T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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711.1 | | NRADM::CONGER | | Mon Aug 17 1987 09:11 | 11 |
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re. 1 - feleuk vacc.
According to my vet, you don't *have* to test before you
vaccinate. Testing is done to see if your cat has or carries
feline leukemia, and it usually costs at least $20. However,
you can give the vaccine without having the test done because
the vaccine will not harm your cat if it has leukemia, but it
will not cure it if it does. So, you can vaccinate with or
without giving the test - it's just a matter of your preference.
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711.2 | Meat | 25192::MECLER | FRANK | Mon Aug 17 1987 12:24 | 18 |
| Dave,
The vet wants the cats checked for leukemia so he knows whether
or not the vaccine will protect the cat. The vaccinations aren't
exactly cheap and if one of your cats is carrying leukemia you should
find out before the other gets it.
We feed raw beef which has been deep frozen for several months to
kill parasites. We buy it from the man who supplies the greyhound
tracks in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. This puts muscle on
our show cats. We had a male who was the runt of his litter and
weaned him onto the beef at 4 weeks, the show judges didn't believe
his age when he was a kitten because he was a solid 8 pounds.
If our cats are not drinking what we feel is enough water, we water
their food or lightly salt it. So far no problems with FUS.
Good luck.
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711.3 | | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Mon Aug 17 1987 13:19 | 17 |
| re .1
I can't imagine why one would want to incur the expense or put
their cat through the series of leukemia shots if it's all for
naught?! It actually seems a bit irresponsible on the part of
a veterinarian to practice this. There's quite a bit of discus-
sion in this conference on the pro/cons of the FeLV vaccinations.
I don't feel comfortable yet with the vaccine and since my 3
cats are indoor only, I have not had them vaccinated, though they
all have tested negative.
I guess there's no way to stop your kitten from eating the
"non-kitten" food, short of separating the cats during mealtimes.
Hill's makes a Feline Growth food in addition to its many others.
Welcome!
Donna
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711.4 | If they wont eat the dry food... | OPUS::STYLIANOS | | Mon Aug 17 1987 18:05 | 16 |
| Cat food:
The local feed store (UCF in littleton) has some stuff called FROMM
which has the requisite low Mg content for FUS and it is ~$4 / 5 lb.
which I believe is about 1/2 the price of Hills.
If my cats are given a choice canned food wins hands down, but as
long as I dont over feed them they eat dry food. We have an 8 year
old and on a dry food only diet, limiting the ammount of food she
has a pot. When we were allowing them to eat as much as they wanted
(when our youngest was a kitten) canned food (or hamburger) would
always cause them to eat more.
If they wont eat the dry food they are not hungry!
Tom
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711.5 | Is Thawed Beef really safe? | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Mon Aug 17 1987 18:40 | 21 |
| Re: .2
I've never heard of freezing as a recommended means of killing
parasites -- at least not the bacteria that affect people. For
example, the preferred method for defrosting Thanksgiving turkeys
is in the refrigerator; the bacteria that were inactive while frozen
will contaminate the meat if it it's allowed to thaw at room
temperature.
This may or may not apply to the situation described in .2. Cats
are different from people, and "deep freezing" may mean something
different that conventional home refrigerator/freezers (typically
0 degrees F). And I'm hardly an expert, while the supplier mentioned
in .2 may very well be. I just don't want people extrapolating
from .2 into believing that they can safely make Steak Tartare by
freezing supermarket ground beef for a few days.
Besides, are there any advantages to feeding raw beef over cooked
beef? (I haven't the foggiest idea, one way or another.)
Gary
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711.6 | Lets be real - if you had a choice would you eat dry food? | NCADC1::PEREZ | The sensitivity of a dung beetle. | Tue Aug 18 1987 00:25 | 19 |
| Thanks for the info everybody.
These are both indoor only cats. I'll have the Giz' tested this
week. Tigger has been tested in the past. I'll ask the vet if
he needs to be tested again. Sounds like since these guys don't
go outside maybe they don't need vaccinations for feLV?
Giz is starting to feel better. I can tell. She's turned into
a minute feline terrorist! Chases everything, including her own
tail. Bites feet at night (we don't close any of the bedroom doors
so the cats can roam in and out). Sits in the pot with my daughters
scheflera... Got her toenails clipped. Loved it! She kept getting
her head in the way 'cause she was so interested in what was going
on! Purred the entire time.
Ah, but when she climbs up in your lap, turns on her motor, and looks
up at you with those big eyes...
D
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711.7 | Gary Re. .2 | 25192::MECLER | FRANK | Tue Aug 18 1987 08:40 | 18 |
| RE.: .5
Gary
The parasites I referred to in .2 were things like worms and cysts.
The really deep freezing for prolong periods of time will kill
those. The meat is handled like human ground beef and kept frozen
until needed and then refrigerated until used. No bacterial or
sick cat problems. Cats eat raw meat in the wild and ours turn
up their little snub noses at cooked meat unless it is on our plates.
In no way was the info in .2 meant for humans. Cats probably have
a genetic capability to handle contaminated food. Consider the
large wild cats which will cache a kill in hot temperatures and
return to feed. I'm not recommending feeding spoiled meat but I
think cats are better equipped to handle that sort of thing.
Frank
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711.8 | Cats Can Be Fooled! | TSG::MCGOVERN | Szechuan Vanilla | Thu Aug 20 1987 14:13 | 13 |
| Re: cat wont eat the Science Diet food: the stuff tastes like garbage
compared to the regular canned stuff, so the cats won't eat it right
off. We had to mic it about 50/50 with the regular canned food
and wait for the cats to get hungry enough to eat it. (I'm not
big on letting "finniky" cats train me...) After a week or so,
cut the mix to 25% normal / 75% Science Diet (or C/D or whatever.)
Keep this up till the cats eat the straight Science Diet. It's
easier to do this than to treat them for FUS.
Good luck with your new household members.
MM
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711.9 | Oh boy, a cat smorgasbord! | NCADC1::PEREZ | The sensitivity of a dung beetle. | Sun Aug 23 1987 00:37 | 16 |
| I talked to the vet today after our second visit -- Gizmo got tested
for feLV and came out negative - and got vaccinated. She's looking
a lot better than when we first got her.
The vet directed me to a pet supply place where I got samples of a
bunch of different foods. I got Purina Pro Plan, Iams, Science Diet,
and Tami Ami, each in separate formulas for kittens and adults. I also
got one called Eagle that the cats RIPPED OPEN. I'll be trying
different ones and find out which one the beasts seem to like.
Interestingly enough, all the above have more "ASH" (~6%) than the
Amore' and Buffet we've been feeding (~2.5%). What makes any of these
better for FUS than the canned food if they have more ash and less
moisture? Neither cat seems to drink much water.
D
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711.10 | Cat/Kitten Dietary Difference | DECSIM::TAYLOR | | Mon Aug 24 1987 08:36 | 10 |
| Hi,
When I took my 'kids' to the vet for their first shots, the vet
said that a higher ash content was ok, in fact, GOOD for kittens
(maybe it was the magnesium?) and for bone growth and that it was
ADULT cat food in which low ash content was important. She said
that the important thing was to make sure the kitties got enough
water by giving them wet food on occasion. This will also lead to
cats with more flexible palates.
Mathew T.
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711.11 | Low for canned food...but... | CLUSTA::TAMIR | | Mon Aug 24 1987 14:07 | 17 |
| The difference is that the canned food which contains "only" 2.5%
or so is comprised of about 75-80% moisture. Dry food, on the other
hand, has a much smaller percentage of moisture (like 10-15%).
I'm sure there is some math fanatic out there that will be able
to subtract the difference in percentage of moisture, compound that
with the phase of the moon, etc. but, in short, the 6% level of
the dry food is much lower than the seemingly small amount in the
canned. You've got to compare the moist to moist, and dry to dry.
Your baby really needs the nutritionally value in kitten food, so
I would recommend the Iams kitten food (in the purple bag or box)
and Science Diet Feline Growth. In a recently conducted taste test,
Iams was preferred over the SD (by my kitten!).
And you thought this was gonna be easy.............
Mary
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711.12 | Food, glorious food -- Survey sayyyyyys its IAMS! | NCADC1::PEREZ | People are Hell -- Sartre' | Mon Aug 31 1987 23:25 | 17 |
| Well, we've been doing taste tests for the past week... (Not us,
the cats).
I put out samples of two different cat foods every day. Then watched
to see which got eaten. Then I took the winner and put a different
one up against it the next day. In the end the IAMS won. The CATS
preferred it to the Science Diet, Purina, etc.
We're mixing the IAMS adult and kitten food together and adding
a small can of wet cat food. This seems to work pretty well. Even
the TOTALLY spoiled Tigger is eating (more or less) happily. I'll
gradually reduce the amount of wet food.
NOW, SOMEBODY TELLY ME HOW TO KEEP THIS MINIATURE TERRORIST FROM
EATING MY SPIDER PLANTS!!!
D
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711.13 | Spider Plants | WALTZ::BOWEN | | Tue Sep 01 1987 08:47 | 7 |
| The only way to save a spider plant is to get it out of reach, cats
will kill to get at one. Actually there is a possible danger here
for the cat as well. Spider plants are very efficient air cleaners
in a home environment, they filter out many airborne substances
which tend to become concentrated in the plant's cells. Some of
these can be very toxic to cats and although this isin't a common
occurance it is something to keep in mind.
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711.14 | Avoid All Plants | 25192::MECLER | FRANK | Tue Sep 01 1987 10:06 | 5 |
| It is a good idea to break the "salad" habit early. Some household
plants are extremely toxic and should not be chewed by fuzzy or
non-fuzzy kids. Dieffenbachia (dumbcane) can be a particular problem.
Frank
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711.15 | Hang 'em!!! (the plants) | EXODUS::ALLEN | | Tue Sep 01 1987 13:53 | 15 |
|
Spider plants make GREAT hanging plants!
(If you can't get Mohammed away from the mountain, you'll have to
move the mountain away from Mohammed!)
Amy. Who's cats love to ride plants down from the highest of heights.
-now an expert at outsmarting the cats, and happy to report that
my numerous plants (I love them!) are finally recovering from felinaphobia!
-and yes, it is possible to have happy plants and happy cats under
the same roof!
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711.16 | Cat monsters.... | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Sep 01 1987 14:38 | 16 |
| I keep the "salad" plants (spider plants and my ponytail palm) in
a room the cats aren't allowed in, which is also where the coats
of cat-allergic guests (poor, poor people!) go.
Nebula, when she was a kitten (JFCL is far too ladylike for this
one), saw the tomcat, now departed, who came with the house decide
to do his business in the pot of a big fig tree in the living room
(he was mad that the house had sprouted another kitten - he was
an unaltered tom that the previous owners had, and left behind because
they only moved a few blocks away and he lived mostly outside anyhow
- he knew that there was a catbox in the basement, in the same place
that his previous humans had kept one). I ended up having to cut
a piece of chicken wire that would fit inside the pot (it is inside
a decorative basket) to prevent digging to break her of the habit.
She broke herself of trying to climb this "tree" after a branch
of it broke off with her on it!
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711.17 | Kitty Greens | BUFFER::HOFFMAN | Joan Hoffman, DTN: 276-9829 | Tue Sep 01 1987 14:42 | 12 |
| Cats usually eat greens for the chlorophyl, so you can either grow some grass
or sprout some bird food. That way, they'll substitute (hopefully) the kitty-
greens for the plants. Of course, to this day, if Mutu gets mad at me, she
goes over to a plant, takes a leaf in her mouth, and stares at me as if
to say, "Go ahead - make my day!".
Growing greens is worth a try...
Regards,
J.
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711.18 | Yucch.... and always an inconvenient spot... | 25175::KALLIS | Not now. I've got an idache. | Tue Sep 01 1987 14:47 | 7 |
| re .17:
>Cats usually eat greens for the chlorophyl, ...
Usually, it's to help themselves rid themselves of hairballs.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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711.19 | And I thot they were just doing it to annoy me! | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Sep 01 1987 15:41 | 8 |
| RE: .16
When I first got Pip, she seemed insistant on climbing my (now
decesaed) Norfork Pine. I broke her of this habit by getting itty
bitty immature pine cones and covering the entire surface of the
pot with them.
Deb
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