Petlibro is rolling out a new smart feeder line called Granary 2, aimed at pet parents who want tighter control over meal timing, portions, and behavior tracking. The series builds on the company’s earlier Granary models and adds more sensors, smarter schedules, and app features that try to keep both you and your pet on a steady routine. It is designed for cats and small dogs, especially in homes where people are away at work for long stretches or travel often.
The Granary 2 lineup centers on automated feeding with programmable schedules and precise portion control. Owners can set up multiple meals per day, with exact gram amounts, through the Petlibro app. The feeder is built to keep kibble fresh with sealed storage and controlled dispensing, meant to avoid food sitting out too long or being poured in uneven amounts. The company says these changes come from studying long term feeding habits and common problems like overfeeding, underfeeding, and inconsistent meal times.
A big focus of Granary 2 is behavior and health monitoring, moving the feeder beyond just dropping food in a bowl. The system tracks how much and how often a pet eats, then shows trends in the app so owners can spot changes early. Sudden drops or spikes in intake can be early signs of health issues, so having that history in one place can help when talking to a vet. The app keeps a log of feeding events and pet activity around the feeder, which can make it easier to adjust diet or timing as a pet ages or their health needs shift.
Granary 2 also leans into the “smart home” angle with app controls and real time alerts. Owners can start a manual feeding from their phone, change schedules on the fly, and get notifications if a scheduled meal is skipped or if the feeder runs low on food. The idea is to give people who travel or work long hours some peace of mind that their pet is still getting consistent meals. For multi person households, the app can help everyone stay on the same page about who changed what and when.
Design and safety are another selling point for the series, with Petlibro stressing reliability and backup systems. The feeders are built with anti clog mechanisms to keep kibble from jamming inside the chute. Many models in this line pair plug in power with battery backup so feeding keeps going during power outages. The housing and bowl are laid out to make cleaning easier, which is important for keeping bacteria down when food is always in contact with the same surfaces.
Petlibro positions Granary 2 as the result of several years of testing different ways pets interact with automated feeders. The company says it studied how cats and dogs respond to different noise levels, bowl shapes, and feed patterns, then adjusted Granary 2 to be quieter and less disruptive. While pricing and specific model names are not detailed in the announcement, the series is aimed at pet owners who want more control and data than a basic timer feeder can give. For anyone trying to keep a pet on a strict weight plan or just craving fewer “did I feed the cat?” moments, Granary 2 is built to make scheduled, tracked feeding more routine.
View the original press release.