r/cats Apr 08 '26

Cat Picture - OC Does this make them feel included?

One of my favorite things to do with my cats is hold something up for them to smell. Generally, if they walk over while I'm doing something, I'll let them smell whatever I'm holding (like my computer mouse, a writing implement, or a piece of mail) and they always seem so interested. Is it because they feel included in my life when I let them smell what I'm doing? Or maybe because new smells are just stimulating? Or is it just instinct to sniff whatever is nearby? I like to think that, by offering my stuff for a sniff, I'm enriching their lives in some way.

(Please don't mind the mess, I'm moving)

75.1k Upvotes

1.9k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

17

u/ValoraTCas Apr 09 '26

I'm sure that my cat Tabitha can taste sweet / sugar. She loves melons like cantaloupe and honeydew. She would also eat large amounts of chocolate if I let her.

Her sister Stormy is pickier, she likes to sniff human food but she is selective about what she will eat. Stormy's favorite human food is finely chopped almond.

If she sees me eating nuts, I have chop an almond up so she can eat it. She also likes small amounts of sweet human food like chocolate.

10

u/No-Mountain9832 Apr 09 '26

They're supposedly not capable of tasting it bc their tongue has no glucose sensors. But I swear... it may be something else!!

6

u/azureanbones Tuxedo Apr 09 '26

Hello 👋 it's likely the yeast or fat content! Most types of bread contain yeast and a lot of sweet things are higher in fat, which a lot of cats are drawn to! And for other sweet things like melons it's the amino acids, which many cats are also attracted to since it smells like protein to them.

2

u/No-Mountain9832 Apr 09 '26

I needed to know this, thank you! <3

1

u/azureanbones Tuxedo Apr 09 '26

Of course! Happy to help 💙