Monday, 12 November 2012

Homemade Cat food turned raw meat diet

Thanks to Reuters for the picture.

My husband and I have been on the road to feeding our family more healthy, natural, homemade foods and it just dawned on us that we had forgotten our cat!

I started reading some of the ingredients (and lack of real ingredients) in the store bought brands, and I determined we were just feeding her a bunch of filler and garbage. After spending a number of hours researching homemade cat food recipes it occurred to me that cooked grains and vegetables was not what domesticated cats ate in households even 100 years ago and for thousands of years before that.

After more reading, more website visits, and joining some eGroups, it led me to agree with many raw feeding enthusiasts: raw meat, bones, organs, etc. are what cats should be eating. Cats are obligate omnivores; they need flesh of other animals to survive and can't break down plant matter. They naturally have grinders (teeth) specific for tearing flesh and bones for eating and they're natural predators. This makes so much sense to me.


We are raising our own poultry for eggs and eventually for meat, and plan to get some meat rabbits in the spring or summer (after my husband is finally finished his Bachelor degree), so why not raise some extra for the kitty? And mice, too?

I'm looking into it, getting some advice from veteran raw feeders and looking for the most simple and economical way to feed my family, including the animals. Hopefully when we make the transition it will be easy for us and good for her (it's all about balance).

Jenn

Thursday, 8 November 2012

Hallowe'en from an Orthodox mom's perspective

Picture credited to Anna E. October 2011.

I just wanted to see my cute, little boys dressed up and to go out to meet the neighbours, so we took the books out for Hallowe'en this year. And the boys were so cute, and the neighbours were so nice and the treats were plentiful. It's really amazing how many people really go all out for this holiday!

I think it was the wrong choice for us. Most other Christian families I know don't go out, some of our closest Orthodox friends do, almost all of our non-Christian friends go, and everyone has their own reasons (or not). Whatever may be the decisions of others, my husband and I had previously discussed and decided not to take the boys out.  Not to bring it up, not to talk about it, to basically pretend that it didn't exist. It wouldn't be hard because both my husband's birthday and my oldest son's birthday are just a few days on either side of Hallowe'en.

We talked about giving out treats as it is a hospitable thing to do (don't turn away guests, which makes sense to me), so that's not really celebrating it. But dressing up the kiddies and taking them door-to-door, even using the "reason" of getting to know the neighbours, is actively participating in a holiday we don't agree with.

Why don't I agree with it? For one, it encourages scary, ugly, nightmare-ish images: witches cackling, dismembered mummies, mean ghosts and zombies. For another, it's been largely commercialized for the profit, and I really dislike anything that's around just to put money in the pocket of these gratuitously large businesses. Lastly, it takes death, and disfigures it to resemble something hokey, something to poke fun of and to make light of it.

So, is it worth the fight? Well, I guess we'll see when we get there. Am I making too a big deal out of it? I'll keep reading and talking to my husband and priest. Either way, I hope I'll be stronger next year at least to stick to what I decide.