Results 1 to 10 of 13
Hybrid View
-
29th May 2012, 05:35 AM #1The Quiet Kitten
- Join Date
- May 2012
- Location
- Kennesaw, Ga
- Posts
- 23
- Thanks
- 1
- Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
My maine coon boy is 14 lbs at almost two years. He is a little bony too, but the vet didn't seem worried. She said that he will probably fill out a bit more in the next year or so as maine coons don't always reach their full adult stature until a bit after other kitties. Just make sure everything is ok at the vet
-
29th May 2012, 08:15 AM #2Moderator




- Join Date
- Feb 2010
- Location
- Norfolk,UK
- Posts
- 3,709
- Thanks
- 433
- Thanked 675 Times in 648 Posts
- Images
- 47
One tall long lean very boney 10yr old in this household who has never hit 7kg in his life but perfectly fit,a lot depends on the breeding lines too...
-
20th June 2012, 12:36 PM #3Active Cat


- Join Date
- Jun 2011
- Location
- I live in a small village in Holland the village is Biddinghuizen.
- Posts
- 84
- Thanks
- 1
- Thanked 11 Times in 10 Posts
Bit late, but what do you give him to eat? Sometimes it helps a lot to give the cat good meat..ore good can food ..and as much as he like. And sometimes a MC is very slim and small..look at the parrents from your cat...if they bin small...most of the time the offspring is not big.
And a other note...DNA for HCM tells you nothing..its not sure the cat never get HCM ...its a little part of dna what they found and they must found a lot more dna parts to get a full DNA result. Of the breeder told you that he can get no HCM than the breeder is not telling you the truth
Beter buy a kitten who's parrents get the ultrasound ...it's also not sure but if the breeder test this every 2 ore 3 years with the cats/...you bin more sure that they have no HCM signs than with the DNA
I hope you can read my english and understand it



3Likes
LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks



Reply With Quote
Bookmarks