Marguerite wrote: >We don't hammer a food store to remove "all fatty foods" or all "high >in carbohydrate" foods. Those have their places, though. They can be eaten by people in moderation, and there simply are those who DO need these products -- sometimes form special health needs. Meanwhile, with ferrets where there can be need for some to have more protein like the 50th percentile range foods (insulinoma) or less but certainly enough protein like the mid-30th percentile range foods (cystine stones) UNTIL WE KNOW HOW MUCH THE RATES OF SUCH THINGS MAY CHANGE IN RESPONSE TO DIET, and where some ferrets do best with high fat and some with moderate fat levels it does make sense to keep a range of those sorts of good foods available, but the junk that causes blockages or is very high in sugar simply doesn't make sense. I personally can see retaining a sugary supplement like Nutrical or Nutristat because that has a place in disease treatment and occasional treats. I can't see something like Yogis or things chuck full of dried fruits, seeds, or veggies like Fiesta, though. The big thing to know is that each of these two indicated a need for consumer feed-back, so these polite letters are helpful. One because he wanted to know what consumers will be buying since he wants to optimally please them, and one because he knows that he needs to be able to present a big stack of polite consumer letters to the business people to indicate that he has the power of the public behind him for making healthful changes. This is such an opportunity to make the sorts of changes we all usually can only grumble about needing. It would be shame to not follow-up. WE CAN DO THIS! [Posted in FML issue 4873]