year. Or one $20 toy a month. Sure, I know that’s about $250 a year, but toys are fun!
Btw, PLEASE tell us about your favorite toys in the comment section below. We absolutely NEED your know-how here.
3) Presents for pet-people
Here’s a category of gifting that acknowledges the obvious: Pet people love pet-themed gifts. In this realm, I can offer you plenty of options. From iPad and iPhone apps (like Laser Kitten and Kitty Carnage) to pet “clothing” (I love Dublin Dog collars, especially their durable plastics and holiday-wear varieties).
Tags are also on my hot-hot-hot holiday list. I adore the Rockin’ Dog pewter personalize-able tags and charms for both dogs and cats. I especially like the fact that many of these pet tags offer matching jewelry for the humans that love them.
MIcrochips also made my Miami Herald and USA Today lists but what can I say? Though no one likes an extra trip to the vet (much less a fourteen gauge needle), getting pets back home again is part of my schtick.
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Now it’s your turn. Because I plan to offer you some updated holiday gift info sometime next month, I’m especially keen to get your favorite ideas for this year’s holiday pet-gifting season.
Dr. Patty Khuly









































































