John Popp
Site Supporter
Chongo is now 7 months old. Dale definitely knows his stuff about animal nutrition, and I wouldn't discount anything he said. The canned EVO recommended was what Chongo had an issue with. Loose stools that ended as soon as I got him off of it. I also tried the EVO dry Chicken and Turkey which he wouldn't eat, as I wasn't able to get the Royal Canin Kitten 36 on a Sunday. The other cats ate it up so it wasn't as if it went to waste.
Through that minor ordeal, I really got locked in on providing a raw diet. I still do some on demand kibble, but the majority of all my cats food is now raw. For Chongo there wasn't any transition period as I had been going the other direction trying to introduce the recommended canned food. With the other cats one took a week and the other took three.
5 months into the raw diet and I have freelanced a bit from the original recipe I had used. Just trying to figure out who likes what while making sure I had the necessary supplements added. I am currently pretty dialed in and can offer them some variety outside of the whole chicken recipe I started with. It's still primarily chicken, but also rabbit and duck. None of them will eat turkey and even disguising just a little bit of turkey mixed with chicken is a chore.
Hydrating dry food seems like an interim step more so than a long term solution. They need to add something to make it stick together and also heat which destroys some nutrients. No question that Chongo likes his kibble, just that I know the later in life issues that poses as a result. I have one cat with some renal issues at 15 years of age, and he was the one really partial to eating kibble. He is now on a low protein raw diet and while his issues aren't gone his lab tests are dramatically improved and he's not knocking on deaths door.
If you have the opportunity, I would certainly ask Dale about a raw diet and the recipe they use at their cattery. I'm sure some of their big cats are exclusively on a raw diet and know they have a couple cats/kittens on a duck and pea diet for sensitive stomachs. It's a conversation that I never had with him and from his background and knowledge I'd place a great deal of trust in whatever he recommends.
Through that minor ordeal, I really got locked in on providing a raw diet. I still do some on demand kibble, but the majority of all my cats food is now raw. For Chongo there wasn't any transition period as I had been going the other direction trying to introduce the recommended canned food. With the other cats one took a week and the other took three.
5 months into the raw diet and I have freelanced a bit from the original recipe I had used. Just trying to figure out who likes what while making sure I had the necessary supplements added. I am currently pretty dialed in and can offer them some variety outside of the whole chicken recipe I started with. It's still primarily chicken, but also rabbit and duck. None of them will eat turkey and even disguising just a little bit of turkey mixed with chicken is a chore.
Hydrating dry food seems like an interim step more so than a long term solution. They need to add something to make it stick together and also heat which destroys some nutrients. No question that Chongo likes his kibble, just that I know the later in life issues that poses as a result. I have one cat with some renal issues at 15 years of age, and he was the one really partial to eating kibble. He is now on a low protein raw diet and while his issues aren't gone his lab tests are dramatically improved and he's not knocking on deaths door.
If you have the opportunity, I would certainly ask Dale about a raw diet and the recipe they use at their cattery. I'm sure some of their big cats are exclusively on a raw diet and know they have a couple cats/kittens on a duck and pea diet for sensitive stomachs. It's a conversation that I never had with him and from his background and knowledge I'd place a great deal of trust in whatever he recommends.