So do ginger marmalade cats seem to be more prone to digestive problems?

I ask this because my parents have a ginger female by the way.
And she pukes up just about every thing. My sister got her as a kitten and she was always vomiting any food she was given.
She has trouble even now.
Some neighbors of mine had a ginger tom named Buddy. Buddy was great.
He would play fetch. And they didn’t teach him either. You could throw anything and he chase it and bring it back.
But he puked up every thing and usually on their bed. They took him the vet and discovered he was missing some kind of enzyme and he was given some kind of paste. As long as he got that paste he was fine. He was a great cat. We called him Buddus Pukus but he didn’t seem to mind.
I know it’s only two cats so it’s statically not significant.

Mine doesn’t throw up very much at all. My black and white cat, on the other hand, would puke at least once per week. However, when I got the orange one from the shelter it took several months (transitioning carefully between each one) to find a food that didn’t give him loose stools. The expensive, natural grain-and-allergen-free foods were actually the worst for this, causing outright diarrhea. Funny enough, he does best on plain old cheap Purina Cat Chow (gentle formula) which probably horrifies some people but you know what, it works :lol:

Not an orange cat thing. Lots of cats are, however, fed inappropriately. Most of the chronic vomiting cats I encounter as a veterinarian stop once they’re taken off of dry food and put on wet.

I have two male gingers, one female ginger and one female Torby with a lot of ginger in her. None of them puke up anything except for the occasional hairball. They are all on Taste of the Wild dry food and each get a spoonful of salmon or tuna daily.

I have a big red tabby. He’s always been very particular about what he eats, and he does have a sensitive stomach. Hasn’t vomited much as an adult, but did for probably up to age 2 or so. He was adopted from a shelter. Literally all he ate in his youth was dry kibble. If I gave him canned food, he’d literally have a gag reflex just from smelling it. My alpha male cat gradually got my red tabby to try human foods like chicken, fish, cheese, vanilla ice cream. To this day, red tabby has very distinct peferences for cetain food, and will only occasionally nibble at some canned cat foods, and only Friskies pate varieties. My ex I dubbed him “The Working Man’s Cat” due to cat’s obvious preference for budget cat kibble. Lol