First pic reminds me how when i had a dental surgery and my cat was very insistent with getting me a cat compress on my face.
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My dog is always sweet but not always chill. We were about to take a ferry from Vancouver Island back to Washington so I gave her a chill pill before we left the house. She hates them so I normally just use the. on the fourth of July and new Year's Eve due to all the fireworks in my neighborhood. Ferry seemed like a high stress environment as well.
We stopped at a breakfast joint with outdoor seating and she hopped up next to me on the picnic table bench and was just so chill. So many people came up and pet her praising her calmness. I didn't have the heart to tell them she was just high as a kite. I think all the affection made up for her not liking the chill pills.
No bad intent here, just curious, how do cats eat after having their teeth removed?
I had taken care of a foster that had to have all his teeth removed. I am glad dry food is still an option, we opted for wet as he enjoyed it and the vet recommend us to feed any wet food over dry food for all our cats. Some cats just love dry food though and have little or no interest in wet, so like I said glad it's an option still
Perfectly fine.
My cat had the same tooth removal surgery a couple years ago (he was adopted with a mouth full of teeth where most were about to fall out). He was on soft food for about 2-3 weeks before he started picking at his dry food again. Now he gets a portion of wet food every morning, and free feeds dry all day.
What I learned from the vet is that cats use their teeth mainly to rip meat off their prey so they can swallow it, and not really to chew. So if they're presented with food that's an appropriate size to swallow, they just swallow it.
Well that's certainly not the whole truth the way mine can be heard crushing on his dry food from multiple rooms way
My understanding is that if the food is easily swallow sized, they may unintentionally crunch as they maneuver the food around their mouths to position it to be swallowed, but not out of necessity. If the food is larger, sure they'll break it up so they can swallow it easier. But by nature, cats aren't animals that need to chew food for grinding and digestive purposes (like animals that have flat/grinding molars.) As long as they can swallow it, they don't need to chew.
They don't tend to crush too much with their teeth from what I've heard, they mostly lack the molars needed for that i think, instead the can use the top and bottom jaw usually.
Might be wrong been a while since I read that.
Mine is also toothless by now. You are correct, my vet told my they're using their upper denture / jaw to crush what needs to be crushed and swallow everything else.
I was told to be careful with wet food and meat because this kind of stuff can't be crushed so it should be "bite sized" to allow her to swallow her food easily. But I don't know if this is a general thing or if this was related to an incident when my cat nearly suffocated from a piece of sausage she greedily swallowed without chewing... She's never been the sharpest tool in the shed, but we love her (人 •͈ᴗ•͈)
He's like "I didn't know what happened, but I think I'm dying. I just want you to know, I'd still eat your face if I could. Let me touch that delicious face one last time."
Another of him passed the fuck out