I feed my Scottie Blue Buffalo Organics Chicken and Brown Rice. She eats one cup per day. A 20 pound bag lasts around 2 months. It is a little expensive at approx. $55 a bag, but the store I shop at runs the food at a $5 discount and I get additional $5 coupons via email. So typically $45 for 20 pounds (or to feed my dog for 60 days). I don't consider this bad. She does well on this food which is what is important. Check out this web site for information:
http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/
Here is the rating for Beneful dry:
http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/dog-food-ratings/beneful-dog-food-dry/
Here is a rating for my Blue Buffalo:
http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/dog-food-ratings/blue-buffalo-dog-food-organics/
Check into this web site and read the ingredients. It really doesn't matter what brand of food you pick as long as you understand the ingredient label and pick a good quality, balanced food that allows your dog(s) to thrive. Personally, I would not go below a 4 star from this list, but I've lost two dogs to cancer. I have a breed that is notorious for skin allergies and sensitivities to food ingredients. I will not feed a kibble that looks like froot loops. There is no reason to have multi-colored dog food--the dog can't tell it. Blue Buffalo is available at many PetSmart stores, although I think they aren't presently carrying the organics line. You can probably find a pet supply store or a feed store that carries quality kibble. You will feed less of a premium food than a grocery store kibble which offsets the price somewhat.
http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/
Here is the rating for Beneful dry:
http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/dog-food-ratings/beneful-dog-food-dry/
Here is a rating for my Blue Buffalo:
http://www.dogfoodadvisor.com/dog-food-ratings/blue-buffalo-dog-food-organics/
Check into this web site and read the ingredients. It really doesn't matter what brand of food you pick as long as you understand the ingredient label and pick a good quality, balanced food that allows your dog(s) to thrive. Personally, I would not go below a 4 star from this list, but I've lost two dogs to cancer. I have a breed that is notorious for skin allergies and sensitivities to food ingredients. I will not feed a kibble that looks like froot loops. There is no reason to have multi-colored dog food--the dog can't tell it. Blue Buffalo is available at many PetSmart stores, although I think they aren't presently carrying the organics line. You can probably find a pet supply store or a feed store that carries quality kibble. You will feed less of a premium food than a grocery store kibble which offsets the price somewhat.