Guest guest Posted March 4, 2004 Report Share Posted March 4, 2004 At 03:06 PM 3/4/04 -0600, you wrote: >Okay, what's the deal. I think I am being the purrfect mum by cutting up >some nice raw chicken liver of the highest quality for my 6 kitties. Then >only two of them go for it! And my cats are total gourmands! > >BTW, the two that dined are the only two that go outside much. Five cats >came with the house we bought over a year ago: Mama (Ashes) and four kittens >(Stormy, Orca, Francis and Marble). The recent addition is a stray (Tosca). > >Tosca is normally the food fiend, zipping in and growling at any feline even >thinking about eating her intended morsel. Well, with the raw liver, she >was batting it all over the kitchen expecting it to fly or something. But >she wouldn't eat it. > >Okay, what gives? > The only way my cat will eat raw liver (from any animal) is if I mix small amounts in with other food. He LOVES cooked chicken liver, but not cooked liver from other animals. So basically, I just cut up a bunch of raw stuff and mix it into his meals for a few days. MFJ There are no stupid questions, but there are plenty of silly ones. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 4, 2004 Report Share Posted March 4, 2004 >> Okay, what gives? << Cats are a species that " imprints " on food pretty strongly. During a certain period of kittenhood, they are shown by their mothers what food is and isn't, and ever afterward, it's difficult to impossible to get them to see things that don't meet those parameters as " food. " This means that most cats have trouble accepting new tastes/smells/textures as " food. " Some cats become so strongly imprinted that they only see ONE brand of kibble, or ONE type of food, as " food. " To them, anything else is no more food than a rock is, even if they are literally starving. Cats are one of the few species that can actually DIE in the presence of abundant food - if that food doesn't fit their understanding of what food is. They aren't finicky - it's just a survival skill that kept them safe in the wild but doesn't work so great in domestication. It doesn't sound like your cats are quite that imprinted, as you say they are " gourmands. " So I would imagine it might just take them a while to get what the liver is, and grasp that it's food. Or they may never get it. Hard to predict what a cat will do. <G> Christie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 4, 2004 Report Share Posted March 4, 2004 I've had 2 cats from the same litter since kittens, one is now 19 1/2 and the other had to put to sleep late last year. They were swapped over to raw foods maybe 8 years ago, but only Muffin would eat organ meat. Since she later went blind, she must have needed the Vit A and didn't get enough. Miffy wouldn't touch the stuff. Just recently I tried her on raw liver again, and to my surprise she wolfed it down. Then again a week later. I have heard that if cats get too much Vit A it gets stored in their bodies and becomes dangerous. Don;t have any idea if this is true or not. But maybe Miffy didn't need vit A before and does need it now????? deb > >> Okay, what gives? << > > Cats are a species that " imprints " on food pretty strongly. During a certain period of kittenhood, they are shown by their mothers what food is and isn't, and ever afterward, it's difficult to impossible to get them to see things that don't meet those parameters as " food. " This means that most cats have trouble accepting new tastes/smells/textures as " food. " Some cats become so strongly imprinted that they only see ONE brand of kibble, or ONE type of food, as " food. " To them, anything else is no more food than a rock is, even if they are literally starving. Cats are one of the few species that can actually DIE in the presence of abundant food - if that food doesn't fit their understanding of what food is. They aren't finicky - it's just a survival skill that kept them safe in the wild but doesn't work so great in domestication. > > It doesn't sound like your cats are quite that imprinted, as you say they are " gourmands. " So I would imagine it might just take them a while to get what the liver is, and grasp that it's food. Or they may never get it. Hard to predict what a cat will do. <G> > > Christie > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 4, 2004 Report Share Posted March 4, 2004 ***** It doesn't sound like your cats are quite that imprinted .... ***** No not with food. But they have these other behaviors imprinted. Yes, with this and the mixing into the food advice, these kitties will eat *food* that is actually good for them... even if I have to have the boys tie raw liver to a string and drag it around the house so they think it's a locust or something! Maybe I should just try to catch fish with the chopped liver, lol. Many thanks to you both. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 4, 2004 Report Share Posted March 4, 2004 >> I have heard that if cats get too much Vit A it gets stored in their bodies and becomes dangerous. Don;t have any idea if this is true or not. << That's true of them, dogs, and also of us. Christie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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