A Labrador couch potato needs about 1,300 calories a day. A sled dog mid-race burns 8,000 to 10,000 — proportionally one of the highest energy outputs of any mammal athlete on Earth. Feeding that furnace is a science mushers have refined for a century, and it has surprisingly practical lessons for anyone with a high-energy dog.
The short answer
Working sled dogs eat a fat-first, meat-based diet: commercial high-performance kibble as the base, loaded with raw or cooked fatty meats (beef, poultry), fish like salmon, fish oils, and warm, water-rich "baited" broths to keep hydration up in freezing air. On the trail they snack every few hours — frozen chunks of salmon, beef fat, or tripe tossed onto the snow.
Why fat, not carbs?
Human marathoners carb-load; sled dogs fat-load. Dogs' muscles are exceptionally good at burning fat for sustained aerobic work, and fat packs more than twice the calories per gram. A racing team's diet can run 50–60% fat. Protein (30%+) maintains and repairs muscle; carbs play a minor role. That's also why scraps of advice from sled kennels translate poorly to overweight pets — context is everything.
Salmon: the sled dog staple worth copying
Fish appears in nearly every musher's protocol — cheap calories in the north, but also omega-3 fatty acids (EPA/DHA) that fight the joint and muscle inflammation of repeated effort. This one translates directly to pet dogs: a weekly portion of properly cooked salmon delivers the same anti-inflammatory fats. We wrote a step-by-step on how to cook salmon for dogs safely (raw salmon is genuinely dangerous — details inside).
The joint lesson: support before the limp
Here's the part most owners miss. Sled kennels don't wait for arthritis to appear at age eight — dogs doing repeated impact work get joint support as routine maintenance, the way human runners take their training recovery seriously. The cartilage protein at the center of that maintenance is collagen; the veterinary research on UC-II collagen is genuinely interesting — we break it down in our UC-II research review and the complete joint & hip health guide.
For a weekend-warrior dog — the fetch maniac, the trail runner, the agility prospect — the practical equivalent is a daily joint formula: hip & joint chews with collagen, glucosamine and anti-inflammatory botanicals, or liquid collagen drops mixed into dinner for picky eaters.
Feeding your own athlete
- Match calories to actual workload — most pet dogs need less, not more
- Add omega-3s (cooked salmon or fish oil) for coat and joints
- Hydration counts: wet food or broth after big exercise days
- Joint support early, not after the first limp
Thinking of actually trying the sport? Start with our guide to beginning sled dog training — and if snow is scarce where you live, bikejoring is the dry-land cousin.
Informational only — consult your vet before major diet changes, especially for working dogs.