I think I'm frugal-my husband thinks I'm cheap. We have arguments over buying cat food. I would rather feed them table scraps. What do you think?
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Do you consider yourself cheap or frugal?
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Scraps are NOT healthy for cats/dogs. A once in a while 'treat' will not hurt but NOT as regular food. My cat LOVES the liquid from water pack tuna & gets it about biweekly.
Set up a system for using bits of leftovers. Couple ideas:
Marinate lefover veggies in Italian dressing-foew days have a 'new' side dish
Have containers in the freeze for left bits of veggies and meat. When full make soup.
Have a weekly smorgasbord meal (lunch or dinner) of all leftovers
Repurpose leftovers into other meals - chicken can become MANY different dishes
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[QUOTE=marvholly;273618]Scraps are NOT healthy for cats/dogs. A once in a while 'treat' will not hurt but NOT as regular food. /QUOTE]
Agree entirely. Cheap or frugal, pet food is manufactured for pets who have a different nutritional requirements to humans. Cats have especially finicky systems requiring high protein and extra taurine intake. And I am an ex Animal Health Technician, so I know how to read those labels. Give the pets scraps to add variety to, but not replace, their diet.
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That's a question whose answer varies day to day. Some days, it's frugal, where I'm making smart money decisions based on fact and reason; others, I'm simply being cheap for the sake of being cheap. I try to aim for the former, but often find myself doing the latter....
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I don't know anything about the nutritional needs of cats, nor the expense of cat food versus people food for cats. However, I know people sometimes joke about getting by in their poverty stricken old age by living off cat food. So to some degree cat food does have a reputation of being less expensive than people food....I would not know.
However, if you are saving money in order to do the things that are important to you and your husband, and if it is important to him to feed the cat differently, why not do it? I'd try to first save money on the things that are less important to either of you, and only secondly on those things that are more important. Perhaps there is somewhere else you and/or your husband could save some money in order to feed the cat. If you and he differ on whether it is important, well, you do have to respectfully allow one another some leeway."There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid
"It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass
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Originally posted by CHH1023I'm cheap, that's why I don't own any pets.....well, that's not completely true. I do have a pet rock on my table.
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LOL. Cheap or frugal is just a matter of semantics. If the goal is saving money and building financial security and eventually financial independence and your unwillingness to spend money on certain things is helping you make progress toward achieving your goals then it doesn't matter much what you call it.
On the other hand if you refuse to spend money and you have no goals and no plan you're probably not going to get anywhere financially so again, it doesn't matter much what you call it.
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