>Interesting!
>
>Edie- thanks for the information! Now, I have another
>question. I have 3 cats, 2 of which are on the larger end of
>average and 1 that is a super heavy weight. I have been
>feeding them Science Diet light for years, trouble it, Ambush
>eats it all! I have tried putting only 1/3 cup of food in
>each bowl in the morning and at night, like I said, Ambush
>eats the lion's share of it. I have recently starting giving
>them 3 oz cans of wet food, and again, Ambush eats is all! I
>have no idea where this driving need to eat all the food comes
>from! If DH and I let the food bowls get empty between
>feedings, then when we fill them, Ambush eats so fast that she
>throws up! It's not like we are trying to starve them, and we
>have had all 3 from kittens! The other 2 seem to have a very
>healthy relationship with food, unlike Ambush! I don't know
>what to do next? (Sorry to ambush the highjack the
>thread....)
Amy,
Will the other 2 cats eat on demand or not? (meaning will they eat if the food is placed in front of them, or are they "grazers"?) You might have to lock Ambush out of the room and allow the other 2 to eat. Then keep the dishes up unless it's feeding time. Ambush will have to learn that she can only eat twice a day and not eat all the food in the house! Sounds like she needs a diet anyway! You might consider Hill's m/d (not to sound like a salesperson for Hills), it is a "metabolic diet" meaning that in a dry food form, it is higher protein, reduced carb. A lot of cats that have had trouble losing weight on traditional diet foods (light and less-active formulas) will often lose weight with m/d. Hope this helps!