Reddit Reddit reviews IAMS PROACTIVE HEALTH HEALTHY KITTEN Dry Cat Food with Fish Oil and Chicken, 7 lb. Bag

We found 2 Reddit comments about IAMS PROACTIVE HEALTH HEALTHY KITTEN Dry Cat Food with Fish Oil and Chicken, 7 lb. Bag. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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IAMS PROACTIVE HEALTH HEALTHY KITTEN Dry Cat Food with Fish Oil and Chicken, 7 lb. Bag
Contains one (1) 7 pound bag Of Iams proactive health healthy kitten dry cat food with chickenChicken is the #1 ingredient in this protein rich kitten food made to help your kitten develop and grow into a strong, lean, healthy adult catNutrients like those in mother’s milk, including vitamin E, help kittens build strong immune defensesOmega 3 Dha helps promote healthy brain developmentSmall kibble for small mouths, designed for easy pickupTaurine helps promote strong vision development and healthy eyes
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2 Reddit comments about IAMS PROACTIVE HEALTH HEALTHY KITTEN Dry Cat Food with Fish Oil and Chicken, 7 lb. Bag:

u/bbdoll · 1 pointr/cats

i've been in a similar financial situation before so i understand. hopefully some of this advice helps:

the kitten will need vaccinations at 8 wks, 12, wks, 16 wks. call around, this shouldn't be extremely expensive. i would get kitty fixed by 16 wks at a low cost clinic (humane societies have these), that will give you time to budget for everything. low cost clinics are usually around $50. get a microchip too, again at the clinic (expect around $10ish).

this tidy cats litter is my favorite on a budget. it will last a very long time and it's good too.

you'll want to provide two types of scratching posts: a floor kind like this that you replace as needed, and a tall kind like this that the cat can stretch their vertical muscles on. this is important for the cat's health and for training them to leave your furniture alone.

this fountain is amazing and extremely low maintenance otherwise don't feel bad about just having a bowl of water that you change daily. don't keep the water next to the food, the smell of food in their water can weird them out.

as for food, you want to feed both wet AND dry when they're a baby. you must expose a cat to both types of food in case someday in the future they need to switch due to health reasons. additionally, kittens are little eating machines and need food access 24/7, hence having dry out constantly. this dry food is inexpensive, will last a long time, and is perfectly adequate, but honestly whatever is in your budget will work at this stage. it's temporary and kittens self-regulate.

you will also want to do supplemental meals of canned food (such as breakfast/dinner). this should be a low carb pate (not gravy etc). you'll want to feed at least two different brands of wet food. Fancy Feast Classic is excellent and cheap, as well as pates from Friskies. two other good foods are Chicken Soup for the Soul and Natural Balance but they're also a bit pricier.

you want to transition the kitten to their adult diet around 7-9 months old. that means taking away the dry food and exclusively feeding canned food twice a day. the high moisture diet that comes with canned food can potentially mitigate several future health problems, saving you money in the future.

also don't use plastic dishes as a rule, plastic irritates some cat's skin and it becomes a whole thing lol. basically it's easiest to just get ceramic or metal and avoid that problem entirely.

i think those are the most important things. i agree with whoever said to use a bell... 8 weeks is sooo tiny, it's easy to lose track of a kitten this size!

u/bluefoxicy · 1 pointr/cats

Okay, that makes sense. I was worried they were keeping themselves hungry to an unhealthy-degree. Like I said: if they're just eating less than they otherwise could, I'll get healthy but smaller cats, which is cool; if they're starving themselves in protest for wet food, I'll end up with sick and dying kittens.

I'm switching the dry food to high-protein adult food next week, too. It's more protein and less fat than the kitten food they're eating. That means lower caloric density, but they're not filling themselves up on kibble anyway, and the cat's only nursing when they pin her down. Fat's good, nutritious stuff, but it's not a nitrogen and sulfur source.

They do respond differently to different food. Maybe they'll like more protein better—or just salmon instead of chicken; you should see how they go after salmon-flavored dental treats (like 5 per kitten, 17 for the cat).