Sounds like a girl after my own heart ;)
 Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2012 13:28:35 -0700
From: susan_hoff...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] The Price of Cat Food

I tried raw with my 15 year old calico a few years ago.  She wouldn't touch it, 
wanted me to fry it up in some butter first.





From: "dlg...@windstream.net" <dlg...@windstream.net>
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Friday, October 12, 2012 1:09 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] The Price of Cat Food


i TRIED RABBIT FROM A NEIGHBOR WHO RAISES HIS ORGANIC FOR HIS OWN FOOD.  THEY 
LOOKED AT IT LIKE IT WAS ALIEN, WOULD NOT EVEN TOUCH IT.  I ONLY HAVE 7, BUT 
KEEPING ENOUGH MEAT FOR THEM WOULD BE A PROBLEM.  i HAVE A SIDE BY SIDE AND THE
 FREEZER IS NOT THAT LARGE.  AND GETTING IT OUT IN TIME TO THAW WOULD BE A 
PROBLEM WITH MY MEMORY.

---- Lee Evans <moonsiste...@yahoo.com> wrote: 
> It would be nice if I could do that but I'm feeding around 35 cats right now. 
>  Feeding raw would cost me around $9 a day with turns into around $250 a 
> month.  On top of which, I would be a little nervous to feed raw chicken to 
> the cats.  Some of them probably wouldn't even understand what it was while 
> others might throw it up at first.  Cooked chicken would add about 3 hours 
> work to my day.  My freezer would be full of frozen chicken, not defrosted in 
> time for their dinner and I would go insane.

The dry food costs me about $100 - $150 a month.  With the price of Kirkland 
going up it would cost me about equal to that because they eat less of the 
Kirkland due to fat
 content.  Seems to fill them up better.  I used to buy Friskies regular type, 
and Purina Cat Chow (no one wanted to eat that).  Then I bought HEB brand Hill 
Country Fair and all the cats began throwing up in unison.  Stopped buying that 
also.  They seem to be able to digest Paws and Claws, the Tractor Supply brand 
that cost $20 for 36 pounds but the older ones lose weight when they eat it.  
One of my cats, Isadora lost most of her fur (long hair) and had scabs and 
sores on her skin.  I began feeding Kirkland about 3 months ago and the other 
day I realized that Isadora had no more scabs and had grown back her fur.  The 
fat content did her a whole lot of good. She looks like she has gained a pound 
or two and is much more active. Mr. Buttons (Big Butt-tons) also gained weight 
on
>  Kirkland.  I need to widen the doorway for him.
I will probably have to keep buying the Kirkland and just work harder.
 


 
Spay and Neuter your cats and dogs and your weird relatives and nasty neighbors 
too!




________________________________
From: Kathryn Hargreaves <khargrea...@gmail.com>
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2012 1:28 PM
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] The Price of Cat Food


I'm curious as to how much you are spending per day per cat feeding dry.  I am 
able to feed raw for 70 cents/day per cat.  If you didn't buy the chicken from 
Whole Foods, which charges about twice as much as do, say local ethnic 
butchers, then you could roll in for around half that.   

I've heard they have to eat more dry than raw, as it isn't as high-octane of 
food.   Also, cats don't drink enough
 water to compensate for dry food, grain/starch-free or not, and stand a very 
good chance of ending up with CRF.  



On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 10:06 AM, Lee Evans <moonsiste...@yahoo.com> wrote:

Oh, @#$%!!!.  The price of Kirkland Adult Maintenance cat food used to be 
$16.99.  Then it went up a year later to $17.59.  Well, I bought two 20 lb. 
bags a week and a half ago.  This Tuesday, I went back to Costco because my 
cats ate most of the Kirkland and the price had gone up to $18.99!!!  It went 
up $1.49 in about a week.  This is robbery.  I'm so depressed.  The crap I buy 
at the feed store doesn't have a high fat content and doesn't have actual 
chicken like Kirkland and is $20  for a 36 pound bag.  Well, kitties, you're 
going to be back on a diet of crap and corn meal unless Mommy can get
 another job online.  Sigh.
>
>
>
> 
>Spay and Neuter your cats and dogs and your weird relatives and nasty 
>neighbors too!
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>Felvtalk mailing list
>Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
>http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org
>
>


-- 
----------------------------
Go Get a Life---Go Get a Shelter Animal!

If you can't adopt, then foster "bottle baby" shelter animal, to save their 
life.  Contact your local pound for information. 


If you can't bottle feed, foster an older animal, to save their life, and to 
free up cage space.

Ask your local animal pound to start saving over 90% of their intake by 
implementing the No Kill Equation:
 http://www.nokilladvocacycenter.org/shelter-reform/no-kill-equation/

Here's the current growing list of true No Kill communities: 
http://www.nokillhouston.org/no-kill-shelters-in-north-america/

Legislate better animal pound conditions: http://www.rescue50.org/

More fun reading: http://www.nokilladvocacycenter.org/shelter-reform/guides/

More fun watching: http://vimeo.com/nokill/videos especially 
http://vimeo.com/48445902




Local feral cat crisis?   See Alley Cat Allies' for how to respond: 
http://www.alleycat.org/page.aspx?pid=537

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