Kanga for Cats is our Kangaroo recipe. With the benefit of lean muscle meat, vitamin and mineral-rich offal, calcium-rich crushed bone as well as biologically appropriate amounts of carrots, wheat grass, barley grass, whole eggs, live probiotics, prebiotics alfalfa and kelp. Kick the can to the curb and let your furry feline into the raw food realm!
*Available in 1.3kg pack with 12 x 115g individual patties.
View Big Dog BARF Collection.
Ingredients
Kanga for cats will also include beef tripe, along with beef meat. It will also contain lettuce and pumpkin instead of celery
New ingredients:
Kangaroo (meat, crushed bone & cartilage, heart, liver, lung, trachea), chicken (meat, crushed bone & cartilage), beef (meat, washed tripe), seasonal vegetables (carrots, lettuce, green beans, pumpkin), whole chicken egg, sprouted wheatgrass, cold pressed ground flaxseed, goats whey, psyllium, kelp, organic fulvic acid.
Guaranteed Analysis
Protein 16.5%,
Fat 8%,
Fibre 1% Maximum,
Calcium 0.6%,
Phosphorus 0.5%,
Calcium: Phosphorus ratio 1:0.8, Ash 2.3%, Moisture 73%.
Kj/100g = 661 Kj/serve (250g)=760
Feeding Guide
We recommend feeding adult cats 2-3% of their body weight daily (this is based on an average sized 4kg cat) and kittens 4-6%.
However, our feeding guidelines are a guide and your pets metabolism, breed, size, age and activity level may affect their overall nutritional requirements. Many people wish to replace a raw meal with an appropriate serve of meaty bones for dental health which is an important part of ensuring a healthy raw fed pet. Also taking into account treats as part of the daily energy from food being provided to your pet has an impact.
The important thing to focus on ultimately is that your pet is within a healthy weight range.
It is fine for younger animals (especially puppies) to have extra fat (aka puppy fat) sub 6 months of age. As they grow into adults, its more important to fine tune their diet to suit a healthy weight. A healthy weight can be measured in a number of simple physical ways. Ribs shouldn’t be prominent but should be able to be felt with a thin covering of fat over the top. There should be a visible abdominal tuck and when you look at your pet from above, they should have a visible waist. If the ribs can be seen, increase their daily food allowance, if they no longer have a waist and look like a log from above, decrease their daily food allowance until their waist returns.