Pet Food Manufacturers Comparison Chart
Dairy Ingredients in Pet Foods (Colostrum, Milk, Whey, Cheese, Yogurt)
Rationale for Dentatreatâ„¢
Rationale For Equine Dietâ„¢ and Supplements
Probiotic Supplementation
Biotic pH- and pH+
Rationale For Nutritious Oils
Clinical Veterinary Nutrition
Omega-3 Spectrum Dry
Vitamin Basics DSM
Oxidation: The Unspoken Danger in Processed Pet Foods
The Truth About Pet Foods
Rationale for Archetype Diets
Wyscin and Other Raw Food Safety Innovations at Wysong
Wysong's Master Key To Health
Does America Owe an Apology to its Pets
How to Apologize to Your Pet
Welcome - Wysong Pet Health and Nutrition
The Safety of Vitamins and Minerals in Pet Foods
Vitamin C in Pet Foods
Vitamin D in Pet Foods
Vitamin K in Pet Foods
Salt in Pet Foods
Yeast in Pet Foods
Methionine in Cat Foods
Montmorillonite Clay in Pet Foods
Mung Bean Sprouts in Pet Foods
Probiotics and Enzymes in Pet Foods
Proteinates in Pet Foods
The Soy in Pet Foods Myth
Taurine in Cat Foods
Turmeric in Pet Foods
Kelp in Pet Foods
Lecithin in Pet Foods
Limestone in Pet Foods
Meats in Pet Foods
Methionine in Pet Foods
Enterococcus Faecium in Pet Foods
Fish Oil in Pet Foods
Flax Seeds in Pet Foods
Fruits and Vegetables in Pet Foods
Garlic in Pet Foods
Poultry (Chicken) Giblets in Pet Foods
Grape Seed Extract in Pet Foods
Guar Gum in Canned Pet Foods
Corn and Soy in Pet Foods
Di Calcium Phosphate (DCP) in Pet Foods
Digests in Pet Foods
Ecklonia Cava in Pet Foods
Wysong Pet Food Ingredients Explained
Animal Plasma in Pet Foods
Artichoke in Pet Foods
Aspergillus in Pet Foods
Black Pepper in Pet Foods
Bugs, Mice and Grass as Pet Food Ingredients
Carageenan in Pet Foods
Chitin in Pet Foods
Citric Acid in Pet Foods
'Real Chicken' in Pet Foods
Fluff, Puff, and Smoke in the Pet Food Industry
Irritable Bowel Syndrome in Pets
Pet Foods and Bird Flu
High Protein Pet Foods and Kidney Disease
Dog and Cat Urinary Problems
Wysong Prevention and Therapy Guide
Allergen Free Pet Foods
Cold-Processed Canned Pet Food
Pet Foods Developed by Vets, Breeders, etc.
Grain Free Pet Food
Pet Foods Without Added Vitamins and Minerals
Tapioca in Pet Food
Are Meat By-Products in Pet Foods Bad?
Why Feed Any Processed Pet Foods?
Animal Testing and Pet Food Feeding Trials
Pet Nutrition is a Serious Health Matter
Large Breed Puppy Foods
Can Pets Consume Raw Bones?
Should Pets be Vegetarians?
Should Pets be Vegans?
Euthanized Pets as a Pet Food Ingredient
Rodents as Pet Food Ingredients
Rabbit vs. No Rabbit in Pet Foods
Breed Specific Pet Foods
22 Pet Food Fallacies
GMO Ingredients in Pet Foods
Diet Guides for Pet Health Conditions
How Important is Caloric Content in Pet Food?
The Pet Food Ingredient Game
Can Pet Health be Simple?
What are the Healthier Grains?
Raw Pet Food Deceptions Exposed
The 'Food Allergies Are Cured...' Myth
The Challenge of Properly Diagnosing Pet Food Ingredient Allergies
The 'Don't Feed Your Pet Table Scraps' Myth
The 'Don't Feed Your Pet Bones' Myth
The 'Exotic Pet Food Ingredients Mean Good Nutrition' Myth
Pet Food Toxins
Why You Should Not Rely On Pet Food Ranking and Pledges
The "Order of Pet Food Ingredients" Myth
Should You Feed Raw To Your Pet?
The Case Against Raw Frozen Pet Foods
Does 'Organic Pet Food' Mean Healthy?
Wysong Pet Foods Preservation Methods
Why are Wysong Pet Food Bags Small?
Reusing Wysong Pet Food Packaging
Why Does Wysong Make Formulation And Ingredient Changes?
Why Wysong Pet Foods Are Not Always Uniform
Wysong Pet Food Can Linings
The 100% Complete Pet Food Myth
The Real Problem in Pet Feeding
Does Your Pet Need a % of Something?
How to Rotate Wysong Pet Diets
Why Intermittent and Varied Pet Feeding
Pet Foods for Both Canine and Feline
Combining Raw Foods and Wysong Pet Diets
Fresh and Raw Pet Diets
Wysong Feeding Recommendations for Finicky Cats
How to Use Wysong Human Supplements for Pets
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong Dry Diets
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong Supplements
Wysong Pet Foods Processing Methods
Dry Matter Analysis of Wysong True Non-Thermalâ„¢ Raw and Canned Diets
Archetype Diet Differences
Archetype Special Features
Rx Diet Regulations
Pet Inoculant Uses
What Wysong Pet Diets to Begin With?
How to Transition to Wysong Pet Foods
Wysong Pet Foods Feeding Amount Guidelines
Wysong Pet Food Quality Control
Rationale for Feline Diets
Special Wysong Pet Food Features
About Wysong Healthy & Holistic Pet Food
Wysong as a Holistic Company
Comparing Pet Foods Based Upon What Matters
How To Choose Healthy Pet Foods
Ingredient Sourcing
Wysong Media
 

Rationale for Feline Diets

Wysong feeding recommendations for cats depart from the common practice today of exclusively feeding cats singular processed, manufactured foods, which claim to be "100% complete and balanced" pet food. (See the Myth of the "100% Complete and Balanced" Pet Diet, The Truth About Pet Foods.)

Without repeating these arguments here, let me briefly say that cats, of all species, are especially genetically adapted to the natural diet they would consume in the wild. Other than a few nibblings here and there of plant materials, and what would be consumed as part of the digestive tract contents of prey, cats are carnivores. Their diet would consist of the whole body of prey animals and would be raw and fresh.

Manufactured cat foods are a blend of meat parts and grains, with fortification of vitamins and minerals; this is a poor and incomplete substitute for the real thing. Nutritionists do not know all there is to know about cat nutrition and, therefore, cannot construct cat foods out of fractions and synthetics to make a "100% complete" diet. If 100% knowledge is not available, a 100% complete manufactured diet is not either. It is as plain and simple as that.

But since we cannot release our domestic cats into the wild to eat their natural diet, we are faced with the dilemma of having to prepare meals that will come as close to the archetypal pattern as possible. Such foods should be predominantly meat based, fresh, varied, and also properly manufactured raw cat foods. This indeed creates a challenge since most processing heats or otherwise alters food from its natural, raw state.

Most manufacturers leave it to nutritionists or to the results of failed feeding to determine how to construct cat foods. In other words, as long as a recipe does not cause overt problems, meets certain analytical values, or passes short-term feeding trials, all is assumed well. The cat product is put in the marketplace and only when nutritional disease strikes is a change made. For example, thousands of cats became ill and died as a result of feeding taurine-deficient premium brands of cat foods which had undergone analytical testing and feeding trial proofs. Once this was discovered, manufacturers added synthetic taurine to the diets and everything was once again considered to be "100% complete and balanced."

But this is only one crisis, only partially solved. Encouraging pet owners to feed processed cat foods that vary dramatically from the natural archetypal dietary patterns of cats is fraught with potential problems. As time moves on we will discover again and again that many of the diseases we had attributed to other causes or unknown etiology will be linked to the singular feeding of fabricated "100% complete and balanced" processed cat foods.

Wysong cat food diets are also processed. They do differ in design from other products in that they at least recognize their limitations and do not attempt to simply meet arbitrary nutritional minimums. Instead, we seek optimal nutritional value, by simulating archetypal patterns. For example, Wysong dry natural cat foods have as much fresh meat and organs in them as is possible to mix in a dry extruded product. There are also formulations - both dry and canned - that are 100% meat. After processing, various fragile natural ingredients such as enzymes, vitamins, and probiotics are enrobed on the outside to provide raw, natural, living food elements.

We encourage the use of supplements such as F-Biotic™, Biotic pH-™ or Biotic pH+™ if the cat is having urinary stone problems, EFA™ to provide high omega-3 essential fatty acids, and Pet Inoculant™ to provide high doses of probiotic microorganisms. By adding these raw, live, natural cat supplements to processed cat foods, they are brought closer to their natural, raw, whole characteristics.

Additionally, we strongly recommend the supplemental feeding of fresh, raw, meats and organs. Our Wysong TNT™ processed raw cat foods represent the least compromise from the natural feline diet. You can also feed a variety of meats and organs purchased at the grocery store and fed on a ratio of 10-15% organs with the balance being meats. Raw chicken necks and wings can be provided for the cat to chew.

Although there is a fear of food poisoning from this latter recommendation, this is by and large exaggerated. The danger to your cat in not consuming raw, fresh meat and organs far exceeds the danger of a bout of gastrointestinal problems from food-borne pathogens on raw meats (please review Should You Feed Raw To Your Pet?). Additionally, probiotics in Wysong Diets and Pet Inoculant™ help prevent food-borne pathogens from surviving, thus reducing the risk of a bout of food borne illness even more.

Wysong Feline Diets should be fed in variety. Cycle through the various dry cat foods and canned cat foods. Vary and mix these with fresh, raw, natural meats and organs. Also, follow the lifestyle recommendations described in the Wysong Optimal Health Program™.

By following this program much can be done to build cat health and prevent disease from ever striking in the first place. When disease does strike, following this feeding regimen and including the appropriate Nutrient Support Formulas developed by Wysong for the specific organ systems under stress, can do much to reverse disease.

Notice that we are not suggesting that cat caretakers look for certain percentages of protein, magnesium, phosphorous, taurine, carnitine, specific pH level, or any other analytical result or so-called proof from short-term feeding trials. We believe all of these are misleading and incomplete methods of determining food value for achieving optimal health. These methods keep nutritionists employed and manufacturers confident, but they do not address the real issue of returning cats to their genetically adapted, archetypal feeding patterns.

A more complete expose can be found in the report: "The Truth About Pet Foods."