Question:

What are some common cat food @ walmart that's not expensive and is good for your cat? ive been feeding ?

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my babies Special Kitty Indoor food? thank you!

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  1. Special Kitty is c**p. Anything you can find in a grocery store/Walmart is going to be a low end food.

    Not all pet food is made equally. A lot of it is full of corn, by-products, dyes, unhealthy preservatives, filler grains and all sorts of nasty stuff. A lot of pet food companies are perfectly happy to dump cheap leftovers in. Will it kill your cat? No, it has to be nutritionally complete and safe to even be marketed. Is it healthy? Not by a long shot.

    Corn is a low quality ingredient you never want to see in your pet food. Corn and low quality grains are two of the biggest culprits when it comes to food allergies in our pets.

    Thankfully, there are some excellent cat foods being made these days that include organic, human grade ingredients rather than trash not fit for human consumption.

    Examples of low quality foods to avoid: Anything you can find in a grocery store will be low end, Purina, Iams, Eukanuba, Science Diet, Royal Canin, Whiskas, Fancy Feast, Friskies, Meow Mix.

    Examples of high quality foods to look for: Innova, Wellness, Solid Gold, Felidae, Fromm Four Star, Merrick, GO Natural, Nature's Variety Prairie, Nature's Logic, Artemis Fresh Mix, Timber Wolf Organics.

    Although the high quality foods are more expensive, you're getting what you're paying for. Less filler material means more concentrated nutrients... this means you typically need to feed far less of the high quality food than you would of the low quality one. Which also means less p**p!

    A great option is to go with an entirely grainless diet. Diets high in grain have been attributed to problems with diabetes in cats. Cats are obligate carnivores, so why should there be grain in their diet? Many of the high quality foods now put out grainless formulas. Some good grainless diets include: Innova EVO, Wellness CORE, Blue Wilderness, Nature's Variety Instinct, Orijen, Horizon Legacy, Merrick Before Grain, Fromm Surf & Turf, Now!, and Sold Gold Indigo Moon, Taste of the Wild.

    Some pretty decent foods can even be found in common pet stores. Petsmart carries Blue Buffalo products (such as the excellent grain free diet Blue Wilderness). Petco carries Wellness, Solid Gold, Natural Balance, Eagle Pack Holistic, Blue Buffalo, Castor & Pollux Organix, Pinnacle, and Halo. If you can't find a food, most of the high quality food brands have websites with store locators on them.

    Remember that foods should be switched gradually, especially when switching to a higher quality one, so as not to upset tummies.

    Another option for feeding cats is to feed raw. This is something that should be thoroughly researched before being attempted:

    http://www.barfworld.com/

    http://www.rawfedcats.org/

    http://www.rawfed.com/

    http://www.wysong.net/controversies/rawm...

    Now the question is, do you feed wet or dry? Wet is the correct answer. The reason is, in the wild, cats normally get most of their water content directly from their prey items and drink very little. Domestic cats are no different, and because of the fact that they are designed to take in water with their meal, they have a very low thirst drive. Cats often just don't drink enough. This leads to urinary tract infections and crystals. The bit about dry food being better for teeth is a myth and has not been proven in the least. Canned/wet food is better because it more closely mimics the cat's natural diet. More on why canned food is best:

    http://www.catinfo.org/  (Excellent cat nutrition information by a vet)

    http://cats.about.com/cs/catfood/a/canne...

    http://www.littlebigcat.com/index.php?ac...

    http://www.felinefuture.com/nutrition/bp...

    http://www.littlebigcat.com/index.php?ac...

    Another option to get cats to drink more would be a cat fountain. Cats tend to like to drink from running water and cat fountains see to that need, encouraging cats to take in more water.

    More:

    http://www.dogfoodanalysis.com/dog_food_... (Dog food reviews. It's for dogs, but most of the high quality brands also put out excellent cat foods. Four stars is a decent food, five stars is a great food, and six stars is an excellent food.)


  2. Just make sure you avoid IAMS.

    check this out:    iamscruelty.com

  3. My rule is anything in the WalMart pet dept is not good for cats.  I only buy cat litter there. Wet food without grain fillers is what you want. Cats need to eat meat.  All those foods like Goodlife Recipe, etc contain grain fillers like corn, wheat, and even boast veggies.  Carnivorous animals do not need veggies. Meat and moisture is what's important.  If you don't live near a pet store, I feel your pain. The nearest one to me is 40 miles away. I buy in bulk. Here's a good guide to choosing a good commercial pet food.

    http://www.littlebigcat.com/index.php?ac...

  4. I feed my cat Innova. Best brand out there

    http://www.innovapet.com/

  5. Dry food is not good. The best you can do at a walmart would be something like fancy feast which is kind of a middle grade food





    Nutrition since there are so many bad things out there is very important to your cat’s health

    Contrary to what you may have heard; dry foods are not a great thing to feed a cat.

    Please read the label on what you are feeding? What are the ingredients? Do you know what they mean? Is the first ingrediant a muscle meat like chicken or meal or other things?

    http://www.catinfo.org/#Learn_How_To_Rea...

    http://iml.jou.ufl.edu/projects/Spring04...

    Dry foods are the number 1 cause of diabetes in cats as well as being a huge contributing factor to kidney disease, obesity, crystals, u.t.i’s and a host of other problems. Food allergies are very common when feeding dry foods. Rashes, scabs behind the tail and on the chin are all symptoms

    The problems associated with Dry food is that they are loaded with grains and carbohydrates which many cats (carnivores) cannot process.  Also, Most of the moisture a cat needs is suppose to be in the food but in

    Dry, 95% of it is zapped out of dry foods in the processing. Another thing, most use horrible ingredients and don't use a muscle meat as the primary ingredient and use vegetable based protein versus animal. Not good for an animal that has to eat meat to survive.

    http://www.catinfo.org/#My_Cat_is_Doing_...

    You want to pick a canned food w/o gravy (gravy=carbs) that uses a muscle meat as the first ingredient and doesn't have corn at least in the first 3 ingredients if at all.    The best food for cats does not contain any grains at all.

    Fancy feast is a middle grade food with 9lives, friskies  whiskas lower grade canned and wellness and merrick upper grade human quality foods. I would rather feed a middle grade canned food then the top of the line dry food.

    Also, dry food is not proven to be better for teeth. Does a hard pretzel clean your teeth or do pieces of it get stuck? http://www.felinefuture.com/nutrition/bp...

    Please read about cat nutrition.

                                   http://www.newdestiny.us/nutritionbasics...

                                   http://www.catinfo.org/feline_obesity.ht...

          http://maxshouse.com/feline_nutrition.ht...

    Vetinarian diets  The reason your vet thinks so highly of the pet food they sell probably has more to do with money than nutrition. In vet school, the only classes offered on nutrition usually last a few weeks, and are taught by representatives from the pet food companies. Vet students may also receive free food for their own dogs and cats at home. They could get an Iams notebook, a Purina purse and some free pizza.  http://iml.jou.ufl.edu/projects/Spring04...

  6. Not expensive and good for your cat doesn't really go together. Splurge a little because your cat won't eat much anyway. The better the food you get the less they need to eat. You shouldn't get a cat if you can't afford to have it and if you can't afford an extra 10 bucks a bag then how can you afford a medical emergency?

    Anyway Purina would be the worst food I'd let my animals eat but only in emergency circumstances.

    I have a Mastiff, a Mastiff/Pit mix and a Pit Bull = 280 lbs of dog in my house. I spend over 85 dollars every week and a half on dog food alone. A cat won't be near that expensive and when you have to feed so little it amounts to only pennies more every day for the "good stuff."

  7. You want to look at the ingredients.  You don't want to buy food with by-products in them.  Following that is a good rule.  The cheaper food has allot of fat in it so the flavor is appealing. I would check for any by-products.  That means they take the WHOLE animal and use it in the food.  

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