How do you best handle a very picky eater. My little buddie was a dry food
eater till his problems of a few weeks ago. Since then have been able to get
him to eat can food. Started him on Iams and he only would eat the chicken
and turkey. He would have nothing to do with any of the other flavors. Now
he just wants the chicken, turns his nose up at the turkey. What to do if
and when he decides he doesn't want the chicken anymore? This is getting
ridiculous. I'm sitting here this morning with a cat that won't leave me
alone cause he is hungry, I assume, and all there is, is turkey till we go
to the store this morning. AAARRRRRGGGG! Definitely not a kitty experienced
person.

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Paul O.
oplholik@hotmail.com
.oO rach Oo. - 17 Jul 2004 12:57 GMT
I feel your pain! My two kitties are picky like that as well. My advice is,
just get what he wants. It's not worth the aggro. We've started getting a
can or two of different flavours each time we go to the pet store and
tracking it on a chart. The brand we get seems to have every variety under
the sun. Since neither cat like left overs, it has to be the small tins,
three times a day - which they share half each. Keep a chart with which ones
he likes... maybe mixing it a bit with one you know he likes and see what
happens. By now I'm sure you realized you're no longer the boss, right?
Good luck!

Signature
rach
> How do you best handle a very picky eater. My little buddie was a dry food
> eater till his problems of a few weeks ago. Since then have been able to get
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> to the store this morning. AAARRRRRGGGG! Definitely not a kitty experienced
> person.
Paul O. - 17 Jul 2004 13:19 GMT
> I feel your pain! My two kitties are picky like that as well. My advice is,
> just get what he wants. It's not worth the aggro. We've started getting a
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> happens. By now I'm sure you realized you're no longer the boss, right?
> Good luck!
boss. LOL

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Paul O.
oplholik@hotmail.com
Karen Chuplis - 17 Jul 2004 18:24 GMT
> How do you best handle a very picky eater. My little buddie was a dry food
> eater till his problems of a few weeks ago. Since then have been able to get
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> to the store this morning. AAARRRRRGGGG! Definitely not a kitty experienced
> person.
My cats swing back and forth. I get Petguard and routinely switch around to
try to keep them from getting tired of one or the other. You might see if a
health food store in your area carries petguard. That's where I buy mine.
They have several flavors.
IBen Getiner - 21 Jul 2004 13:08 GMT
>Subject: Picky eater
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>From: "Paul O." oplholik@hotmail.com
>Newsgroups: rec.pets.cats.health+behav
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>Date: Sat, 17 Jul 2004 11:40:56 GMT
>
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>ridiculous. I'm sitting here this morning with a cat that won't leave me
>alone cause he is hungry, I assume, and all there is, is turkey till we go
Your cat is running you when you should be running him. When he gets hungry
enough, he'll eat. I've even heard-tell that cats will eat soggy food that has
been sitting in water for days. You'll figure it out.
IBen Getiner
CatNipped - 21 Jul 2004 21:11 GMT
> How do you best handle a very picky eater.
There is nobody on earth as "pussy" whipped as I am by my four
fur-babies, but I have to say this is one area where I put my foot
down (as I did with my non-furry kids). I give them the food that is
best for them, no junk food at ALL! If they don't eat that, they go
hungry, and believe me, they won't voluntarily go hungry for long.
When my daughter was very small I used to worry about her being so
tiny and not eating, no matter what I offered her. So, I went to my
peditrician for help. My peditrician told me, and I quote, "In my 27
years of practice I have never seen a healthy child, when offered
food, deliberately starve himself to death. Offer her nutritious food
and nothing else and eventually she will eat." I did, she did, and
she has never had a health problem or an eating disorder since.
The same holds true for cats. They're great actors, will make you
think they're starving to death and will only revive if you give them
what they like, but, if they're healthy, they will not deliberately
starve themselves to death. Determine for yourself the most
nutirtionally sound food for your cat, offer that and only that, then
just sit back and wait until the cat decides that going hungry is not
going to get it what it wants.
I once read a story of a cat who was trapped in a house after a family
moved and left him and he survived for over a month be eating bird
seed!!! If a cat will eat bird seed to survive, I'm sure they'll
resign themselves to eating something that's good for them.
Hugs,
CatNipped
CatMom to:
Bandit, (a.k.a. "Bitch Cat From Hell"), 14, DLH Tabby
Demi, (a.k.a. "Ghost Cat"), 5, DLH Pure White Beauty
Jessie, (a.k.a. "Jet Ski"), 4, DSH Tortoiseshell
Samantha / Sammy, (a.k.a. "Mini Me"), 2 ½ months, DLH Tabby
http://www.gcmensa.org/Cats.html (Jessie, Demi, Bandit)
http://www.gcmensa.org/Sammy/ (Sammy)
http://www.gcmensa.org/Sammy2/ (All my fur babies)
Paul O. - 22 Jul 2004 02:53 GMT
> > How do you best handle a very picky eater.
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> Thanks folks for the info. So far we are getting by with the Iams chicken
flavor canned food. I guess if he gets tired of that he will have to eat
something else.

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Paul O.
oplholik@hotmail.com