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Posted by: Herpeto-punk at Thu Jul 29 16:01:24 2004 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by Herpeto-punk ] Well, I think the ideal weight would best be best on her skeletal size & muscle mass. We have one cat who we thought was really starting to get fat when he hit 15 lbs at 1 year old. However, he practically overnight turned it over into muscle mass & he is now over 16 lbs & there is very little fleshyness to him. He's just HUGE and very muscular! We have another who started getting fat at the same age who all by herself dropped 3 lbs, now weighs 13lbs and is possitivly svelte. Again though she's a really big cat! She looks perfect now. Then we have another that is fat. She is big, round & fat. But she has some birth defects and previous injuries that I realize keep her a little less active & make her look fatter than she actually is, because they round her hips & back. I just don't know for sure what to do for her, because all her fat is in her abdomin. Can't make a cat do crunches as some wise person here once said, so I don't think there's much we can do about it. I'm not sure how helpful all this is to you, but I think what I'm trying to say is, don't panic, her body may just be reajusting.-- Jennifer [ Reply To This Message ] [ Subscribe to this Thread ] [ Hide Replies ]
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