It always amazes me when I see the aftermath of what had to be a cat's hunt. Usually, if the prey is a bird, there will be a hunk of wing and tail feathers left and nothing else. This means that the cat has eaten the meat, the blood, the head, (including the beak) feet, bones, internal organs and even most of the feathers. What a digestive system cats must have, considering that they seldom chew and don't really have teeth equipped for that anyway. In the case of a mouse as prey, usually all that's left is a little puff of gray fur and that's about it. You won't even see a drop of blood. It's almost as if the cat licks the spot clean after dining. Nice that there's an animal who cleans up after itself so thoroughly. Now, let's talk about that 'mouse flavored' cat food. First of all, how do we know what mouse tastes like if the food is only FLAVORED like a mouse? We would have to process actual mouse meat, (might as well toss in the bones, and everything else as well) in order for it to be genuinely mouse flavored. I think my cat would be just as happy with peanut butter flavored cat food, that is, if I could persuade her to eat canned cat food in the first place. I'm pretty sure she considers that glop as suitable only for dogs. Okay, now I've grossed myself out completely... and I just ate too.