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The litter tray

Cat food Sachets are a ripoff

117 replies

johnnygriff · 24/01/2018 15:28

Why are people buying sachets when they are about 4 or 5 times the price of tins? Smaller supermarkets are stopping selling tins. Why are people falling for this non recyclable con? Makes no sense to me.

OP posts:
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TuftedLadyGrotto · 31/01/2018 15:58

Sadly we can't recycle tetra paks, so we can't recycle pouches.

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Boatsonthewater · 31/01/2018 22:46

What about Burns dry food? It was invented by a vet and they are a brilliant company. I give mine the dry food wit wet Science Plan or AVA. It's a minefield isn't it? Mine is really fussy and I am being driven crazy. I hate putting all these sachets in the recycling, I don't like tinned food and the smell. I wish she would just eat dry food like my last cat did, but she will only eat it in small amounts alongside wet, in a different bowl!!

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Boatsonthewater · 31/01/2018 22:47

What are the Aldi ones called, and are they good quality?

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Greensleeves · 31/01/2018 22:48

Looked at the Applaws pouches today. We can't afford them. So our kittens will have to put up with crappy old Iams for now.

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EachandEveryone · 31/01/2018 23:13

I was looking at the Morrissons extra special pouches today for the strays and on the box it says they are sugar and grain free. Anyone tried them? Also Whiskas incredients says 40% meat which I never knew.

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PinkSparklyPussyCat · 01/02/2018 07:17

Let’s be honest here, as much as we want to feed them the best food, they are cats. They will not eat it if they don’t like it!

When I was at home all our cats were fed on Whiskas, Felix or something like that and lived to a ripe old age. They never had senior food just bog standard tins in those days.

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MikeUniformMike · 01/02/2018 13:26

The Aldi ones are called Vitacat. The gourmet ones are about £2, the not gourmet ones about £1.75.
They also do the little foil trays, treats, dry food and a budget range.
Lidl catfood is called Coshida and cost the same as Aldi. I'm off to Lidl later to get some more.

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EachandEveryone · 01/02/2018 15:08

Is the Lidl one ok quality?

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Boatsonthewater · 01/02/2018 17:54

Our cat was fed on IAMS all his life. I thought it was good quality, but it seems not ! He died at 14. The neighbour's cats were fed half a tin of Sainsbury's cat food , the most basic type, each, per day. They outlived him hugely .

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MikeUniformMike · 01/02/2018 18:38

Been to the shops to get cat food. Looked in all catfood outlets in high street. No tinned 'in gravy' catfood other than pouches.
I didn't fancy going to the supermarket.

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stickytoffeevodka · 01/02/2018 19:23

Ours are on a mix of Applaws, Wainwrights grain-free or Lily's kitchen, depending on what's on offer!

Our Maine Coon is intolerant to grain and gets really bad diarrhoea when he eats it. We switched his food about nine months ago and he's been absolutely fine since then - poos don't smell at all and he seems much happier and energetic.

It doesn't cost a lot if you buy in bulk.

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GingerKitCat · 02/02/2018 17:29

Interesting thread!

Any opinions on Porta 21 dry food (adult cat - yellow bag):

here

And Harringtons dry food (chicken with rice):

here

I thought I was doing the right thing quality-wise and it suits my budget Hmm
Cat is pretty happy (he can be a fusspot) - good coat, energy, digestion and disposition Grin
He gets occasional meat tidbits and wet food samples but I enjoy not having to deal with wet food if I'm honest.

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Badcat666 · 07/02/2018 14:45

UK pet food can be different from US. If they want to import their brands to the EU they have to comply with the EU regs which are pretty specific in what they can use so some US manufacturers are approved to import and some won't be, even in the case of the big companies.

Mine hate tinned stuff and only eat pouches, fussy sods. Only like whiskas or felix as good as it gets but have harringtons dry as has a decent protein content for the price. (Plus chicken and fish if I'm having it cos they look at me with their big cat eyes)

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hotelduvin · 07/02/2018 16:17

We tried moving to tins so that we can recycle them. Cats said NO. They ONLY like Sheba or Gourmet Perle. Even Felix pouches can "do one" according to our cats.

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Bitchfromhell · 07/02/2018 16:23

Funnily enough I've just swapped from Sheba pouches (£4 for 12 x 85g) to Butchers tins (£2.50 for 6 x 400g) because of the price difference. Also because I'm trying to be a bit eco conscious.
Both cats seem to be eating it, one seems to actively enjoy it.

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Boatsonthewater · 08/02/2018 11:38

i wonder if Butchers is suitable for kittens? They sell it in my local shop. Haven't seen it anywhere else though. My local shop has quite high mark ups.

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thecatneuterer · 09/02/2018 17:01

Kittens don't have to have specific kitten food. I've given lots of kittens Butchers. Apparently the main difference between kitten and adult food is the size of the chunks, so if they're very little just mash it up a bit.

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