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Soupie's Avatar
Catsey Senior
 
Cats owned: Worlds No 1 Moggy and 2 Selkirk Rex
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Warwickshire, UK
Posts: 379
04-02-2007, 07:03 PM   #1

Which dry food? and which cat litter?


Since I last had a cat which needed litter, Catsan have brought in a clumping litter which I am finding fab to use as I can basically "deep litter" Pousse's tray and it doesn't get smelly I cannot crouch down due to very bad arthritis in my ankle so find doing a tray hard but because I can deep litter with this and it is so easy to scoop up as it just clumps into a neat ball.

Pousse is a house cat as I live in a ground floor flat although she is happy with this lifestyle and is used to it.

I have a bit of a social conscience though and wonder how environment friendly catsan is (it is very fine grains ad I'll be using half a small bag a week) and whether there is another alternative which is easy to use bearing in mind my limitations (no crouching and difficult to bend down and kneel). What do you all use and why?

Also a few questions about dried food. I've always just fed bog standard dry food along with meat - either whiskers/felix. Now I've been able to handle Pousse a bit more I've found out she doesn't have a great many teeth (make that very few ) certainly fewer than I would expect as 12 is not ancient Are the dried foods aimed at older cats like Iams 7+ or Hills 7+ softer and easier to manage and would you recommend them?

I have some Iams and some Royal Canin Acive Mature 32 to try as she turned her nose up at Morrisons own which is really just to hard and bulky for her

Feel a bit daft as I'm so used to having cats but none of them have had special dietary needs or had so few teeth at this age. She is also really rather underweight so I am trying to get a little back on. She has an MOT booked with the vet on Friday but any advice/discussion on the above would most gratefully appreciated.



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tilly's Avatar
Almost a Veteran Member
 
Cats owned: some
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: somewhere
Posts: 1,074
04-02-2007, 07:31 PM   #2

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


My cat Tilly has got hardly any teeth (no canines and a few back teeth) and she eats hills science diet senior biscuits just fine. She has also scoff some t/d diet buiscuits which are fairly large I had put them down for her brother who has still got most of his teeth and she decided that she fancied them!!. So I think if Pousse likes the food she will be able to eat it. It can take Tilly a little while to keep the food in her mouth long enough to chew and swallow but she does fine on dry food.
Tilly is 9 years old and will be 10 on the 1st of may so don't worry about Pousse losing her teeth at 12. I think that the Iams or roayl canine will be Ok to try if not you could try some Hills Science diet senior which is on sale at most vet and quite a few pet shops.

Hope this helps

Sally



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jenny's Avatar
Catsey Senior
 
Cats owned: bengal
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: surrey, uk
Posts: 258
04-02-2007, 08:30 PM   #3

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


i would recommend worlds best for cat litter. it clumps well and leaves no smell, meaning u dont have to change all the litter. one small bag will last ages.
its also flushable, so kinder on nature.

for dried food, i recommend something like james wellbeloved, no artificial ingredients, additives, fillers etc and hypoallergenic.



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dinahsmum's Avatar
Catsey Veteran
 
Cats owned: 2 moggie boys; 1 grey 1 red striped
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: SW England
Posts: 12,761
04-02-2007, 08:32 PM   #4

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


World's Best http://www.mpmproducts.co.uk/default...=worlds_bes t is flushable - woud that make life easier for you? Made from maize - don't know if you find that good in ecological terms or not.

Wellbeloved is a good food, so is Burns



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EmmaG's Avatar
Catsey Veteran
 
Cats owned: Moggies
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Posts: 7,396
04-02-2007, 08:57 PM   #5

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


I use sophisticat cat litter, works ok for my two.

Dry food is James Wellbeloved, no more problems with Arthur with crystals



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jenny's Avatar
Catsey Senior
 
Cats owned: bengal
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: surrey, uk
Posts: 258
04-02-2007, 10:01 PM   #6

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


ah yes forgot burns dinahs mum. Burns is the better option if u can get hold of it



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Sweet's Avatar
Catsey Veteran
 
Cats owned: 10 cats (stray stayed) 3 sleeping x
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Bristol
Posts: 6,852
04-02-2007, 10:06 PM   #7

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


I use Hills Science Plan Dry and various litters along the way, I had bought Catsan this past week, but it remains unopened - giving Cat Attract Litter a go - more expensive but fingers crossed apart from a minor accident last night seems to be working x



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Kay's Avatar
Kay Kay is offline
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Cats owned: 19 Persians, 2 Oriental SHs
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Anglesey, Wales
Posts: 4,419
05-02-2007, 11:09 PM   #8

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


Soupie if you think Pousse is underweight the senior foods are not the best option as they are less likely to fatten her up. An ideal food for putting weight on is Royal Canin Persian. If you could use this for a hile till she gets up to a good weight and then perhaps try her on the Senior.



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Kobster's Avatar
Catsey Senior
 
Cats owned: 2 DSH and a Siamese
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Texas, USA
Posts: 487
06-02-2007, 03:58 AM   #9

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


No real advice on litter or food (as I'm not from your area) but I DO have arthritis, and can sympathise there.

What I did was put both litterboxes up on an old desk/table top so I that I didn't have to bend down to scoop the boxes. The cats have taken to it very well, and as an added bonus, it keeps the dog from foraging for "kitty krunchies" in the litter box.



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Soupie's Avatar
Catsey Senior
 
Cats owned: Worlds No 1 Moggy and 2 Selkirk Rex
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Warwickshire, UK
Posts: 379
06-02-2007, 08:12 AM   #10

Re: Which dry food? and which cat litter?


Quote:
Originally Posted by Kay
Soupie if you think Pousse is underweight the senior foods are not the best option as they are less likely to fatten her up. An ideal food for putting weight on is Royal Canin Persian. If you could use this for a hile till she gets up to a good weight and then perhaps try her on the Senior.
The problem I have is her lack of teeth and so far the only dry food (out of 5 I've tried so far) she will eat is the senior - it is slightly softer? She is seeing the vet on Friday for her weight and teeth - I could be being overprotective about her weight

Meat wise she is on normal Whiskers fish selection pouches which disappear VERY quickly

Thanks for the tip though - my local pet store stocks the Persian version I just wish they did it in trial packs If vet agrees about weight though I will give the persian a go. Why is that one higher calorie? and what are the "biscuits" like in terms of size and consistency.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Kobster
No real advice on litter or food (as I'm not from your area) but I DO have arthritis, and can sympathise there.

What I did was put both litterboxes up on an old desk/table top so I that I didn't have to bend down to scoop the boxes. The cats have taken to it very well, and as an added bonus, it keeps the dog from foraging for "kitty krunchies" in the litter box.
That's a good idea - thanks!



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