Quote:
Originally Posted by kjc I'd also place two bowls of water out, one in the same room and one for her. Measure the amounts in each, one she has access to and the other she can't access. At the end of the day, measure the amounts left in each bowl. Subtract the difference of the bowl she can't access from the bowl she can access, that will be the amount she drank taking into account any that evaporated.
If she's peeing more often, she may have a Urinary Tract Infection. Are you able to tell the amount she's peeing or are you judging by the time she spends trying to pee? |
I have been measuring, 1 cup of water, when I give fresh water I measure what is in the bowl, it's the same amount I put in, not much evaportes I change 4 / 5 times a day. lol she's doesn't "try" to pee, she goes out and squats right away, a nice pee-pee, not a couple of drops. She's not peeing more then she normally does, since she's not drinking where is all the pee comng from, I didn't think canned food had tht much liquid in it. She is peeing out more then she is taking in, that's my concern. And what she takes from the spoon amounts to maybe a table spoon. I am always offering her water from the spoon, she laps it up or just takes 1 or 2 little laps, so maybe all the laps equal 2 tablespoons a day.