Case of 12 for £3.99 absolute bargain, works out @ 0.33p per tin. Dating till beginning of 2017
Not sure if national, but do check your stores
Top comments
yrreb88
5 Jun 163#16
Tuna tends to be high in salt, it's not nutritionally complete, so can lead to deficiencies and too much can cause several health issues e.g. as a result of mercury poisoning. A tiny bit, preferably from a can with spring water, as an occasional treat will be ok but certainly not exclusively or as a large part of their diet as with any fish.
Treating them with some cooked chicken or plain white fish would be a better alternative. :smiley:
All comments (17)
m5rcc
5 Jun 16#1
Cue the Greenpeace brigade...
bubbs
5 Jun 16#2
If it is the chunks thats brill, but i thought in mine on fri it said flakes
Stuntgut
5 Jun 161#3
If flakes then OK cat food.
yrreb88 to Stuntgut
5 Jun 16#8
You shouldn't really be feeding tuna as cat food. If you want to treat them, any plain white fish will be a far more suitable alternative such as the cheap frozen fish pieces you can find in any supermarket. :smiley:
dealsfinder17
5 Jun 16#4
Do apologise, put the wrong pictures up, the offer is for the flakes
dougie69 to dealsfinder17
5 Jun 161#5
yes cat food
snowflake75
5 Jun 16#6
what a lovely name for a princess! !.. lol
Kevo2k7
5 Jun 161#7
jfclfc
5 Jun 16#9
cat food just
Ego-X
5 Jun 16#10
I'm genuinely curious; why are tuna flakes unsuitable for cats?
smallclone
5 Jun 16#11
The Princes chunks recently have been of poor quality, like they've accidently put the school meal grade stuff in the wrong tins.
Plus, they have reduced the size of the tins, so you think it is a bargain getting more tins for your money.
Ross81
5 Jun 161#12
I wouldn't feed my cat tuna in brine - maybe a little spoonfull if it was in spring water
stevemack
5 Jun 16#13
Good old tuna flakes.... the bits off the floor basically
Looking4Glitches
5 Jun 16#14
Yeah flakes are stank!... probably 50% scales.
Benzyl
5 Jun 16#15
The cheap flakes seem to have been OK quality recently, better than the wet fish sawdust they traditionally were.
yrreb88
5 Jun 163#16
Tuna tends to be high in salt, it's not nutritionally complete, so can lead to deficiencies and too much can cause several health issues e.g. as a result of mercury poisoning. A tiny bit, preferably from a can with spring water, as an occasional treat will be ok but certainly not exclusively or as a large part of their diet as with any fish.
Treating them with some cooked chicken or plain white fish would be a better alternative. :smiley:
hardstylemw
7 Jun 16#17
Unfortunately this is skipjack tuna, which tastes like poo! I remember the days when you could buy non-skipjack tinned tuna!
Opening post
Found this in local farm foods, by the door!
Case of 12 for £3.99 absolute bargain, works out @ 0.33p per tin. Dating till beginning of 2017
Not sure if national, but do check your stores
Top comments
Treating them with some cooked chicken or plain white fish would be a better alternative. :smiley:
All comments (17)
Plus, they have reduced the size of the tins, so you think it is a bargain getting more tins for your money.
Treating them with some cooked chicken or plain white fish would be a better alternative. :smiley: