Why Soft Dry Cat Food Is Ideal For Senior Cats – Top 3 Benefits

Read our article: What Is The Top 5 Soft Dry Cat Food For Seniors –

Are you looking for the perfect soft dry cat food to meet your senior cat’s special dietary needs?

In this video, we’ll show you why soft dry cat food is ideal for older cats and how it can help improve their digestion, weight management, flavor, and texture.

Plus, we’ll explain how soft dry cat food makes mealtime easier with its single source of nutrition that meets all your pet’s needs.

#cats #catfood #soft #dry #seniorcat

3 Comments

  1. Isn’t this all true (and much better) for wet / canned food? Plus it has the added benefit of moisture – which seniors need (plus, a lot of them are prone to developing kidney disease).
    Dry food is also NEVER going to be a “single nutrient” food: that is because in order for kibble to be extruded and maintain its shape, it needs to be bound together – all but one brand of kibble I know use grains to do this (cats are CARNIVORES – they cannot digest carbohydrates well). Unless you are talking about freeze-dried meats, this will never be true for dry food.
    Because of the high temperatures that kibble is made at, and the high carbohydrate content, kibble will almost NEVER be as highly digestible as wet food!
    Although wet food certainly does not have as much fiber as kibble, it doesn’t have to! It’s nature as a moisture-rich, high protein food will keep the cat satisfied for longer.
    Even crappy cheap wet food is better for your cat than kibble. Unless you are feeding your cat exclusively freeze-dried meats (in that case, I would highly suggest rehydrating it), feed your cat wet food: it will always be better (unless your cat is on a prescription kibble, in that case, make a soup out of it).
    There are so many better feline nutrition videos out there: I do not suggest this one if you want what is best for your cat

  2. If you want the best for your senior, please feed them wet canned food – not kibble.
    If you cannot afford to exclusively feed wet food, do your due diligence and DO RESEARCH on the best brands (look for low-carbohydrate, high meat formulations), and when you feed it, REHYDRATE with water or broth! A lot of older cats are prone to kidney disease, and the added moisture will help (plus a low-phosphorus formulation).
    Please look at other videos for advice – particularly from certified cat nutritionists and professionals (vets aren’t necessarily nutrition-certified). I suggest watching Jackson Galaxy’s videos on nutrition (he has three)

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