Mud Bay began in 1988 when Elsa Wulff bought a tiny farm store.
The store was housed in an eighty-year old building on Mud Bay Road, which runs west out of Olympia and spans the bottom end of Mud Bay, one of the southern arms of Puget Sound.
The enterprise had been flirting with failure for years, but Elsa had an immigrant’s sense of possibility, a never-say-die spirit and a wealth of practical experience in animal husbandry. Years earlier, her children had filled her house with dozens of species ranging from goats and geese to dogs and donkeys.
Early on, Mud Bay sold a little of just about everything, from locally grown oysters, pop tarts and folk art to hog feed, fertilizer and hay. The store also lost money. In its first full year of operation, Mud Bay lost $46,000 on sales of $277,000.
Recognizing that his mother couldn’t afford for the business to fail, Elsa’s son Lars left a mountain cabin and a half-finished first novel to become Mud Bay’s third employee in 1989. Elsa’s youngest daughter, Marisa, returned from Holland, where she had just finished an MBA, and joined the effort in 1993.
Mud Bay chooses foods with the goal of offering meaningful variety and the best possible nutritional options for dogs. We research not only dog nutrition, but also the companies that make the food we carry. We choose formulas and the companies that make them based on the ingredients, the foundation for the nutritional approach and the food company’s business and manufacturing practices.
A time-tested family recipe
Recklessly crunchy dog treats
Gourmet dog food & treats
A holistic approach to complete nutrition
Complete and balanced pâté recipes
Healthy cat foods start with healthy ingredients. Choosing a healthy cat food starts with knowing how to read a cat food label. After that, you’ll need to know what are the most important things to look for are, and why these are so important to your cat’s well-being.
Gourmet cat food
A holistic approach to complete nutrition
The Purrrrrfect Way to Treat Your Cat