Re: Praise for the FDMB
My diabetic cat Wink was a confirmed "dry food addict" also. It took 6-8 weeks to convince him that canned food was edible. I used almost every trick listed in Dr. Lisa Pierson's great article on
Transitioning Dry Food Addicts to Wet Food.
Have you tried the "chip and dip method"? Take a few pieces of dry food, dip them in the canned food and offer them on a plate.
Halo Liv-a-little freeze dried chicken treats, crumbled over the food. I'd have to crumble a bit more over the top of the food as he ate the bits with the freeze dried chicken on them. Maybe 3-5 times each meal of crumbling a bit more of the freeze dried chicken treats. My Wink loved the Halo more than the Pure Bites freeze dried chicken.
Various flavors? Wink hated the fishy flavors and finally deigned to eat the Fancy Feast Turkey and Giblet flavor as his favorite. Took about 6-8 more weeks to get him consistently eating other flavors. Now he likes both the Fancy Feast pates and the Friskies Special Diet pates, but still no fish for him please.
A smorgasboard? Try offering little bits of several different foods at one time. It's how I found out that the fish flavors were a no go, but some of the other flavors were acceptable.
Tried offering only the canned food for an hour or so before you put down any dry food. Use your cats natural hunger drive to attempt to get him to try the wet food.
Hold the dish for your kitty? Put it right in their face and they may try it.
Put a bit of wet food on your finger for him to sniff and try?
A bit of tuna juice poured over the top of the wet food?
My Wink was such a hard core dry food addict, that when I went to move all the dry food out of my house and I left a bag in the hallway while I went to get some more food to move out to the garage, he chewed through the unopened bag of dry food! In like 30 seconds. The good news is that Wink shortly went OTJ (off the Juice, insulin being the juice) after we were able to switch him entirely to wet food.
PLEASE BE VERY CAREFUL if you have a long, transition period. You may need to frequently and dramatically drop the insulin dose as your cat eats more and more wet food. I should have cut Wink's insulin dose more drastically then I did. Although he had some low numbers, in the 30's and 40's, he was not a symptomatic hypoglycemic except for really dilated pupils that did not react to light. I had several sleepless nights and worrisome days when his numbers were low. Thankfully, I was home testing and could manage his numbers by feeding him a bit of food to bring the BG levels back up.
Persistence and patience, patience, patience. Yes, there are times you will throw up your hands in despair at ever getting your cat to eat canned food. But it can be done.