Noah & me (GA)
Member Since 2016
Five cats in the home, no diabetics, one Persian 10 years old approaching morbidly obese.
We free feed wet and have Royal Canin SO (urinary care) kibble for nighttime eaters. The very last thing I need right now is another diabetic cat.
The wet food ranges from FF Salmon for picky Lewis to get his thyroid meds into him to Science Diet Urinary Care for the other four.
Sam is last in the pecking order so he eats last and likes both wet and kibble. He eats almost in secret and we never see him scarf down entire cans, without a camera down here I have to assume he's eating a lot of the kibble. The obvious answer there is to pull the kibble at night but I'm wondering if anyone has had genuine success with weight control food wet or dry. Most pet stores will tell you in private their food doesn't work, the cat just eats more of it. Other than dental Sam has never had major health issues and exercise isn't going to happen.
This is what took Noah's brother Simon from us, I'm not to let it happen again.
We free feed wet and have Royal Canin SO (urinary care) kibble for nighttime eaters. The very last thing I need right now is another diabetic cat.
The wet food ranges from FF Salmon for picky Lewis to get his thyroid meds into him to Science Diet Urinary Care for the other four.
Sam is last in the pecking order so he eats last and likes both wet and kibble. He eats almost in secret and we never see him scarf down entire cans, without a camera down here I have to assume he's eating a lot of the kibble. The obvious answer there is to pull the kibble at night but I'm wondering if anyone has had genuine success with weight control food wet or dry. Most pet stores will tell you in private their food doesn't work, the cat just eats more of it. Other than dental Sam has never had major health issues and exercise isn't going to happen.
This is what took Noah's brother Simon from us, I'm not to let it happen again.