Okay, that's unfair to the cat -
Nov. 29th, 2007 07:04 amBut I have to cave and admit to some schaudenfreude at my cat's expense.
The one that cost us $70 at the vet last pay period only to be told she was too fat to clean her own butt. (We hadn't actually seen this in practice, just noticed she had a stinky, messy behind.)
Well, we saw it last night.
Damn cat rolled around like a roly-poly Weeble, maybe hitting the mark a few times. Not for lack of trying, y'understand!
Poor thing was so confused.
They are SO not getting any more gushy food for the forseeable. I can see I'm going to be measuring progress by how much bottom she can reach.
The one that cost us $70 at the vet last pay period only to be told she was too fat to clean her own butt. (We hadn't actually seen this in practice, just noticed she had a stinky, messy behind.)
Well, we saw it last night.
Damn cat rolled around like a roly-poly Weeble, maybe hitting the mark a few times. Not for lack of trying, y'understand!
Poor thing was so confused.
They are SO not getting any more gushy food for the forseeable. I can see I'm going to be measuring progress by how much bottom she can reach.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 03:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 05:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 07:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 08:21 pm (UTC)- Play with her. Really. Unlike other cats, a human who is determined enough can make their cat run around. Mine gets to chase shit 2-3 times a day, and I only stop when he is tired. He sleeps better though the night too.
- Get food that has more protein in them, and less corn. Humans process grains just about as well as protein. Not so cats and dogs. They're more likely to benefit from an all protein diet whenever possible.
- Make them work for food. You know doggie kongs? They make something like that for cats. My cat has treat dispensers. Sometimes we put food in there too, so he has to roll the dispenser around the apartment to get his food. Other creative approaches: put food up on shelves that the cat is allowed on, so that to eat she'll have to jump up and down. This means that she'll either jump a lot more than she used to, therefore getting her fatass working a lot more, or she'll think twice about eating out of boredom alone.
You might try her on non-cat food
Date: 2007-11-29 08:23 pm (UTC)It took a bit of fussing, but we figured it was safer. Fed her various things, since initially she was quite determined to get back to that bag of food. Cooked chicken, tuna, some raw chicken, cooked pork -- as well as various stewed vegetables as she would take them.
After a bit she began to eat fairly normally, though every three days or so she'd go on strike for a day in an attempt to get that bag of food back.
We noted two things. When she ate Iams, she wanted to eat ALL THE TIME. On the regular food, she ate a little more than a lb or so of food a day. She also lost a huge amount of weight. Then, about five months in, stabilized and held what she had.
She went from a kitty that only lay around the house and ate food, back to one that climbed trees, played a bit, and could clean her butt again (yeah, this had been a problem with us too).
I'm not sure what this means. We've begun reintroducing cat food, but after seeing what we have, we're trying the more expensive Blue Buffalo and Wellness brands. If she starts gaining that weight back, she's going back on the human foods.
I have no idea what to make of this. So I won't speculate. But that is what happened. Our cat is still pudgy -- but she's no longer a basketball.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 08:29 pm (UTC)http://elfwench.livejournal.com/1336465.html?thread=2355601
EDIT: Basically, feed twice a day with good food. A quarter cup good dry in the morning (she feeds Natural Balance, which I will, too, once I'm employed) and an 1/8 cup dry mixed with a quarter cup canned and some water to make a "stew" (They need the extra liquid for their kidneys.) Free feeding will lead to fat kitties. *nods*
no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 09:45 pm (UTC)One vet highly recommended feeding overweight cats melon (honey dew). Some cats love it. Alas for poor Oliver, he won't touch it. But maybe your cat might like it?
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Date: 2007-11-29 09:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 10:44 pm (UTC)I feel bad that I don't play with my cats enough, even though they chase each other around the apartment plenty.
I have noticed that the boy sometimes is dirty, but I've seen him groom, so I know he can reach behind. I'm not too sure why he's like that, sometimes.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 10:57 pm (UTC)Now - we can control her by putting her in a carrier while the others eat...but if they don't eat when it's put in front of them? How long do I allow that?
Grr. And that youngest *screams* for food every time we go into the kitchen.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 10:58 pm (UTC)Re: You might try her on non-cat food
Date: 2007-11-29 11:00 pm (UTC)I found it still in dishes a day later. NONE of them would touch it.
Food snobs. Honestly!
no subject
Date: 2007-11-29 11:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-30 12:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-30 01:04 am (UTC)Not true, my cats are skinny/healthy weights and they always have access to food. The bowl is always kept full, they don't have feeding times (we don't have time for that). But we also don't feed them soft food because they don't like it, so that might be the difference.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-30 01:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-30 01:40 am (UTC)In the morning, I separate them, and feed Pix where I can see her and am able to shoo Gurney away when she's eating.
In the evening, they're fairly evenly matched food-wise, so they eat together. Sometimes Gurney snags some of Pixel's food when she steps away, but he's usually too busy with his slightly larger serving of WD dry that he doesn't get after Pixel's food at all.