"Can I eat when I'm done blogging?"
When I brought Jane, my 39 lb border collie mix to South Korea, I took a gallon sized ziplock bag and filled it with food. I figured this would last me a couple of days, to get settled and make it to the grocery store. Every dog is different, but this bag lasted Jane over 2 weeks.
Part of this is because:
1. She doesn't eat that much.
But mostly:
2. She spent our first week at another girl's apartment. Why? My first week I stayed with a girl who had a double until my apartment became available. However, the girl I stayed with was terrified of dogs due to being attacked several times as a child. Thus, Jane stayed at another teacher's apartment. The whole airplane/new country/new smells/new apartment experience coupled with mom's-gone-and-I'm-staying-with-this-new-person was seemingly too much for Jane and consequently, she had little appetite for that first week. I poured her a a bowl of food the first evening and it sat there for 3 days.
When you move to Korea with your dog (or anywhere for that matter), be prepared for the unexpected. As best you can, anyway.
Our first night reunited in our apartment, Jane ate all of her dinner. I don't know if you would call "not eating" a manifestation of "separation anxiety" but it seemed like it was for Jane.
But back to dog foods:
When I went into E-Mart for the first time, I was appalled to find that a 5lb bag of dog food was over $20 USD. My first thought was, "Shit, how am I going to afford to feed her?" Remember, most Koreans have very small dogs, which don't eat much. One of my co-workers suggested Gmarket.com which is an eBay company, for Korea. They do have an English site, but if you order dog food from it, be sure to ask a Korean friend if they will help you translate because most of the information is in Korean, even on the English site.
GMarket has many options, I ultimately chose ANF brand, Lamb and Brown Rice flavor. ANF looked like the best option to me, and Jane didn't have any digestive issues switching over to it, unlike other brands in the past. ANF is made in Australia and the United States (depending on the flavor) but bizarrely, it is not sold in the US. There are some unfavorable reviews of it on the internet, but those appear to be for old recipes and not current ones. What I like about ANF is that the ingredients are composed of whole foods and not chemicals, dyes, and artificial flavors. It appears to be high quality, so it is odd that it's manufactured in the US but not distributed there. ANF was also carried by the veterinarian's office that is all of three blocks from my apartment here in Yongin.
Also, shipping was free on the dog chow (it is cheaper in bulk, so I got 7.5 kg and my school director was nice enough to drop it off at my home for me) and it arrived within 2 days of ordering it.