SENIOR FEEDING PROFILE

Preservation, Comfort & Digestive Efficiency
Age Range: 6+ Years
Activity Level: High-activity senior, working roles, farm, protection, or physically demanding lifestyle
Primary Goal: Preserve muscle mass, joint function, and metabolic stability while supporting continued workload

Overview
As giant breed dogs enter their senior years, their metabolism and activity level naturally begin to change. Nutrition during this stage plays a key role in preserving muscle mass, supporting joint comfort, and preventing unnecessary weight gain that accelerates physical decline.
Senior giant breeds should continue eating two smaller meals per day, which supports digestion and improves nutrient utilization. Smaller, consistent meals are easier on the aging digestive system and help maintain steady energy levels.
Body condition becomes even more important during this stage. Excess weight places increased strain on aging joints, while excessive weight loss can reduce strength and resilience. The goal is steady, balanced condition—not simply feeding less or more, but feeding appropriately.
Digestive tolerance may also become more sensitive with age, making gradual food transitions essential whenever adjustments are necessary.
What to focus on during the Senior stage:
• Preserving muscle and mobility
• Preventing excess weight gain
• Supporting digestive comfort
• Maintaining consistent feeding routines
FEEDING FREQUENCY
Stability, Absorption & Metabolic Support
Recommended Schedule:
Two consistent meals per day
This remains the optimal feeding rhythm for senior working giant breeds.
Benefits include:
• Improved nutrient absorption
• Reduced digestive stress
• Stable energy availability
• Reduced risk of stomach overload
• Better metabolic regulation
Large single meals increase digestive strain and provide no benefit to performance or longevity.
Consistency becomes even more important with age.
BODY CONDITION
Performance Without Excess
This becomes the single most important physical indicator during senior years.
Your senior working dog should appear:
• Lean
• Muscular
• Defined
• Athletic — not heavy
You should be able to:
• Feel ribs easily under light pressure
• See waist definition
• Observe free, fluid movement
Avoid:
• Heavy appearance
• Thickened waist
• Excess fat over ribs or hips
Excess weight accelerates:
• Joint deterioration
• Mobility loss
• Injury risk
• Fatigue
Lean seniors stay functional longer.
Weight loss, however, should also be monitored, as muscle loss can occur with age if nutrition is insufficient.
Balance is the objective.
NUTRITIONAL TARGETS
Muscle Preservation & Digestive Efficiency
Senior working giant breeds benefit from nutritional levels similar to Active Adults, but with greater emphasis on digestibility and muscle preservation.
Focus on foods that support:
Protein:
• Supports muscle retention
• Prevents age-related muscle loss
• Maintains strength and stability
Fat:
• Provides energy without excessive volume
• Supports endurance
• Maintains body condition
Digestibility:
• Aging digestive systems extract nutrients less efficiently
• Higher digestibility improves nutrient availability
Avoid reducing nutrition simply because the dog is older if activity remains high.
Working seniors still require fuel.
FOOD STABILITY & TRANSITION GUIDANCE
Protect Digestive Function
Senior digestive systems are less adaptable to sudden change.
Any food transition should occur over:
7–10 days minimum
Gradual transition allows:
• Digestive adaptation
• Microbiome stabilization
• Prevention of digestive disruption
Sudden food changes commonly cause:
• Loose stool
• Reduced intake
• Digestive setbacks
Consistency supports stability.
RECOVERY & LONG-TERM MONITORING
Early Adjustment Prevents Decline
Senior working dogs benefit greatly from ongoing observation.
Monitor:
• Body condition
• Energy levels
• Mobility
• Recovery time after activity
• Appetite consistency
Adjust feeding gradually if:
• Body condition changes
• Activity level decreases
• Recovery slows
Small adjustments early prevent larger problems later.
FEEDING PROFILE SUMMARY
Primary Objective: Preserve muscle, protect joints, maintain working ability
Feeding Frequency:
Two meals daily
Body Condition Goal:
Lean, muscular, athletic
Nutrition Focus:
• Muscle preservation
• Digestibility
• Energy support without excess weight
Avoid:
• Excess weight gain
• Underfeeding active seniors
• Frequent food switching
• Large single meals
Return to Feeding System

Senior Activity Profile Adjustments
As giant breed dogs age, their nutritional needs shift toward preservation rather than growth or performance. However, activity level still plays a major role in determining how much energy they require and how their feeding should be balanced. Select the profile below that best reflects your senior dog’s current lifestyle.
Senior Companion Profile
Typical examples include:
• Retired household companions
• Gentle daily walks
• Primarily resting lifestyles
Adjustment Focus:
• Prevent excess weight gain
• Reduce unnecessary joint stress
• Preserve mobility and comfort
• Maintain digestive stability
At this stage, overfeeding accelerates physical decline. Controlled intake helps preserve mobility and quality of life.
Senior Active Profile
Typical examples include:
• Dogs that remain physically engaged
• Regular walks and moderate exercise
• Seniors with higher-than-average energy
Adjustment Focus:
• Maintain muscle condition
• Support joint function through stable nutrition
• Provide sufficient energy without excess
• Monitor recovery and weight carefully
Active seniors benefit from slightly elevated support while still prioritizing structural preservation.
Senior Working Profile
Typical examples include:
• Seniors still performing regular jobs
• Farm dogs continuing light duty
• Service dogs in later career stages
Adjustment Focus:
• Preserve muscle mass and strength
• Support joint resilience under continued workload
• Provide controlled, sufficient energy
• Monitor condition closely for early decline
At this stage, nutrition plays a key role in extending comfortable working ability while protecting long-term health.
How Activity Level Is Defined in the Feeding System

For Senior living primarily as family companions with normal play and moderate activity.

For Senior participating in consistent training, extended walks, or higher physical engagement.

For Seniorraised in farm, guardian, or high-demand working environments.
Activity level in the Feeding System is not based on energy, excitement, or how much your dog runs around the yard. It is based on structured physical demand, duration, and recovery requirement — in other words, how much actual work the body must perform and recover from each day.
A Companion dog includes the vast majority of giant breeds. These dogs live primarily as household members. They may enjoy daily walks, play sessions, or time outside, but their activity is informal and self-paced. Even if they occasionally run or play hard, their body is not under consistent performance demand. Most giant breed dogs fall into this category at every life stage, including puppies, adults, and seniors.
An Active dog performs regular, structured activity that creates ongoing physical conditioning. This includes dogs who hike frequently, train consistently, perform service tasks, or accompany their owners in sustained physical routines. Their body must adapt to repeated exercise and requires additional nutritional support for muscle maintenance and recovery. This applies across puppy development, adult life, and senior years if activity remains consistent.
A Working dog performs physically demanding roles as part of their daily function. This includes livestock guardians, farm dogs, protection dogs, and full-time service animals. Their workload is not occasional — it is a routine demand placed on their muscular and structural system. These dogs require the highest level of nutritional precision to support performance, recovery, and long-term soundness at every life stage.
It is important to understand that unstructured backyard activity, excitement, or occasional intense play does not place a dog in the Active or Working category. These dogs are still considered Companion dogs from a nutritional standpoint, because their physical demand is intermittent, not sustained.
When in doubt, choose Companion. The Feeding System is designed to protect your dog’s long-term structural health, not to push them beyond what their lifestyle truly requires.

