Guest guest Posted January 13, 2002 Report Share Posted January 13, 2002 > My cat can go outside if he doesn't like the smell! >> Its not about whether they like it or not, its toxic to their livers. Instead of putting puss outside, why don't you just confine him to a bedroom until the burning of oils has dissipated? The average life expectancy for an outside cat or one that goes outside is a few years... an inside cat, 15 - 20 yrs. I'm sure you love your cat and hope you take this into consideration. Terri Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2002 Report Share Posted January 14, 2002 Sorry - my cat loves the outdoors - I won't tell him he's putting his life at risk Thankyou though - I will make sure in future he is not in the room when I burn my oils. My cat I think is allergic to lamb. Just changed the cat food (again) to give him a change of diet, and to my horror looked under the kids bed today, only to find one of there friends had just rolled in cat puke! I wasn't laughing then. He seems to puke on lamb and rice.... he used to be so unfussy...now... he's worse than my mothers cat! Tracy - <annhope1 Monday, 14 January 2002 04:53 Re:cat outside > > > My cat can go outside if he doesn't like the smell! >> > > Its not about whether they like it or not, its toxic to their livers. > Instead of putting puss outside, why don't you just confine him to a bedroom > until the burning of oils has dissipated? > The average life expectancy for an outside cat or one that goes outside is a > few years... an inside cat, 15 - 20 yrs. I'm sure you love your cat and hope > you take this into consideration. > Terri > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2002 Report Share Posted January 14, 2002 - " Nick Grant " <nwgrant Sunday, January 13, 2002 10:17 PM Re: Re:cat outside > Sorry - my cat loves the outdoors - I won't tell him he's putting his life > at risk > > Thankyou though - I will make sure in future he is not in the room when I > burn my oils. My cat I think is allergic to lamb. Just changed the cat > food (again) to give him a change of diet, and to my horror looked under the > kids bed today, only to find one of there friends had just rolled in cat > puke! I wasn't laughing then. He seems to puke on lamb and rice.... he used > to be so unfussy...now... he's worse than my mothers cat! > > Tracy My cat Bob was horribly allergic for the first years of his life. He also had problems with renal stones. The vet had him on a Lamb & Rice diet and he did no better. Then my wife & I found a Homeopathic Vet & Bob was put on a raw meat diet with chicken entrails & bones ground up in it. Bob prospered & got rid of all allergies. I recently wrote to some friends with warnings about dry cat food I copied from this list & received back a reply of what they feed to their cats. I'll append it below. Alobar ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Healthy, Homemade Cat Food > 10 lb. Fresh ground turkey (if using Vitamix, grind bones, as well > for calcium) 18 oz. Quaker Old Fashioned Oats 2 10-oz. Pkgs. Frozen > spinach > Blend all together. Freeze in appropriate amounts and container. At > serving time, add a heaping teaspoon of Healthy Powder and mix in > well with food. This makes a 3-week supply for two cats. Serving = 3 > oz./meal/cat > Healthy Powder: > 2 cups Brewer's yeast > 1 cup lecithin granules > 5 tsp. Eggshell, powdered (or 9000 mg. Calcium) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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