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Can my 8 month old kitten eat frozen pinky mice from a pet store after it is thawed cuz i get them at the pet store for my gecko and i
was wondering if my kitten could have one and if it would be good for him...he is an indoor cat if that makes a difference...fixed male

2007-01-15 08:06:51 · 15 answers · asked by emily woods 2 in Pets Cats

The only thing im woorried about is if it has been frozen and thawed will it be ok! :)
thanx everyone

2007-01-15 08:07:34 · update #1

15 answers

No, that's not something I'd give my cat.

2007-01-15 08:12:52 · answer #1 · answered by TheWeeKiwi 3 · 2 1

Interesting....I've never heard of these. I'll see if I can come up with a definite answer one way or the other.

Ok, I couldn't find anything. I suspect it would be fine if it's alive, but I would say take a pass on buying frozen ones. It's not as if your cat NEEDS it; and if there's any doubt it's best not to do it.

I don't know that a dead mouse would appeal very much to a cat - I think at least part of the reason they may eat them is due to the hunt. So it might not be interested anyway.

But if you really want to try it, I would check with your vet. And of course check the labels, assuming they have any. If anything additional is added - if there are any ingredients besides "frozen mouse," I'd definitely pass.

2007-01-16 01:44:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If it was sold as gecko food, only feed it to your gecko. Sure, out in the wild cats ate a certain way, but cats have been domesticated and there digestive systems cannot handle what their wild cousins tummy's can! They are still carnivores and need protien, but I don't recommend the "raw" diet.

2007-01-15 08:29:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

in my view, most of the pricy cat toys are a waste of money. Our cats like their toy mice, their ball-in-a-round-song toy, between others, yet we've by no skill seen them have as a lot relaxing as they do with a huge cardboard container and crumpled newspaper. i purchased some tremendous fragile products off of ebay, or perhaps at the same time as i replaced into unpacking them, the kitties were leaping in and out of the container and taking section in interior the newspaper. also, the answer at times lies interior the affiliation of the toys. we've a $20 2-factor cat fort from objective (with those nylon cubes with holes interior the perimeters). The cats did not truly take to it at the starting up, yet after we placed the ball-in-a-song aspect next to it, they in simple terms couldn't get sufficient. that they'd spend continuously in simple terms hiding interior the fort, peeking out, then batting the ball and chickening out again interior. In my journey, cats in reality see any enclosed area as a den to hit upon, and any small shifting merchandise as prey to seek out. in case you mix both, that is even extra ideal. believe me when I say that you don't desire expensive toys. once you're sensible, you'll hit upon procedures to re-use usual issues (and by no skill have a shortage of latest playthings on your cat). they're going to ultimately get bored to death in something you purchase them, regardless of fee. ought to as well have them lose interest of a huge recycled cardboard container than a huge cat tree (which does not have any use except being a cat tree).

2016-11-24 19:43:28 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

no problem at all. cats are naturally meat eaters. a lot of people do it, especially if their cat has problems such as diabetes, etc...that was brought on buy our "domestication" of cats and destroying their bodies by feeding them dry food. as close to their natural diet is best, so raw is great for them. you don't want it to be more than 15% of their diet though without some supplements added.

2007-01-19 07:43:56 · answer #5 · answered by Cat Worship 1 · 1 0

yeah the same kind for snakes? If it will, remember mostly they eat them for survival in the wild, just because it's something from there native eating habbits, also if theres food the like they might ignore the pink marshmellow and go for another snack

2007-01-15 08:23:16 · answer #6 · answered by Juleette 6 · 0 0

I don't think it's a good idea! Why would you give one to the kitten anyway? Doesn't it have kitten food? I'm sure it would be happy enough with it's normal food. Better not risk it.

2007-01-22 12:21:53 · answer #7 · answered by Skippy 2 · 0 1

It wont hurt it,my guess is it probably wont even want it,being a inside cat, the most it might do is give it the runs... i would say not to, no reason to introduce something like that to it.

2007-01-23 02:38:54 · answer #8 · answered by kitty 4 · 0 0

I don't see why not as long as you trust the mouse supplier that they are healtyh mice.Personally I wouldn't give my cats mice but they are indoor cats.If yours is an outdoor I'm sure it's probably caught a few.

2007-01-20 21:37:09 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

No I believe it's actually not ok!

2007-01-23 02:36:34 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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