Should I free-feed or do scheduled meals?
Scheduled wins for most indoor cats. Why free-feeding kibble leads to weight gain and hides appetite changes.
Scheduled wins for most indoor cats. Why free-feeding kibble leads to weight gain and hides appetite changes.
Transition over 7 to 10 days, slower for sensitive stomachs. The day-by-day mix and what to watch for.
Yes. A hairball lodged in the gut can cause appetite loss, vomiting and lethargy. This is the dangerous version.
Short coats still shed, especially seasonally, and indoor cats groom more than outdoor ones. When frequency means more than coat length.
Mildly. Most are mineral-oil-based lubricants or fiber. They help, but brushing does more — it removes hair before it’s swallowed.
More than one a week is too often. Long-haired cats occasionally; short-haired cats rarely. When to escalate to a vet.
Wet food, water stations, a teaspoon of pumpkin, more play. The four moves that move the needle, plus what to skip.
Two main culprits: constipation or a urinary blockage. In male cats, urinary straining is an emergency. How to tell which.
Yes, plain canned pumpkin (not pie filling) in small amounts. A teaspoon a couple times a week adds soluble fiber.
Most cats poop once a day. Past 48 hours is constipation territory. Past 72 is a vet call.