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    Feeding a Savannah Kitten at 10 Weeks

    This is a specific conversation about Kitten food — the right nutrition from the start — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A 10-week-old Savannah — you're right to question whether standard kitten food cuts it, because honestly, for a hybrid breed with serval ancestry, it often doesn't. Savannahs are lean, muscular, and metabolically closer to a wild cat than your average domestic kitten. They need exceptionally high protein, minimal fillers, and a nutrient profile that supports rapid muscle and skeletal development. Kittens generally need more calories and protein than adult cats, but Savannahs turn that up another notch. Can you tell me what you're currently feeding, and do you know whether your kitten is an F1, F2, or further down the filial line? That affects how wild their dietary needs really skew.
    She's on some supermarket kitten food at the moment — I think it's Felix or something similar. I was told she's an F2 Savannah. She seems healthy but she's always hungry and her coat looks a bit dull.
    inparticular.ai
    The constant hunger and dull coat are telling you something — Felix is a fine food for a domestic moggy kitten, but the protein percentage is too low and the carbohydrate filler content is too high for an F2 Savannah. Her body is working hard to grow muscle and bone right now, and she's not getting the building blocks she needs. The always-hungry signal especially makes sense: she's eating but not getting what she actually needs from it, so her body keeps asking for more. Before I point you to something specific — is she eating wet food, dry, or a mix? And any digestive issues, loose stools, anything like that?
    Just wet pouches at the moment. No digestive issues that I've noticed, she's pretty solid. I'd be open to switching to dry or doing a mix if that's better for her.
    inparticular.ai
    Good news on the digestion front — that gives you flexibility. For an F2 Savannah at 10 weeks, I'd go straight to Orijen Cat & Kitten dry food. It's 90% animal ingredients, high protein from multiple meat and fish sources, and virtually no grain or starchy fillers. The protein level is around 40%, which is where you want to be for a hybrid breed. It's also nutritionally complete for all life stages, so it's been formulated to support kittens specifically. The ingredient quality is as close to a biologically appropriate raw diet as you'll get in a premium dry food without actually feeding raw. I'd suggest transitioning her over about a week — mix increasing amounts of Orijen in with her current wet food, then once she's fully switched you can either continue wet alongside it or go dry-only. The wet food hydration is actually beneficial for cats generally, so a mix isn't a bad long-term approach. The coat dullness should improve noticeably within three to four weeks once her protein and omega fatty acid intake comes up.
    View Orijen Cat & Kitten on Amazon
    That sounds really good. Should I be worried about anything else with her being a Savannah specifically — like are there supplements or anything she'd need on top of that?
    inparticular.ai
    With Orijen as her base, you won't need to supplement much. It includes taurine, omega-3s from fish, and the amino acid profile is comprehensive. One thing worth knowing with Savannahs specifically is that some owners and breeders recommend adding a small amount of raw meat — chicken or turkey — a few times a week as a topper, not as a replacement. It's not essential, but F2s in particular can do well with that extra raw protein hit. What I'd avoid is over-supplementing — adding things like extra calcium on top of a complete food can actually cause more harm than good in a fast-growing kitten. If her coat improves and the hunger settles on Orijen, which I'd expect it to, you're in good shape. If you're ever considering a raw or prey-model diet as she gets older, that's a conversation worth having with your vet, but for now Orijen is a solid, practical answer that covers everything she needs.
    Perfect, thank you. I'll grab the Orijen Cat & Kitten and start the transition this week.
    inparticular.ai
    You're going to notice a difference quickly — I'd expect the hunger to calm down within a week or two as she starts actually getting what she needs, and the coat should follow. Just keep the transition gradual and she'll take to it well. Savannah kittens are incredible animals and getting the nutrition right at this stage really does set them up for life. Good luck with her!

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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