Why would you want to make your cat fat? If it is overweight or overfed, it is likely they may develop serious health problems such as Diabetes. An overweight cat will not have the quality of life as a cat that is a healthy weight.
Put the cat on a diet. By "diet", I mean you need to regulate the food your cat is eating. Also, enticing your cat to play and exercise several times a day will help. If you free-feed your cat (keep a bowl of dry food down all day), you need to take this away and feed your cat small meals at set intervals - maybe three times a day. This may take a while for your cat to adjust, but its for her/his own good.
Ideally, your cat should be on a wet food diet. Good, high-quality wet foods have high meat content in and no grains. Grains, which are found in cheap wet foods and many dry foods, is what is most probably making your cat overweight, as its overeating to try and get the nutrients it needs (dry food doesn't contain much meat based protein which is what cats need). Cats cannot digest grain or corn, so it just gets converted into fat. The best thing about wet food is a cat will often eat less of this as it has far more nutrition than dry.
Good quality wet foods are high in Protein and Fat, and because cats are strict carnivores, they use these two nutrients as their primary source of energy. Be sure to look at the ingredients - The best cat foods are the ones with a very high named meat content (labeled as Chicken, Turkey, Rabbit, Lamb, Tuna, etc.) as the first, or first three, ingredients.
This conversion can take several months for cats to get used to, and several more months on top of that to get your cat at a ideal weight. Cats need to lose weight SLOWLY, as losing weight too quickly can lead to many health problems. You might want to invest in a digital scale for this so you can check up on his/her weight once a week so you can check the progress.
Cats are strict carnivores, so live predominantly on a diet of fresh raw meat. Domestic cats aren't all that different from big cats such as lions. Pet cats, like their wild cousins, get all their nutrition from meat-based proteins and fats. A pet cat that has access to outside might hunt and eat small birds, mice, voles and other small wildlife animals. Some owners feed their cats raw meat, offal (organs) and bone to mimic the food a cat would eat in the wild.
Due to the vast variety of different cat foods out there - dry and wet and even moist - each pet cat's diet can vary wildly. Premium cat foods often have a high meat content which is the best to feed your cat.
It is advisable to stay away from brands that include Corn, Wheat, Cereals, Soy and various Sugars in their foods - cats have difficulty in digesting these and do not provide any nutritional value to the cat whatsoever. Wet food with these specifications are much easier to find than in dry food.
The amount of moisture in cat food is also very important. Dry food contains no moisture, so is quite dehydrating. Cats are notoriously bad drinkers, even when they are thirsty. This is because they have evolved to get all their needed moisture from their prey (their ancestors were cats that lived in very dry and arid environments where water was hard to come by), so therefore have a low "thirst drive" and will not often seek out water on their own. This is a trait that has been passed down over the thousands of years.
Canned or pouched food has anywhere between 60 to 80% water. Seeing as in the wild a cat's prey is around 65%-75% water, wet and raw food provides a cat with more than enough water each day.
Many dry foods and low-quality wet foods are often packed with carbohydrates - "filler" in the way of grains and cereals, none of which cats can digest or gain any nutrients from. Grain is used instead of meat because it is cheaper to produce and helps kibble pieces hold together. Cats need MEAT based protein, not PLANT based protein. Cats will often overeat on lower quality foods because they are not getting all the nutrients they need, which often results in obesity.
For high-quality Cat food there is: Blue Buffalo, Felidae, Weruva, California Natural, Instinct, Prairie, Natural Balance, Eagle Pack, Wellness, EVO, Bozita (the canned stuff is 90+% meat and can be bought from zooplus.co.uk), Applaws (70+% meat and comes in both tinned and dry), HiLife (60% meat), Feline Fayre, to name a few.
Some fat is good, yes. Typically a cat needs around 5% of fat in its daily intake of food, some of which is usually provided in commercial pet food. Goose fat mixed in the food is a very good substitute if a cat needs a tiny boost in its fat intake (advisable to seek out a vet's advice first).
my cat is18" fat that is fat enough
but i'd say about 16"
you should feed it a little less than you usally do i have a fat cat called Garfield and we feed him a little less than we use too and now hes sliming up!
FOOD
Bustopher Jones
Cats.
Matty cooper is indeed good with cats.
snow sun is very good for cats
I know that white cats can look very dirty whhen they get dirty. Older white cats can look very cute. They sometimes look very fat when they are older.
Generally, Fat cats tend to be fat, and skinny cats usually are known to be skinny.
Fat Cats pizzeria, or Brooklyn pizza they are both really good.
Cats are mammals so they naturally drink milk from their mother when they are young. Milk is naturally high in fat and other nutrients, which is why cats will readily drink milk. Due to their carnivorous diet, cats need some fat in their diet.
No they have more fat
Fat Cats - 2005 is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG-13
Not all cats are fat, but for the ones that are, it is usually the same reason some humans are fat. They eat too much, or don't get enough exercise, or both. Cats often lay around and sleep.
no
not fat, pleasantly rounded only.
They tend to be fat like pumpkins.
Bustopher Jones
if they eat to much or have a disorder
yes