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- #41
The crazy search for food has reached new limits and horizons.
Yesterday, both kitties allied in the search and were able to find a new 12-pack box of wet food pouches in another room. They opened the box up, managed to grab a pouch and started chewing on it, until we found them and stopped the game. The pouches had been already pierced through and partially eaten inside.
A few hours later, Giada, the older of the two, woke up from her nap and walked down the corridor where she puked. I went there immediately and found some stomach juices, a hairball and a strange piece of something in the middle. It was a rather large piece of the plastic material of the pouches. That rascal not only ate part of the content of the pouches, but the packaging as well
Only two hours later, Freya, the other cat, puked as well. Her whole dinner, along with two tiny whitish pieces of something I couldn't tell what it was. And exactly an hour later she puked again a long roll of wet food and dozens of those whitish pieces. In that moment we recognized it was kitchen garbage. My wife had disposed of some fresh pasta that was past the expire date and had developed a little mold on it in the package. This other rascal had managed to open the lid of the kitchen waste bin and eat the rotten waste!
She was a bit down all night, and I only gave her half of her kibble meal at midnight.
This morning Freya attempted to eat the kitchen rug (fabric!) and later on I caught her chewing on the clothes' basket handles.
They both know no limits for eating, but Freya is really driving me mad!
Yesterday, both kitties allied in the search and were able to find a new 12-pack box of wet food pouches in another room. They opened the box up, managed to grab a pouch and started chewing on it, until we found them and stopped the game. The pouches had been already pierced through and partially eaten inside.
A few hours later, Giada, the older of the two, woke up from her nap and walked down the corridor where she puked. I went there immediately and found some stomach juices, a hairball and a strange piece of something in the middle. It was a rather large piece of the plastic material of the pouches. That rascal not only ate part of the content of the pouches, but the packaging as well
Only two hours later, Freya, the other cat, puked as well. Her whole dinner, along with two tiny whitish pieces of something I couldn't tell what it was. And exactly an hour later she puked again a long roll of wet food and dozens of those whitish pieces. In that moment we recognized it was kitchen garbage. My wife had disposed of some fresh pasta that was past the expire date and had developed a little mold on it in the package. This other rascal had managed to open the lid of the kitchen waste bin and eat the rotten waste!
She was a bit down all night, and I only gave her half of her kibble meal at midnight.
This morning Freya attempted to eat the kitchen rug (fabric!) and later on I caught her chewing on the clothes' basket handles.
They both know no limits for eating, but Freya is really driving me mad!