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Black Hawk Lamb / Chicken and Rice Dog Dry Food $114.81 ($109 New Customer) + Delivery ($0 to Metro) @ Swaggle

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SINGLES11NEW20P

Prices for Black Hawk dog food have been increasing over past year or so. They have been hovering around $129 per 20kg.

Lamb and Rice
Chicken and Rice

Swaggle is currently running 11% off sitewide, bringing the price down to $114.81.

If you are new to Swaggle, you can use code NEW20P for an even better discount, bringing down to $109.

I'm not sure if these codes can be stacked with current Shopback 12%/3.5% cashback though, but it doesn't hurt to try.

As always, visit my website 99PetShops for more lowest price pet products. Thanks for your support!

Swaggle Referrals

Referral: random (106)

Referrer and referee get $10 off $50 spend.

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Comments

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  • If you are a westpac member, you might have discount which can stack, $20 cashback when you spend $100 or more

  • Thanks, been a long time since I got it for this price. Flybuys have a 1000 points for $50 spend (might be targeted), be interesting to see if I get that too.

  • -8

    WHAT A JOKE! $114.81. that's $5.74 p/kg for this highly processed garbage thats cooked at such high temperatures, there is almost no nutritional value left at all.
    Why would anyone buy this over real and fresh chicken for as little as $3.45 p/kg from aldi for example.

    Pet stores are such a rip off these days.
    Make it a $1.80pkg, then it might actually be justifiable to feed a family member poor quality sustenance.

    • +3

      My dog is 17 years old, been eating this for years. Chicken you still need to prep, cook, clean, store and refrigerate. Not as convenient.

    • highly processed garbage thats cooked at such high temperatures, there is almost no nutritional value left at all.

      Did you pick that up from Lycra and the other guilt-marketing ads on Insta and Facebook?

      • -1

        The intent wasn't to guilt trip at all, but rather point out facts to help people make better purchasing decisions.
        But with that said, if you're feeling guilty, then it because deep down you know as a care taker of another living being, you should at the very least, be trying to provide healthy food, especially that animal has no say or means to do so, but instead are caving into the temptation of convenience, then yes, you should feel guilty, thats your soul telling you to do better.

        • I don’t feel guilty because I’m not gullible.
          I think it’s best to educate yourself on proper dog nutrition before advising people to feed their dogs chicken. Maybe start here, and try to avoid the misinformation floating around on Instagram and Facebook. Dog food companies hire vets and nutrition specialists to come up with formulas:

          https://sites.tufts.edu/petfoodology/2016/06/21/why-you-shou…

          https://vet.tufts.edu/foster-hospital-small-animals/specialt…

          If you worry about kibble quality, then just pick a brand that follows WSAVA guidelines (Royal Canin, Hills diet or Purina)

          • @mirovich: Firstly don't use FB or insta, at all.
            Secondly every living being requires a balanced diet, it's common knowledge. Of course you don't feed a dog JUST chicken, even though it was in fact a vet who told me I should feed my dog boiled chicken and rice, because my dog was bleeding out his rectum after eating many kibbles such as Blackhawk, Royal canin, hills and a few others.

            Thirdly because my boy was having serious issues with kibble, I did thorough investigations, so much so that my info comes from people that have worked directly at the source where they have witnessed first hand exactly what goes into the base meal that is sourced by so many of these companies. The supposedly chicken and other types of meal also contains; various road kill, ex race horses, stray pets ( metal/leather collars and all), deceased animals from vets/pounds, as well as old stock of kibble, plastic bag and all get thrown into the furnace and grounded down into a meal, that meal is then sold to companies who the then add their own mix of oils and other additives then pressed into pellets.

            I understand it's not all bad, it's a good way to reduce a lot of waste by the enormous amounts of dead animals our society creates, but unfortunately you don't actually get what's said on the label, or know the truth about what you're actually getting.

            • +1

              @yeahwhatever: There is so much “trust me bro” info in your post and false claims that there is no point to argue with you. Good luck.

              I would trust what most vets recommend, and brands that have done decades of research, over internet claims.

          • -1

            @mirovich: Show me the science where dead animals, burnt to a powder, then have oils and other extracts added are just as good as the real and fresh thing?
            And if it's healthy, why aren't you eating it?

    • Doesn't chicken have a higher percentage of fat? Even if you only used skinless chicken breast, it's about 20% fat.

  • +1

    Thanks, was running low. Appreciate the deal.

  • Non metro shipping is as usual a deal breaker.

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