I had a chat with Sean the other day about the raw feeding and he wasn't really keen on the idea. Issues were mainly to do with Salmonella and if Becky got this, she probably wouldn't survive. I did find as well when I fed them on it the other night, Becky got totally bunged up, so much so I had to take her to the vets as her tummy was so swollen I'm still not sure what to do
Don't worry Dawn, lots of vets go on about salmonella and most of them are aginst raw feeding, apart from the holistic vets , but its not a problem in cats (as it would be for us) Cats have highly acidic gut which deals with any nasties, and a fast transit time, they are, after all, designed to eat raw meat. I know owners who have been feeding raw diet for 10 yrs or more, with never a problem.
This is from catinfo.org (written by a vet):
http://catinfo.org/ (perhaps Sean would be interested in reading about it
)
Cats are very different from humans with respect to their susceptibility to ‘food poisoning’. Cats have a much shorter transit time through their intestinal tract than humans do (about 12 hours, or less, for the cat versus 35-55 hours for the human). This is a very important point because the more time bacteria spend in the intestines, the more they multiply, eventually leading to intestinal upset.
A properly handled and prepared raw meat diet has much less bacteria in it than many commercial dry foods. Commercial pet foods may also contain high levels of mold toxins from grains which are never a danger in a grainless raw meat diet.Constipation can be a problem with any food and can be if you are transitioning to a raw diet - so its probably better to start with a raw diet thats made complete with the addition of the Instincts supplement I posted about before, which contains all the things needed to make it balanced.
http://www.felinefuture.com/