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I just got a box of cat food from the cupboard to see what it said on the label. For the chicken one it says
" Composition: meat and animal derivatives (including 4% chicken), minerals, various sugars."
The other ones also have only 4% of the named meat in them. Maybe wet food isn't so good for them either.
If you look at dry food, it often has a higher percentage of protein and fat than wet food in reality.
Most wet food actually has a very high percentage of rice as a filler.
Like all the big food industry, it's just marketed well, and most people think they're buying 100% meat, not 4%
depends what you feed (as with everything) felix or whiskers are generally **** but there are more decent foods such as natures menu pouches coming to market.I just got a box of cat food from the cupboard to see what it said on the label. For the chicken one it says
" Composition: meat and animal derivatives (including 4% chicken), minerals, various sugars."
The other ones also have only 4% of the named meat in them. Maybe wet food isn't so good for them either.
depends what you feed (as with everything) felix or whiskers are generally **** but there are more decent foods such as natures menu pouches coming to market.
The obvious trade off is the price - some months my cats get natures menu others they get felix depening on what cash I have available. they always have the best biscuits I can get my hands on (often meowing heads or Aatu) they also have raw sometimes.
My dog is raw fed.
*DISCLAIMER* I am working towards a qualification in animal nutrition
Potentially but cats need a high volume of taurine containing meat or an additive (heart type meat) as well as organ and liver (I believe its 10% of daily total as organ and a percentage of that needs to be liver), as well as 20% bone. So its not as straight forwards as slapping a chicken leg in front of them and have at it. Though some will also give that a go too!At £6 or £7 a kg, fresh food would be cheaper?
Raw food is the best for cats being the carnivores they are - problem is getting the little devils off the dry food - its addictive to them - just like carbs are to us.
Potentially but cats need a high volume of taurine containing meat or an additive (heart type meat) as well as organ and liver (I believe its 10% of daily total as organ and a percentage of that needs to be liver), as well as 20% bone. So its not as straight forwards as slapping a chicken leg in front of them and have at it. Though some will also give that a go too!
Bless him! - my old lady was 19 when I had to bite the bullet and take her for the kindest injection. She didn't have many teeth left at the finish and she had gone downhill in her last months but she could still tell my other cat off !Victor, the beautiful cat in my avatar, developed diabetes towards the end of his life. He wasn't fat, ate a mixed diet which included fresh meat and fish, as well as canned food and some biscuits.
The vet put it down to "old age" (he was nearly 17) and Victor endured a few months of insulin twice daily. One evening he staggered in, gave a very weird meow, then started fitting. I rubbed some sugary water into his gums and the fit passed, and then I managed to get him to eat a little. When I got him to the vet, the vet did a blood glucose test and found that he was back in the normal range.
We stopped the insulin - turns out diabetes in cats can reverse itself - and Victor enjoyed another four months of normal life before succumbing to lymphoma.He was a true old soldier.
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