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I don't know what the conspiracy about dry food says but our two are very healthy on a mix of the two and growing up we had a dry food only cat who lived past 21, I wouldn't overthink it. Just buy quality food, not cheap crap with grain fillers.
Yes you gotta clip em every now and then. Just when they start getting long and sharp. We do ours every couple of months but they spend a lot of time climbing outdoors, indoor cats may need more regular clipping
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Cheers boss - the argument is that cats are carnivores and dry food is solely for user convenience. The process may start with meat but you end with much higher carbs than they need all sprayed with meat flavor. Apparently they only naturally get carbs from the digestive bits of the herbivores they eat. Anyway noted and will probs just carry on with both.
Cat won't really be touched at this point let alone picked up so fuck knows how we'll clip her nails. But like yours she is free range and always up a shed/fence/tree so...that's a problem for next month.
Novice cat operator here - just watched some youtube about the evils of dry food. We've been giving both since we got her as thats what they said at the rescue centre. She often licks the jelly off the wet and doesn't eat all the bits. Grazes on the dry. Should I reduce the dry to none and then just give wet ?
Also claws - do they need clipping on the regs ?