(What actually matters, in order of impact)
Kane, Kamia Kennels Stud Dog Excellence At Birth

1. Start With the Right Dog (Genetics Is 70% of the Outcome)
A Kamia Kennels diverse restoration Elkhound already gives you:
- Low inbreeding
- High heterozygosity
- Functional ancestral phenotype
- Correct immune architecture
- Stable temperament and drive
- No cosmetic selection pressure
- No popular‑sire bottlenecking
This is the single biggest determinant of long‑term health. You can’t “feed your way out” of bad genetics. You can ruin good genetics with bad management — but you can’t fix bad genetics with good management.

2. Feed a Species‑Correct Diet (Raw, Balanced, Ancestral)
This is the second‑largest lever.
Core principles:
- Raw meat, bone, organ
- High‑quality fat sources
- No kibble, no processed feed
- No synthetic vitamin packs
- No seed oils
- No high‑carb fillers
- Rotate proteins
- Include real calcium/phosphorus balance (bones do this naturally)
Why it matters:
- Maintains correct gut biome
- Supports immune system
- Prevents chronic inflammation
- Keeps joints, skin, and coat in optimal condition
- Reduces cancer risk factors associated with ultra‑processed diets

3. Avoid Over‑Medicalization (The Modern Dog’s Biggest Risk Factor)
This is where most people destroy the health of a genetically sound dog.
Vaccination
- Core puppy vaccines → yes
- No annual boosters
- No unnecessary combo shots
- No “just in case” vaccines
- Titer testing instead of automatic revaccination
Vet Interventions
- Avoid routine antibiotics
- Avoid routine steroids
- Avoid unnecessary surgeries
- Avoid chemical suppression of normal processes
Parasite Control
- Use targeted, not year‑round chemical preventatives
- Avoid monthly pesticide ingestion
- Use environmental management + periodic testing
Why: Over‑medicalization is one of the biggest drivers of autoimmune disease, allergies, chronic gut issues, and endocrine disruption.

4. Provide a Natural Environment (The Elkhound’s Biological Context)
This is where Kamia dogs thrive because they’re built for it.
Grounding / Earth Contact
- Daily contact with soil, rock, forest floor
- Bare‑paw exposure to natural terrain
- Reduces inflammation
- Supports nervous system regulation
- Improves sleep cycles
Sunlight
- Real sunlight, not indoor lighting
- UV exposure for vitamin D synthesis
- Circadian rhythm regulation
- Immune system modulation
Cold Exposure
- Elkhounds are cold‑adapted
- Snow, frost, winter air → all beneficial
- Supports metabolic health and coat quality
Movement
- Free running
- Terrain variation
- Hills, forest, uneven ground
- Builds joints, ligaments, lungs, and cardiovascular resilience

5. Water Quality (Massively Underrated)
Water is a daily input — so quality compounds.
Avoid:
- Chlorine
- Fluoride
- Stagnant municipal water
- Plastic containers
Prefer:
- Well water
- Spring water
- Filtered water
- Stainless or ceramic bowls
Why: Chlorine and fluoride disrupt gut flora and thyroid function — two systems that directly influence immune health and longevity.

6. Maintain Lean Body Condition (The Longevity Multiplier)
This is one of the strongest predictors of lifespan across all mammals.
- Keep the dog lean, not “show‑fat”
- Visible waist
- Ribs easily felt
- No overfeeding
- No constant treats
A lean Elkhound lives 2–3 years longer on average than an overweight one.

7. Avoid Chemical Exposure (Chronic Toxins Are the Silent Killers)
Avoid:
- Lawn chemicals
- Household cleaners
- Scented candles
- Air fresheners
- Flea/tick pesticides
- Fire retardants
- Plastics
- Treated wood decks
Prefer:
- Natural cleaners
- Outdoor air
- Wood heat
- Natural fabrics
- Minimal chemical footprint

8. Mental Health & Social Structure (The Pack Stability Factor)
Elkhounds are pack‑oriented, thinking dogs.
They need:
- Clear leadership
- Predictable routines
- Real work (tracking, hiking, guarding, exploring)
- Social connection
- Purpose and engagement
A mentally stable dog is physically healthier — chronic stress is immunosuppressive.

9. Avoid Neutering Too Early (Or at All, If Possible)
This is a major health determinant.
Early neutering increases risk of:
- Joint disease
- Cancers
- Endocrine disorders
- Behavioural instability
- Immune dysfunction
Best practice:
- Keep intact unless there is a legitimate medical reason
- If neutering is necessary, wait until full maturity (18–24 months minimum)

10. Let the Dog Be a Dog (The Ancestral Lifestyle Principle)
This is the simplest but most overlooked.
- Let them run
- Let them dig
- Let them bark
- Let them explore
- Let them be outside
- Let them interact with nature
- Let them live like an Elkhound, not a house ornament
A dog living in alignment with its biology is a dog that thrives.


