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    Switching kitten from wet to dry food at 14 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
    So you're thinking of moving your kitten from wet pouches to dry kibble — totally understandable, and at 14 weeks it's actually a reasonable time to make that shift, as long as you do it gradually. Before I point you in the right direction, a couple of quick questions: is your kitten currently eating the pouches well with no digestive issues? And do you know roughly what brand or recipe you've been using? That'll help me make sure the dry food I suggest is a sensible nutritional step forward rather than a jump in the dark.
    Yeah she's been eating fine, no issues at all. We've been on Felix As Good As It Looks kitten pouches. She's an Asian Semi-longhair, 14 weeks old, and I just want something easier to manage day to day.
    inparticular.ai
    Great — Felix pouches are a decent starting point so her gut is in good shape, which makes a transition easier. Asian Semi-longhairs are a medium-sized breed, quite active and inquisitive, so she'll need a kibble that's properly calorie-dense and packed with protein to support her growth through this rapid development phase. The one thing worth flagging is that dry food has much lower moisture content than wet, so you'll want to make sure she drinks well — a fountain can help enormously with that. Can I ask: are you planning to go fully dry, or would you be open to keeping a small amount of wet food alongside it?
    Ideally fully dry, just for simplicity. I can get a water fountain though, that's a good shout.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect, fully dry is absolutely workable as long as fresh water is always available. My clear recommendation for your girl is Royal Canin Kitten dry food — the standard 2kg or 4kg bag. It's specifically formulated for kittens up to 12 months, with a high protein content, optimal calcium and phosphorus ratios for bone development, and a kibble size that's designed for small kitten jaws. It's also highly digestible, which matters a lot when you're switching foods. Compared to the Felix pouches, the ingredient quality is a meaningful step up, and it'll carry her right through to her first birthday when you'd move her onto an adult formula. The transition should take about 7–10 days: start with roughly 25% kibble mixed into her current pouches, increase the ratio every two to three days, and watch her stools — firm and well-formed means she's handling it well.
    View Royal Canin Size Health Nutrition Adult on AmazonView Royal Canin Kitten on AmazonView Royal Canin Kitten Dry Food on Amazon
    That sounds straightforward. Is Royal Canin Kitten easy to find, and roughly how much should I be feeding her at this age?
    inparticular.ai
    Very easy to find — it's on Amazon UK, Zooplus, Pets at Home, most supermarkets. At 14 weeks and a typical weight of around 1–1.5kg for an Asian Semi-longhair at this stage, you're looking at roughly 35–45g per day split across three meals. There's a feeding guide on the back of the bag based on target adult weight, which for this breed is usually around 3.5–5kg for a female — use that as your guide and adjust slightly if she's looking too lean or rounding out. Three meals a day at her age is ideal; you can drop to two at around six months.
    Brilliant, that's really helpful. I'll grab the 2kg bag to start and see how she gets on.
    inparticular.ai
    That's exactly the right call — start with the 2kg, confirm she takes to it well, then move to the 4kg for better value once you know she's happy. If you notice any loose stools beyond the first couple of days of transition, just slow the switch down rather than stopping entirely. She sounds like a healthy, well-settled kitten, so I'd expect it to go smoothly. Enjoy the easier routine — and the water fountain really will make a difference long-term for kidney health, so well worth adding.

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

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