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Other than water?
Question for you guys, is there anything other that KMR and its clones and
water that I can give my cats to drink? Trying to come up with a little variety in drinks for the kids here. Chicken broth comes to mind, FWIW. -- Dennis Carr - | I may be out of my mind, http://www.dennis.furtopia.org | But I have more fun that way. ------------------------------------+------------------------------- |
#2
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On Mon, 03 Nov 2003 20:07:52 -0800, Dennis Carr
wrote: Question for you guys, is there anything other that KMR and its clones and water that I can give my cats to drink? Trying to come up with a little variety in drinks for the kids here. Chicken broth comes to mind, FWIW. Nature intended them to drink water. After a kitten is weaned, it no longer needs milk. |
#3
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On Mon, 03 Nov 2003 20:07:52 -0800, Dennis Carr
wrote: Question for you guys, is there anything other that KMR and its clones and water that I can give my cats to drink? Trying to come up with a little variety in drinks for the kids here. Chicken broth comes to mind, FWIW. Nature intended them to drink water. After a kitten is weaned, it no longer needs milk. |
#4
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"m. L. Briggs" wrote in message ... On Mon, 03 Nov 2003 20:07:52 -0800, Dennis Carr wrote: Question for you guys, is there anything other that KMR and its clones and water that I can give my cats to drink? Trying to come up with a little variety in drinks for the kids here. Chicken broth comes to mind, FWIW. Nature intended them to drink water. After a kitten is weaned, it no longer needs milk. yes I agree and when a cats poorly and not drinking much try adding a little glucose, dextros powder to their water. |
#5
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"m. L. Briggs" wrote in message ... On Mon, 03 Nov 2003 20:07:52 -0800, Dennis Carr wrote: Question for you guys, is there anything other that KMR and its clones and water that I can give my cats to drink? Trying to come up with a little variety in drinks for the kids here. Chicken broth comes to mind, FWIW. Nature intended them to drink water. After a kitten is weaned, it no longer needs milk. yes I agree and when a cats poorly and not drinking much try adding a little glucose, dextros powder to their water. |
#6
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Dennis Carr wrote:
Question for you guys, is there anything other that KMR and its clones and water that I can give my cats to drink? Trying to come up with a little variety in drinks for the kids here. Chicken broth comes to mind, FWIW. Plain water is best. They get their nutrients from the food you feed. Water keeps the system "flushed" out by removing impurities, etc. -- "Its the bugs that keep it running." -Joe Canuck |
#7
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Dennis Carr wrote:
Question for you guys, is there anything other that KMR and its clones and water that I can give my cats to drink? Trying to come up with a little variety in drinks for the kids here. Chicken broth comes to mind, FWIW. Plain water is best. They get their nutrients from the food you feed. Water keeps the system "flushed" out by removing impurities, etc. -- "Its the bugs that keep it running." -Joe Canuck |
#9
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In article ,
enlightened us with... Question for you guys, is there anything other that KMR and its clones and water that I can give my cats to drink? Trying to come up with a little variety in drinks for the kids here. Chicken broth comes to mind, FWIW. Chicken broth is (99% of the time) higher in sodium than God. Very bad for anything alive with veins and blood. Cats drink water. Kittens drink KMR. Calves drink milk. Actually, a cat that has a diet of all wet food (or a raw diet) often drinks very little of anything, since they have the moisture in their food. ------------------------------------------------- ~kaeli~ Jesus saves, Allah protects, and Cthulhu thinks you'd make a nice sandwich. http://www.ipwebdesign.net/wildAtHeart http://www.ipwebdesign.net/kaelisSpace ------------------------------------------------- |
#10
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On Tue, 04 Nov 2003 08:26:54 -0600, kaeli wrote:
Actually, a cat that has a diet of all wet food (or a raw diet) often drinks very little of anything, since they have the moisture in their food. That's interesting to know; on that note, about how much water should a cat be drinking on a daily basis? (Note that the cat in question is six pounds soaking wet. She is indeed relatively small.) -- Dennis Carr - | I may be out of my mind, http://www.dennis.furtopia.org | But I have more fun that way. ------------------------------------+------------------------------- |
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