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  1. #1
    The Quiet Kitten
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    Hi Dave

    I also feed my boy with the Royal Canine Maine Coon dry food and leave it out for him all day. He eats it heaps and enjoys He also gets a small 85gram tin of wet food (fish variety) in the evening and one for breakfast. He is not a big eater of his wet food some times so I worry that he does not eat enough. He is very lean and refuses to eat any other food. I have tried everything but he does not like raw meat and chicken, chicken wings and necks etc etc - in fact no human food at all. He was like that when I got him from the breeder. I worry so much that he is not getting proper nutrition and that he should be a lot bigger and heavier at his age. He is currently weighing in at 7 kilos.

  2. #2
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    Mine are all raw fed. We even wean our kittens onto raw as we believe this to be the best and most natural diet for them.

    The only time they have anything different is when the our girls have kittens and then we let them have some of the almo nature biscuit just to give them a little more bulk if they need it.

    Louise

  3. #3
    Cool Cat
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    The problem is that it's very difficult to get cats who have been raised as a kitten with eating dry food and tinned wet food, to eat raw... In the beginning all our cats simply refused to even have one bite of it. But I kept persisting that they would try it, and now 3 of our cats eat a portion of raw meat every day. They don't like enough different kinds of raw meat, though, to completely put them on a raw diet, so I still give them dry food next to the rest.

  4. #4
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    I have to admit, only one of my cats was hesitant and that was my stud boy Odin. It took me about 3 months of gradually mixing in the raw with his normal food. Now he eats nothing but raw and his condition is superb.

    When we bring new cats in, we switch them onto raw immediately as I won't risk having biscuits down for them and having the other coonies eating them. Perhaps we have been lucky so far that all of ours have taken to it so well with no issues but the health benefits for them more than outweigh any inconvenience.

  5. #5
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    True... But I've been trying to change their diet for more than a year now, and still there are too many kinds of meat they simply won't eat. Especially our house cat... She only eats steak and tuna fish; and apart from that she'd rather starve than eat any raw meat. I've tried all different kinds of meat; big pieces as well as meat cut to pieces with a mixer, and she still refuses to eat it. So I'm afraid that I'll have to stick with the combination part raw + part dry food - which is still better than only giving dry food or combining it with tinned wet food.

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    I couldn't agree more Carol - if one of mine wouldn't eat raw then there is no way I would try to force it! The fact that your cats have a varied diet is much better for them than being on a diet that they don't enjoy!

    My mum's cats will only eat biscuits and felix pouches but they are all happy and healthy so it can't be that bad!!!

  7. The Following User Says Thank You to WoodsideMaineCoons For This Useful Post:

    LoopyKoonz (17th January 2010)

  8. #7
    The Quiet Kitten
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    I see that questions at all factory owners identical all over the world. At us some veterinary surgeons, say that chicken necks can litter a stomach of a cat. What your opinion on it?
    God has created the Cat that the person had a tiger who can be stroked.
    Victor Hugo

  9. #8
    The Quiet Kitten
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    Red face Days Spent Researching...

    I spent days reading, reading and reading more and more theories on foods for cats, my conclusion is that if you have the time then you should make your own cat food (B.A.R.F.)(I dont have this luxary) There are plenty of recipes from experience breeders available on line. Failing this all the 'experts' hate dry food. There views are down to what they would be eating in the wild and really they are right, dehydrated biscuit full of rice, maize, wheat etc is not something they would encounter other than what was in the prey items tummy. Dry foods have awful meat content as do most wet foods as if you read them e.g Whiskers, it's 4% meat, 81% moisture. Online there a full and frank accounts of what is going on inside these foods and calculations as to how to work it out.
    I like the idea of a bit of dry food keeping there teeth healthy (like the bones of a bird would) although tiny amounts of biscuit stuck in teeth can be a big cause of dental issues long term. I feed my two MC's:
    Natures Menu ---- Wet kitten food (70% Meat) (Genuine!)
    Applaws ---- Dry kitten food (80% Meat) (Genuine, although it is obviously dehydrated!)
    They have a tiny sprinkle of the dry in with the wet and have a regular supply of fresh food through out the day, I suppose it's little and often, there's not noramally any left!
    I also use a large ceramic dog bowl with only an inch of water in it inside a huge metal dog bowl for the drink, this minimizes the splashing when they 'clear the leaves of the water!', another thing I have done was to go to B&Q and buy a large sheet of perspex for the area to protect the floor.
    Hope this is of someone use to someone. Thanks, Gra'.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jasper&Bailey View Post
    I spent days reading, reading and reading more and more theories on foods for cats, my conclusion is that if you have the time then you should make your own cat food (B.A.R.F.)(I dont have this luxary) There are plenty of recipes from experience breeders available on line. Failing this all the 'experts' hate dry food. There views are down to what they would be eating in the wild and really they are right, dehydrated biscuit full of rice, maize, wheat etc is not something they would encounter other than what was in the prey items tummy. Dry foods have awful meat content as do most wet foods as if you read them e.g Whiskers, it's 4% meat, 81% moisture. Online there a full and frank accounts of what is going on inside these foods and calculations as to how to work it out.
    I like the idea of a bit of dry food keeping there teeth healthy (like the bones of a bird would) although tiny amounts of biscuit stuck in teeth can be a big cause of dental issues long term. I feed my two MC's:
    Natures Menu ---- Wet kitten food (70% Meat) (Genuine!)
    Applaws ---- Dry kitten food (80% Meat) (Genuine, although it is obviously dehydrated!)
    They have a tiny sprinkle of the dry in with the wet and have a regular supply of fresh food through out the day, I suppose it's little and often, there's not noramally any left!
    I also use a large ceramic dog bowl with only an inch of water in it inside a huge metal dog bowl for the drink, this minimizes the splashing when they 'clear the leaves of the water!', another thing I have done was to go to B&Q and buy a large sheet of perspex for the area to protect the floor.
    Hope this is of someone use to someone. Thanks, Gra'.
    We've done some very similar things, like using a dog bowl for water and having a mat down where Lucius eats and drinks.. We started with the Applaws dry but stopped as I hated the smell - it smells like dog food urgh! We're all about Royal Canin Pure Feline Beauty now, Lucius loves it and his coat was shiny and glossier in 7 days - we can't argue with that...

 

 

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