In this day and age of the mighty dollar masquerading as
king, it becomes more and more difficult to trust businesses who have a vested
interest in gaining your sale. As cats can’t talk to us, or perhaps I should
say, as we can’t hear what cats are telling us, we don’t have that all
important input to know if we are providing our cats with a healthy cat food.
If you do a quick search on the internet, you’ll come across
practically all pet food manufacturers proclaiming their brand is ‘all
natural’, ‘healthy’, ‘holistic’, even ‘organic’, but in every single case they
are selling dry food.
Just think about it for a minute. Dried food which contains
any form of meat just won’t keep at room temperature. Try keeping your steak
out of the refrigerator for a few days and see what happens.
So how do pet food manufacturers keep cat food indefinitely
at room temperature?
The only possible way to do this is to add preservatives.
Despite many claims saying there are no preservatives, logic tells you there has
to be.
Cooking in itself may preserve meat a little longer than raw
meat, but not for weeks, or even years.
So what, you may be thinking, I know there are preservatives
in some of the foods I eat and I seem to be OK. Surely a few preservatives
doesn’t mean I’m not feeding my cat a healthy cat food?
I personally don’t think any preservative is OK. It may
appear to be harmless in the short term, but in the long term there will be
consequences.
But apart from my personal opinion, there are some laws,
perhaps rather basic or not well enforced, in almost every country around the
world, that protects human food. So all preservatives used in human food has to
be considered ‘reasonably safe’ by some standards.
Unfortunately, there are no such safe guards in pet food. Or
the laws are even less effectively enforced than the human laws.
So the preservatives used in cat food can be the most toxic.
Does cat food containing highly toxic preservatives sound like a healthy cat
food to you?
Ever heard of formalin? Embalmers use it to preserve dead
bodies.
Formalin, also known as formaldehyde, is widely used in pet
food to preserve it.
You probably haven’t heard of ethoxyquin. That’s a
preservative used in the rubber industry. It’s in the tyres of your car. So
what on earth is it doing in your cat food?
Lets look at ethoxyquin’s history. When factory workers were
exposed to it, they exhibited side effects similar to those of agent orange:
- constant diarrhoea
- vision disorders including blindness
- organ failure
- organ cancers
- leukaemia
Are you getting a bit concerned? Perhaps your cat is
suffering from some kind of organ damage? Here are a few other common
preservatives used in cat food to keep it at room temperature indefinitely;
·
sodium
nitrite, which gives a nice rosy colour to food and can produce powerful
carcinogenic substances known as nitrosamines
·
propyl
gallate - is now suspected of causing liver damage
·
propylene
glycol used to maintain the right texture and moisture content is used as
coolant antifreeze in engines
·
up
to 1000 times more salt than occurs naturally
No manufacturer can keep preservatives out of dry cat food
if it has a long shelf life.
So, if you don’t feed your cat a commercial cat food, what can you feed her?
To my way of thinking, the only sure way of knowing you are providing a healthy cat food is to prepare it yourself.
Before you throw your hands up in horror, saying you don’t know how, you don’t have time, that’s where I come in.
I’ve done the research for a balanced, healthy cat food.
I’ve made all the mistakes and can show how not to fall into the traps I did.
So, if you don’t feed your cat a commercial cat food, what can you feed her?
To my way of thinking, the only sure way of knowing you are providing a healthy cat food is to prepare it yourself.
Before you throw your hands up in horror, saying you don’t know how, you don’t have time, that’s where I come in.
I’ve done the research for a balanced, healthy cat food.
I’ve made all the mistakes and can show how not to fall into the traps I did.
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