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- #11
He gets wet and dry. Meow mix and Purina. I just wanted to know if you saw characteristics of a certain more strongly. I understand that his heritage with being a barn cat would be nearly impossible.Unless people are in the habit of dumping rare, expensive, intact purebred cats at barns, he has no recent purebred ancestry. His parents would be mixes, their parents would be mixes, and he definitely a mix. You didn't see a Siamese, you saw a pointed cat. That is a color, not a breed. That would be like calling any calico or tortoiseshell cat a special breed, when they're not. If you truly want to know what might be mixed in there, you can spring for a Cat Ancestry genetic test. You order their kit, get a good cheek swab using the included supplies, and send it off.
Because he is not purebred, there are no specific health concerns you can look out for. Just keep in mind the normal ones for any cat. Get into the habit of brushing his teeth now, to prevent gingivitis. I wish I'd gotten my housecat as a kitten so it wasn't such a battle to get her teeth done everyday. Feed him a high quality wet food. Or if you want to take it up a higher notch, a balanced raw meat diet (either ground, frankenprey, or whole prey. Whole means you don't have to worry about organ meat and bone ratio)
Why wet? Domestic cats are obligate carnivores who were domesticated from desert cats. That means two things, they need a diet of only animal protein, and they get nearly all of their water needs from their food. Dry cat food is full of plant carbohydrates (even the high quality kinds still need to use some plant matter a binder), and it will also lead to chronic dehydration. A cat will never drink enough water from a bowl, sink, or fountain to make up for what they aren't getting on a dry diet. Under hydration leads to renal problems, such as infections, crystals, and stones.
Dry food is also not good for their teeth. Don't let people convince you that wet will rot their teeth. Dry will equally rot their teeth. Just like eating potato chips doesn't clean you teeth, eating dry food won't clean their teeth. What will clean their teeth is a soft toothbrush and some feline toothpaste, no matter what they eat. A raw diet with whole prey or bone in frankenprey will clean teeth some, too. If you've ever seen a cat gnaw a raw rabbit haunch to bits, the raw bone really scrapes their teeth well.