Most dog owners reach a tipping point. You stare at the ingredients list on the back of the kibble bag – meal, derivatives, preservatives – and something shifts. You start wondering whether your dog deserves better. And then the second thought arrives, almost immediately: isn’t raw feeding incredibly complicated? All that butcher sourcing, the calcium ratios, the bacteria risks. It sounds like a part-time job.
That hesitation is understandable. But the all-or-nothing framing is the wrong way to look at it. Transitioning a dog to natural food doesn’t require a nutrition degree or a chest freezer in the garage. With pre-formulated, vet-developed meals delivered cold to your door, the logistics have genuinely changed. This guide walks through the practical side – the first seven days, the storage questions, the daily routine, and one honest limitation you should know before you commit.
What BARF Actually Is – And Why DIY Gets Risky
BARF stands for Biologically Appropriate Raw Food. The principle: dogs evolved eating prey animals, not cereal-based pellets, so a diet closer to that ancestral model supports their physiology better. That means raw muscle meat, ground bone, organ meat, and some plant matter – in precise ratios. Typically around 70-80% muscle meat, 10% raw bone, 10% organ, with the remainder being vegetables, seeds, or eggs.
Getting those percentages wrong creates deficiencies or excesses that cause real harm over time. That’s exactly why DIY raw feeding carries risk. The homework is non-trivial. Most people don’t have the time to do it consistently – and that’s before factoring in sourcing, storage, and the rotating cast of ingredients needed to maintain variety.
Pre-portioned, vet-formulated meals eliminate the hardest part. Natuka develops every recipe with veterinary nutritional oversight – not self-certified formulations. Each product hits the right targets for the dog’s life stage. Pre-portioned sausage sections mean you never weigh anything. You defrost what you need, cut along the markings, and serve. Zero artificial preservatives, colours, or additives – fresh or frozen, that’s it.

The First Seven Days – A Realistic Transition Plan
This is where most guides get vague. “Transition gradually” is fine advice in principle, but what does that mean on a Tuesday morning when you have 20 minutes before work?
Here’s a concrete approach that works for most adult dogs in good health. Puppies and dogs with pre-existing digestive conditions should be transitioned more carefully and ideally in consultation with a vet.
- Days 1-2: 75% kibble / 25% new food. Serve them separately at first – some dogs refuse mixed bowls.
- Days 3-4: 50/50 split. Watch stool consistency. Softer stools are normal; liquid or blood is a sign to slow down.
- Days 5-6: 25% kibble / 75% new food. Energy levels and appetite should be stable by now.
- Day 7: Full switch. Most dogs accept this without issue. Sensitive stomachs may need an extra 2-3 days at Day 6 ratios.
One thing that surprises people: dogs often eat noticeably less volume on a natural diet than they did on kibble. That’s not a problem. Natural food is more nutrient-dense and more bioavailable, so the body extracts more from less. Don’t panic and add more – trust the portion guide on the packaging for the first few weeks.
Storage – Simpler Than You Think
Storage anxiety is one of the most common reasons people talk themselves out of the switch. It turns out the practical reality is much less demanding than the fear suggests.
Pre-portioned frozen BARF sausages take up remarkably little space. A standard freezer drawer – the kind you already have in any fridge-freezer combination – can hold two to three weeks of meals for a medium-sized dog. Larger dogs will need more space, obviously, but even then you’re talking about one or two freezer shelves, not a dedicated chest freezer in the utility room.
The daily routine is simple. The night before, move the next day’s portion to the fridge. By morning, it’s defrosted and ready to serve at near-room temperature – which is ideal, since cold food straight from the freezer can cause stomach cramps in some dogs. Once defrosted, store in the fridge and use within 48-72 hours. Don’t refreeze thawed portions.

Delivery and Daily Routine – The Part That Actually Makes It Stick
The sourcing question used to be the biggest friction point in raw feeding. You either found a specialist butcher who understood the ratios, bought in bulk from an online supplier, or drove across town to a pet nutrition shop that may not have had stock that week. Most people tried once, got frustrated, and went back to the bag.
Refrigerated home delivery removes all of that. Natuka ships across Spain with maintained cold-chain logistics – food arrives at safe temperature, without freezer-burn compromise. The subscription model means you don’t have to remember to reorder. The next batch arrives before you run out.
Day-to-day, the routine is genuinely simple. The night before, move the next day’s portion from the freezer to the fridge. By morning, it’s thawed and ready. Defrost time is the only prep involved. Two meals a day works for most adult dogs – morning and early evening. You can pull the second portion from the freezer when you leave for work, and it’ll be ready by dinner time.
Cleaning up deserves an honest mention. Raw meat carries bacteria – wash the bowl with hot water and soap after every meal, same with any surfaces the food touches. It’s a real consideration for households with young children or immunocompromised family members. Not a dealbreaker, but something to factor in.
What Changes – And the One Thing That Costs More
The changes people notice aren’t slow. Within two to three weeks, stool volume drops – sometimes dramatically. Higher digestibility means the body extracts more from less, leaving less behind. Firmer, smaller stools are almost universally the first thing owners report. Coat condition follows over four to eight weeks – higher moisture content, quality fats, and the absence of artificial additives tend to produce visible improvement in shine and skin health.
Here’s the honest limitation: natural raw food costs more than budget kibble. For a larger dog, the monthly spend is higher than most owners are used to. The pre-portioned, vet-formulated approach is more affordable than DIY sourcing – subscription pricing reduces per-meal cost meaningfully – but it still costs more than a bag of supermarket dry food. That’s a real trade-off. For owners managing a dog with chronic digestive issues or persistent skin problems, the cost often looks different in context. For others, it’s a values decision. Both are fair starting points.
What this isn’t is a decision requiring months of preparation or specialist knowledge. The recipes have been developed by people who know what they’re doing. The cold chain gets it to your door. What remains is just the first week of transition – and that, as it turns out, is a lot more manageable than most people expect before they try it.
