Real quick question: Should i put the dry food out of my kitties reach at night? Currently they have unlimited access to the dry stuff, but we try to feed them wet food twice a day.
I'm confused by this statement. Is she a kitten or is she almost 4 years old? If she's an adult, I agree with MowMow to not free feed. If she's a young kitten, then she should have access to food, IMO.Well, my little one is 3/4 of a year, and she's almost 4. I'll leave it out for the nights for now, unless someone got any other thoughts on it.
Depends. I deliberately leave dry food out for Missy. She's lighter now, I think, than when I brought her home. If she gets hungry in the night and I don't get up, she has something to nibble on.Imo, no. Free feeding dry is just asking for an obese kitty.
There is always some left, one good sized bowl lasted 2 days, only refilled today, but after the nights a good portion was always gone. Issue i'm having: She's only eating dry at the moment, i gave her different wet foods but she wouldn't have any of them.If you leave food out, does it disappear?
Because there is a never ending bowl of dry food available. She has no incentive to eat wet food...it's something she may not recognize as food, her belly is full or she can walk away and go eat dry anytime she wants.She's only eating dry at the moment, i gave her different wet foods but she wouldn't have any of them.
It also helps if you wait an hour or so after you get up to feed. A cat will wake up 30-60 minutes before meal time (the amount of time it would typically take if they needed to hunt for their food). So the 5:30 wake up call you were getting is about right. If you had continued feeding at 5:30, eventually he would have been getting you up at 4:30.A few years ago my husband and I wondered what would happen if I didn't get up. I burrowed under the covers while the racket kept going until I got up at 6:30. It took about a month for the noise to stop. I noticed he was waiting quietly next to the bed.