SKU: 11274125059

Chicken & Turkey Dog Food Topper Bundle

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Description

Chicken & Turkey Dog Food Topper BundleTwice the flavor and nutrition for your fur baby and a healthy savings for you! With our Treat Topper combo duo, you can enhance and add variety to your pet's meals with a boost of pure, all natural chicken or turkey powder or both! without added ingredients or empty calories. Made using our incomparable Chicken Chip and Turkey Chip healthy pet treats, each Topper Combo contains: 1x jar (4. 7 oz) Chicken Treat Toppers 1x jar (4. 7 oz) Turkey Treat

Twice the flavor and nutrition for your fur baby and a healthy savings for you! With our Treat Topper combo duo, you can enhance and add variety to your pet's meals with a boost of pure, all-natural chicken or turkey powder - or both! - without added ingredients or empty calories. Made using our incomparable Chicken Chip and Turkey Chip healthy pet treats, each Topper Combo contains:

1x jar (4.7 oz) Chicken Treat Toppers

1x jar (4.7 oz) Turkey Treat Toppers

 

FEEDING GUIDELINES

Add 1 tablespoon of Treat Topper per 10 lbs of your pet's weight to food 1-2x per day.

 

DOG FOOD TOPPERS = PROTEIN POWDER FOR PETS

Single-ingredient Treat Toppers are made from the same all-natural human-grade poultry found in our tasty healthy dog treats, but in powder form! With a smooth, even texture pets love, they are perfect as a kibble topper or to give any food an added boost of the pure low-fat protein dogs – and cats! – need to live their best lives. In fact, our pet food toppers contain 2-3x the protein of many other dog food toppers on the market!

 

PERFECT FOR PICKY PUPS AND MORE

Does your pup turn up his nose to his dinner? Turn up the flavor by adding the irresistible taste of our healthy dog treats to any meal! Maybe your senior dog prefers to gum than crunch his food, or your puppy needs extra protein boosts to get her required nutrition. Our Treat Topper Combo is perfect for these pup predicaments – and to treat both dogs and cats to the all-natural poultry tastes they love in multiple ways!

 

WAYS YOU CAN USE FOOD TOPPERS FOR DOGS AND CATS

Just sprinkle the healthy pet treat love on top of or underneath pet food to make mealtime extra fun and nutritious. About 1 tablespoon of Treat Topper per 10 lbs of your pet's weight per day adds the perfect protein-packed punch without added fillers, extra fat or empty calories. Our convenient dog food toppers are also pup-tacular in licking mats, educational toys and bowls - whether dog or cat!

 

PET FOOD TOPPERS ARE VERSATILE AND EASY TO USE

Not only do our Treat Toppers come in break-resistant jars with convenient shake-or-spoon lids, but they are super easy to incorporate into your pet's daily diet. Simply use as a kibble topper, sprinkle on wet food, or add your own blend, or mix into broths and homemade treats. They even help make medicine go down like a breeze!

 

SO MUCH VALUE, LOW WASTE

We carefully inspect every bag of Farm to Pet treats before shipment from our facility to be sure that it is intact and contains no broken chips. But we don’t waste any broken chips we find! Instead, we repurpose the perfectly good yet imperfect-looking or broken treats into Toppers so that they can end up right where they belong: your pet’s tummy!

 

MORE ABOUT FARM TO PET TREAT TOPPER CHICKEN & TURKEY COMBO

Farm to Pet Treat Toppers give any pet’s diet a nutritional boost! Made from our healthy pet treats and always free from anything artificial, these tasty pet food supplements support muscle development, healthy skin and coat, and overall well-being as they enhance meals, recipes and more. Our Topper Combo Pack includes two tastes that dogs - and cats! - love: all-natural chicken and turkey.

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SKU: 11274125059

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4.5 ★★★★★
Based on 1015 reviews
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Product Reviews
R
Verified Purchase
Rachel S.
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
Exquisite, enrapturing
Format: Paperback
Loved the gritty, visceral language and the epic nature of this poem. Notely blows me away -- the loss of memory, the tangled and eternal subway, the owls and masks.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2014
E
Verified Purchase
Eileen O Malley Callahan
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Format: Paperback
Brilliant, lucid, engaging and brave, a feminist chthonic journey shimmering with poetic bravado.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2014
J
JeFF Stumpo
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
A Feminist Divine Comedy?
Format: Paperback
Let me start with this: The Descent of Alette is difficult to read at first. Notley "puts quotation marks around" "groups of words" "in lines" "that can be off-putting." Note that I'm not quoting from the book there, just giving an example of what the book's text appears like. This forces us to read more slowly, taking in each line a few words at a time. What appears to be awkward is in fact a great solution to the speed-reading most of us do these days. That being said, it's troublesome for the first few poems, less so after that, virtually invisible by the end of the first section. When talking about this book, I immediately compare it to Dante's Divine Comedy, and I commonly see others do the same (see an earlier review here on Amazon.com). Exchange Hell for a subway, and you've basically got it: an underground realm ruled over by a Tyrant, poor souls being tortured, though in this case there is no indication that they have done anything to deserve it. Notley's language might not be quite as beautiful/harsh as Dante's, but her images stand with anything he created. After introducing two characters on a subway, a woman and her baby, both on fire, Notley writes: "another woman" "in uniform" "from above ground" "entered" "the train" "She was fireproof" "she wore gloves, & she" "took" "the baby" "took the baby" "away from the" "mother" "Extracted" "the burning baby" "From the fire" "they made together" "But the baby" "still burned" ("But not yours" "It didn't happen" "to you") "We don't know yet" "if it will" "stop burning," "said the uniformed" "woman" "The burning woman" "was crying" "she made a form" "in her mind" "an imaginary" "form" "to settle" "in her arms where" "the baby" "had been" "We saw her fiery arms" "cradle the air" "She cradled air" ("They take your children" "away" "if you"re on fire") "In the air that" "she cradled" "it seemed to us there" "floated" "a flower-like" "a red flower" "its petals" "curling flames" "She cradled" "seemed to cradle" "the burning flower of" "herself gone" "her life" ("She saw" "whatever she saw, but what we saw" "was that flower") After surviving the horrors of the subway, Alette goes even deeper underground, passing through a series of psychological challenges that at times seem straight out of Freud, at times out of Classical mythology, at times out of collective dreams. Throughout it all, we learn more and more about Alette, who is not just a "hero" who goes through the motions necessary to the plot, but who considers and stumbles and is confused and learns. The third section of the book is a rebirth, wherein Alette finds a source for a stronger power than the Tyrant's, and it is distinctly feminist in its nature. I need to note here for those who react to feminism in a knee-jerk way: Notley's feminism is not a militant feminism, though it requires brief "military" action on Alette's part. Men are helpful in the story, have purpose besides being the bad guy. If anything, what Notley attacks in the form of the Tyrant is the idea of a corrupt masculinity, a kind of Big Brother who would easily stand as an antagonist in any number of 20th/21st century literary works. Alette's feminism is the discovery of her place in the world, and that place is not slaving away mindlessly for the Tyrant, not acting as just a womb or pair of hands or pretty face. It's a nuanced message, despite the epic (and therefore presumably black-and-white) nature of the whole book. The fourth section is the showdown with the Tyrant, a great deal of philosophizing, and an ending that I actually find more satisfying than that of Paradiso. I won't spoil it here, but it just works extremely well in conjunction with the themes of Descent as a whole. If you want to be challenged, if you want to think deep thoughts, if you want surreality and magic, pick up The Descent of Alette. For even more interesting reading from the author and her partner, you could also turn to The Scarlet Cabinet, which contains but actually predates the on-its-own publication of Descent.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2010
K
Kent Shaw
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
A Contemporary Epic
Format: Paperback
I have a complicated relationship with most of the books I've read by Alice Notley. I admire her facility with the lyric, her ability to get just beneath a concept or sentiment using a very talk-y style so that I always feel like I'm with whatever speaker she's using, inside that mind and her mind all at once. This is a good kind of complication. It's one I yearn for with poems. The unpleasant complications are when I feel as though I'm just being subjected to her unedited notebook entries. Too much, too much, too much. It comes up especially with her book Mysteries of Small Houses. I mention these difficulties only to sharpen the accomplishment of The Descent of Alette. Like other reviewers, I feel the tonal similarities to Dante's Inferno. Which becomes a subversive allusion considering Alette seeks after a male Tyrant in order to destroy him, while Dante sought after his Beatrice out of desire. But I read and reread Alette, because Notley continually subverts patriarchal conventions in the book. I actually find I crave the speaker's intellect, and the mythic logic that gives the book its arc. I want it more. Yes, there are quotations around each fragment in the poems. I actually appreciate them for slowing my reading down, and for sharpening my focus on the use of Notley's language. And it's not just a stylistic tic, or something to be endured. It could actually be described as further subversion of The Tyrant Alette pursues.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2011
R
Verified Purchase
Raquel Wilbon
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 2
Imagery and diction
Format: Paperback
This book was very challenging to read because everything was written in quotations however, it was intriguing as a different way of writing poetry.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2020

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