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- Jun 11, 2019
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I apologize if this has been asked before. Friday is ~13 years old now. He's in good health, aside from needing to shed some pounds. He's an ex-barn cat that was brought up mainly on dry food, so that is what he prefers now. I've been trying to slowly get him to eat wet food and he will, but only the smallest dollop at a time. So when I am home I will give him a little bit at a time and I'm trying to give him a little more each time (and a little less dry) to try and get him to eat predominately wet. However, his preference for dry is clear.
Anyway, the dry food he is currently eating is Purina One Indoor Advantage, the Senior formula. He loves it. I can get a decent deal right now on the same brand, but instead of the senior formula, it is just the turkey formula for adult cats. I want to make sure he is getting everything he can, so is senior food the way to go? I know I've been told before that for dogs the senior formulations aren't really much better/different than the adult ones unless there is a health concern, but I wasn't sure if it was the same for cats. Reading the ingredients between the two formulas, it looks like the senior food is higher in fat and slightly lower in fiber, but otherwise very similar.
Thoughts?
Anyway, the dry food he is currently eating is Purina One Indoor Advantage, the Senior formula. He loves it. I can get a decent deal right now on the same brand, but instead of the senior formula, it is just the turkey formula for adult cats. I want to make sure he is getting everything he can, so is senior food the way to go? I know I've been told before that for dogs the senior formulations aren't really much better/different than the adult ones unless there is a health concern, but I wasn't sure if it was the same for cats. Reading the ingredients between the two formulas, it looks like the senior food is higher in fat and slightly lower in fiber, but otherwise very similar.
Thoughts?