Orijen Six Fish vs. Catit Gold Fern Chicken
If you have ferrets, please check out Ferret Love
Create an account to hide ads!
If you purchase a product or service linked from this page, we may receive a commission. We will never link to or promote unhealthy or dangerous products. 100% of profits will be donated to animal charities. Read our mission statement
Orijen has a better protein to fat ratio. However, Catit's ratio is not bad. (The ideal ratio is 2 to 1.) Catit has much fewer ingredients, which is usually a good thing. Both foods are 100% free of fruits, veggies, grains, and starches.
Orijen Six Fish
Orijen has a better protein to fat ratio. However, Catit's ratio is not bad. (The ideal ratio is 2 to 1.)
First 10 ingredients:
whole atlantic mackerel whole atlantic herring flounder whole acadian redfish atlantic monkfish silver hake mackerel meal herring meal blue whiting meal alaskan pollock oil
Catit Gold Fern Chicken
Catit has much fewer ingredients, which is usually a good thing.
First 10 ingredients:
chicken chicken gizzards chicken liver green lipped mussel fish oil natural flavoring calcium carbonate salt inulin brewer’s yeast
Orijen Six FishKibble |
Catit Gold Fern ChickenAir-Dried Raw |
|
Score
B |
Score
A+ |
|
Food Type | Kibble | Air-Dried Raw |
Meat % | Unknown | 95% |
Protein % | 40% | 43% |
Fat % | 20% | 24% |
Fiber % | 3% | 2% |
Protein to Fat Ratio | 2 to 1 | 1.79 to 1 |
Total Ingredients | 43 | 11 |
Meat Content |
12 total
high concentration, high quality |
4 total
high concentration, high quality |
Non-Meats |
24 total
low concentration |
None |
Sugar-free | Yes | Yes |
Controversial ingredient-free | Yes | Yes |
We only link to quality products. |