I want to feed my two adult cats just good healthy dry food.. how do you do it sucsessfully or can you? thanks
Keeping your Pets Healthy and Happy
I want to feed my two adult cats just good healthy dry food.. how do you do it sucsessfully or can you? thanks
{ 10 comments… read them below or add one }
In my experiences with cats once they got wet they wont turn back.
my cats will eat wet and dry food
You can just not give it to them anymore I used to give canned food to my cat then I just stopped and all she eats now is dry (9 lives) I really needed to have her lose some weight so I just wouldn’t give it to her no more and it took her maybe 1 day to eat the dry.
Let me share with you what I have learned about feline nutrition to help you make an informed decision on what diet you should feed your cats.
Many brands of manufactured cat foods claiming to be “healthy” really are not. In fact they are made of the lowest ingredients possible. I’m not saying that a cat can’t live off them… just the same as you could live off hot dogs and Mac and cheese forever, but better choices can and should be made for your feline friends. I would not venture to say that any manufactured food is “best” for a cat but a grain free organic wet food would be a good start. Feeding canned is certainly better than feeding dry in all cases.
Cats were never meant to eat dry food, also known as cereals or kibble. We, humans, make them eat it for convenience to us. It has nothing to do with them or their nutritional needs. It’s completely species inappropriate.
In the wild, cats derive their entire liquid intake from their prey. They do not have a thirst mechanism because they don’t need it when eating a species appropriate diet. They get all they need from what they eat. So they do not drink water. Regular ol’ house cats have descended from those same wild cats.
So in a home environment, your kitty does not get the moisture it need from dry food and are almost always in a constant state of dehydration. Water fountains are encouraged to TRY to get your cat to drink more and your kitty may even enjoy it. But it will never meet its water intake needs drinking from a bowl.
Deadly feline illnesses such as diabetes, kidney failure, obesity, stones, urinary tract blockages and Urinary Tract Infections (FLUTD), with and without deadly crystals run rampant these days. Cats are not taking in enough water to stave them off. Proper water intake through a species appropriate diet alone can prevent most of these conditions.
Overall, wet is a better all around better for any cats diet, be it canned or Raw and they should never be fed dry cereal kibble if we wish to most closely match their wild nutritional and dietary needs.
Kibble meets our needs… not our cats.
It is also bogus that kibble cleans teeth. DRY FOOD DOES NOT CLEAN TEETH. It’s an old myth that has been scientifically disproved for years, but old-school vets drilled it into people’s heads for so long (and sadly still do) that people still believe it. Cats can not “chew”. They do not have chewing teeth. They have meat ripping pointy carnivorous teeth. They do not have molars. They may “crunch” a piece of food once to crack and break it… but they are absolutely unable to chew a hard piece if food. Want your cat to have clean teeth? Give them an appropriately sized raw bone.
)
I personally feed a Raw Meat and Bones based diet to my cats and they are very healthy on it. I HIGHLY recommend it. Once I got the hang of it and felt comfortable with it it’s a snap to prepare. It’s something you might want to consider someday. They are obligate carnivores after all and must derive ALL their nutrients from meat based sources. They are unable to absorb them from any other source. Despite thousands of years of domestication they remain strictly carnivorous. True and honest meat eaters and that is what they need most. Protein from meat!
If you are interested in feeding a raw diet some great places to start learning are http://www.catinfo.org/ , http://www.catnutrition.org/ , and http://www.felinefuture.com/nutrition/ .
If you would like to try raw with your cats and don’t want to get all technical about it but want to try a trusted, time tested and balanced raw diet you can order from http://www.felinespride.com/products/cat... . I purchased this myself when I first started and my cats loved it!
If raw is not an option for you please be aware that there are three Categories of Pet Foods:
-”Grocery store” foods – (Generic Brands and cheap name brands) Those foods found in grocery stores and mass-market retailers are made with lower-quality, less-digestible, inexpensive ingredients and are therefore a cheaper alternative. While easy on the pocketbook, “grocery store” foods normally do not provide your cat with the healthiest, most nutrient-dense ingredients.
-Premium foods – (Iams/Eukanuba, Purina One, Hills Science Diet, Nutro and such) Foods often found in grocery stores, pet stores, and veterinarian offices that contain higher-grade ingredients, but still include many elements of “grocery store” food, such as artificial colors, artificial flavors, chemical preservatives, and “filler” ingredients such as corn and wheat products, by-products and even animal digest. Yuck! Premium foods are usually more expensive than “grocery store” foods because their ingredients are sometimes of a higher quality, and are therefore somewhat more beneficial and digestible. But don’t be fooled, some of those same so called Premium brands are sometimes worse than grocery store foods, but they charge prices like they are better. They aren’t!
-Healthy foods – (Wellness, Merrick, Eagle Pack, Drs Foster & Smith) The newest addition to the pet food market – provide pets with the highest quality, healthiest, and most nutritious ingredients. They are typically available for purchase online or direct from the manufacturer. Some better retailers are starting to carry them now. Complete Petmart carries a few healthy brand foods. Foods in the Healthy class contain nutrient-rich ingredients. Formulated to provide optimum health benefits for pets, these foods often use real meat as the primary protein source, carbohydrate-rich whole grains like brown rice and barley and whole, fresh fruits and vegetables. They should not contain artificial preservatives, flavors, or colors. They will almost always be fortified with additional vitamins and minerals, and will use the best natural sources for fatty acids to help build healthy skin and a beautiful coat. Because healthy foods use high quality ingredients, you should expect to pay a little more than you would for other types of pet food. Remember, though, with healthy foods you can feed less since healthy foods are more nutrient-dense than other types of food so it often evens out or cost’s les than feeding foods filled with cheap non-nutritional by-products fillers.
With all that information in mind, when you are choosing a new cat food, study the ingredients. All ingredients on pet food labels are listed by weight. Meaning whatever ingredients are listed first on the list, there is more in there. The first ingredients listed should be whole meat ingredients, protein sources, such as Chicken or Turkey. NOT just the word “meat”! Who the heck knows what that is? The word Chicken Meal is ok, but it should be a secondary ingredient, not first. Meal is the meat dehydrated and ground into a powder.
The ingredients also should NOT include any by-products or animal digest whatsoever. Those are disgusting left over animal parts that are scraped off the filthy floors of meat and poultry plants. They should just go into the trash but they put them into pet food instead. EW!!!!
Also make sure there are no artificial colors or flavors. And make sure there is no BHA and BHT used preservatives. These preservatives have been shown to cause cancer in both cats and dogs. Bad Bad stuff and it’s in almost every cat treat on the market.
So, in summery of the ingredients… if you see the words by-products, Animal Digest, the word “meat” alone, Corn, Corn Gluten, Wheat Gluten, or BHA or BHT… stop reading, put down that product and move on to the next.
Be aware that when switching to a Healthy, Holistic or Organic food, you will pay for what you get. Good foods are not cheap. They are pricey and will cost you on a per bag basis much more. Just like steak costs more than hotdogs. But again, you will be feeding a better food and improving the over all health of your pet. This in turn leads to less vet visits for illness now and more importantly later in life in their geriatric years. You will also feed less of this food on a per animal basis because a smaller amount of food contains what your cat needs. Overall healthy foods are well worth it, if only for the piece of mind that the ingredients are better for your cat than cheap crap.
You can start your research for a healthy cat food here if you are not ready to try feeding a Raw diet:
http://www.onlynaturalpet.com
If you want to buy in a store, Complete Petmart is a good store and carries quite a few natural, organic, and holistic blends. Also check with your local feed/grain stores.
I highly recommend you take the time to research for yourself, but the information I have given should get you off to a good start. Good luck choosing a new healthy food!
********IMPORTANT*******Don’t forget to switch your Pets food slowly over a period of 10 to 14 days, if you can. Mixing 25% new to 75% old. Then 50/50… then 75% new to 25% old. And finally switch over to 100% new. Take it slow as not to upset their digestive system.
Side note… Please don’t feed Iams / Eukanuba. It’s ALL fillers, byproducts, animal digest and CRAP. Read the ingredients! There is nothing good for your cat in that food. Not to mention they conduct the most appalling animal testing you have ever seen. http://www.iamscruelty.com to see the terror they create.
Sure you can do it.All you do is put out a dish with dry cat food in along with the canned .Then gradually take away the canned leaving the dry.Eventually leave no canned food at all and they should eat the dry cat food.I do it all the time with the kittens.I start them on canned then slowly change them to dry.
It’s already been said here, but if they are eating canned and happy, then that is best. Dry food really isn’t the healthy thing we think it is – it’s just convenient for us. If they are eating canned, you’re already ahead of the game, as dry-food addicts are very hard to wean off the dry junk and onto canned. Feed the best quality canned you can afford – look for canned foods with no grains, and no by-products. You want them to eat real meat, not beaks, feathers, diseased animal parts, and so on (that’s what meat by-products are). Chicken is of course more expensive than hot dogs and bologna, but it’s more nutritious so actually cheaper in terms of paying for the protein and nutrition in it. Same thing with cat food – you pay a bit more for real meat, rather that junk, but it’s better for you and will save you money in vet bills in the long run.
And it isn’t that much more expensive to feed a high quality food – a 3 ounce can of Fancy Feast (full of by-products) is 50 cents, and a 6 ounce can of high quality food costs between 79 cents to a bit over a dollar.
Why would you wanto to do this? It just took me 8 months of finickines to go the other way. Study this. Cats are CARNIVORES. They have been getting all kinds of deseases and ailments, because kibble is grain/carbohydrate. PLease put This is NOT an advertisement.Please put Food Pets Die For; a Book Excerpt in your browser. Please see http://www .drianbillinghurst.com/ & rawmeatybones.com & Dr. Richard Pitcairn. You want to give them real food. CXats live longer in barnes than those kept inside and kibble is linked to Feline Urinary, a painful killer.
Better to wean them off the dry food than the wet food. Wet food more closely resembles a natural diet for a cat. Cats in the wild eat prey, from which they obtain meat protein and moisture. They naturally don’t drink much water. Dry food usually contains a lot of grain and not much meat protein, not to mention very little moisture. Most dry food (unless it is Wellness CORE or other no-grain, meat-based food) is too high in carbs for cats. Dry food diets can lead to urinary tract illness, diabetes, obesity, irritable bowel, and eventually kidney failure. If your cats willingly eat wet food, you are lucky. It is better for their overall health. I am trying to wean my 5 cats off of dry food. I’ve alway fed them both wet and dry food, but knowing what I know now, I wish I hadn’t allowed them to become addicted to dry, which 2 of them are.
I understand what you’re saying, but they need the “wet” food as well as the dry. They are natural carnivores, and the wet food has meat for them to tear into and eat. The dry food, which helps with their teeth, also has lots of filler (which can be fattening).
My two cats, Krab and Boo-Bear, get a half pouch of wet food (filleted chicken, turkey, tuna, oceanfish, salmon, what ever) in the morning. They share, eating out of a two-basin bowl. At roughly noon (they can tell the time), they get 3/4 of a scoop of dry, which will get them through late afternoon, then anothr 2/3 scoop of dry, which lasts into the night. Boo is a big boned boy, weighing 13 pounds, but he isn’t fat. Krab is a smaller boned girl and she weighs 10 lbs. Their weight is pretty consistent. Krab is more physically active, although she can egg Boo into a good cat fight and gives as good as she gets.
Cats love their wet food. It’s possible to get them on dry food if you insist on it and just don’t give in. Try dry food from radiantpet, our cats love it almost as much as canned.