| I had a German Shepherd with a similar issue, mine was an intact . She suffered from depression resulting from abuse with previous owners, but even when the depression cleared after a few months with me (there is *nothing* in the world like the feeling that your love and caring has brought a dog from depression to happy-wags-and-licks!), she was still a chronic under-eater.
I wound up putting her on a combination of Bil-Jac (expensive stuff) as per the vet's recommendation and a mixture of kibble, canned and human-grade chicken and pork (no chicken bones at all and only large pork or beef bones!). It took a long time, but gradually I did get her weight up to just above the minimum recommended target weight by the vet.
In addition to what I fed her, how I fed her was just as important ... she was very strongly pack-oriented, and whenever I went into a different room, she'd have to follow me -- food was not important. So I learned to bring her food with me into my office if I was going to be there for a few hours, and eventually she'd settle down and eat if I didn't get up to leave. |