This thread is scaring me. Pet owners have to be REALLY careful about "going raw". Meat sold in the markets these days has often been treated with growth hormones and heaven knows what else, and many meat animals are fattened up before sale with non-optimal foods and drugs different from what they would normally eat. I'm not sure I'd let my cats eat raw meat, just as I would not let them eat a wild mouse or bird due to any number of dangerous organisms that might be present in the prey. I have never seen any statistics for barn and feral cats who eat prey bones and all. It's always possible that their diet can sometimes kill them. Nobody knows.
Also, I sincerely doubt if it is safe to give bones to cats. I would think it might result in damage to their digestive systems just like dogs, from splintered bone pieces getting caught and ripping sensitive tissue.
I'm not telling you not to feed your cats raw food, but I am suggesting that you carefully check out feline vet and food requirement sites on the internet before making up your mind.
Dot in PA
Since cats are obligate Carnivores, we cannot expect them to thrive on cereal, which is what dry cat food is.
Dr. Elizabeth Hodgkins, one of the premier feline nutrition researchers, and other Vets who do research, and are not beholden to the food companies that provide them with bags of kibble,highly recommend a good raw diet for optimum health for cats.
More can be found at
http://www.felinenutritioneducationsociety.com/Raw bones, including poultry bones, are OK for cats, they don't splinter like cooked ones. If a cat doesn't get the calcium from bones, he must have it as a supplement, ie: bone meal in a raw mixture. Whole ground chicken or rabbit, bones and all, are great for cats.
Cats' digestive systems are designed to eat raw meat. People shouldn't, of course, because of things like salmonella, etc., but cats with healthy immune systems are not bothered by salmonella. Cats are not little dogs either, and are much more susceptible to obesity, diabetes, and urinary troubles as a result of eating kibble than dogs are.
Mice and birds may well carry various parasites, and vets and breeders do not recommend that cats eat them.
But the myth that kibbles are good for cats is just that, propagated by the manufacturers.
Cats need to eat meat.
Carol
Tokira Siamese and Oriental Shorthairs since 1970