Results 1 to 10 of 26
Hybrid View
-
3rd March 2010, 07:35 PM #1Über Cat


- Join Date
- Jan 2010
- Posts
- 488
- Thanks
- 8
- Thanked 160 Times in 129 Posts
It is supposed to be one of the better dry foods. The breeder of three of our MCs uses it (as one component of her diets) and she is quite picky. We unfortunately do not have any way to obtain it locally so have not tried it.
I spent quite a bit of time in Petco the other day looking at all the "high end" dry cat foods they sell. The Royal Canin ingredients are not terribly high quality (e.g., "chicken meal" vs. "chicken"). The best two in terms of quality of ingredients and protein levels were Pro Plan Selects and Blue Wilderness. I was extremely surprised to see even supposed "high end" dry foods with corn as a major ingredient and only 30% protein levels (PP Selects is 40% and Blue W. is 45% protein).
We normally feed Pro Plan Selects, but got a bag of the Blue Wilderness to try. The kitten just loves it, the other male likes it a bit, but neither of the girls will go near it! Also got a few cans of the Blue Wilderness wet, but that was less successful.
Incidentally, I also looked at prices of cat foods. Dry cat foods have actually become significantly more expensive than dog foods. The cheapest large bags of cat food I could find (at Walmart) were more than $.60/lb, while dry dog food can be had for $.40/lb. By contrast, the PP Selects and Blue W. are in the $3.60-$3.80/lb range--around six times the price. For that, you get mainly chicken or salmon, etc. as ingredients rather than "meals" or "meat by-products," and little "grain." One of the disturbing things is that a number of the "high end" foods at Petco are not objectively any better than the cheapest cat foods at Walmart. Don't know what you are paying for with them.
I also noted that the only foods that stated that their nutritional sufficiency had been confirmed in actual feeding studies were the Purina foods like Pro Plan. All other foods rely solely on nutritional assays and then assume the necessary nutrients will be available if they meet the (semi) governmental nutritional standards.
-
29th September 2010, 08:54 AM #2The Quiet Kitten
- Join Date
- Apr 2010
- Location
- Basingstoke
- Posts
- 3
- Thanks
- 0
- Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
- Images
- 4
Orijen Cat and Kitten
Hi,
My two Maine Coon kittens (now 7months / 6months) have been fed on Orijen Cat and
Kitten (chicken variety) since I got them. They are thriving on it (see pic).
My two older (15 years) moggies also love it.
Applaws dry food, available in UK (not sure about worldwide) is 80% chicken.
I can recommend Orijen
Best regards
Trevor
-
30th September 2010, 09:26 AM #3Cool Cat


- Join Date
- Nov 2009
- Location
- Newcastle upon Tyne
- Posts
- 226
- Thanks
- 1
- Thanked 27 Times in 24 Posts
I would love to give it to my cats too, along with the raw meat they're already eating and instead of the Royal Canin; but unfortunately they really don't like Orijen... A friend of mine has the same problem: the cats refuse to eat it even when they're hungry. Apparently the taste isn't as good as that of other brands (or my cats are just extremely difficult when it comes to food)...
Mine refuse to eat all the better dry food brands by the way; Applaws, Sanabelle, Orijen, Akana, it's all no use...
I'm just glad that they eat some raw food next to the dry food. However they also refuse to eat some types of raw food so I can't completely change them to that either...
But if your cat does like Orijen, I can recommend it to you. Heard lots of good stuff about it!



5Likes
LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks




Reply With Quote

Bookmarks