T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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213.1 | Keep him in the basement while you're out | TOOLS::DICKAU | Martin Dickau | Sat Feb 15 1986 12:37 | 13 |
| Do you have a basement? If it has a warm area in it (either where
the furnace/water heater is or perhaps a window on the south side
that sun shines in during the day), give him a nice place to sleep
down there and shut him in the basement when you are not home.
You'd just have to make sure there's not much in the basement he
could destroy.
When you come home, you could let him up into the rest of the
house, but when you leave, back down he goes. As he grows older,
the problem will probably go away, and then you could let him have
the run of the house again while you're gone, if you want to.
Martin
|
213.2 | Basement? (HA HA HA HA) | USHS01::MALLORY | Kevin Mallory -Dallas SWS | Sun Feb 16 1986 12:53 | 11 |
| Basement? In Dallas? What a laugh. I don't think people down here
have ever seen a basement.
As for his age, he's allready almost 2. I think that I really need
to get him a playmate. Just haven't found the right one yet.
As for being shut up in a single room, he HATES to be put in a room
by himself - he'll chew the carpet at the door, or the wall next
to the door to get out. (he can even open un-locked doors)
|
213.3 | Oh well. So much for looking before leaping. | CLT::DICKAU | Martin Dickau | Sun Feb 16 1986 17:58 | 13 |
| Never occurred to me you might be 'down South'. Guess I should pay
more attention to personal names... :-)
Sounds like a playmate may be a good idea, but you may be letting
yourself in for twice as much destruction. What about a "toy" that
he can destroy (or he and a playmate can destroy)? Something like
a large cardboard box, inverted with lots of holes (many too small
for him to get through) cut in it. You could even be creative and
attach various interesting item to it (string, etc). If he
shredded the box, well, you'd have cardboard shavings to pick up
every night, but your bills would be safe...
Martin
|
213.4 | Toy's R US loves me. | USHS01::MALLORY | Kevin Mallory -Dallas SWS | Sun Feb 16 1986 18:44 | 14 |
| RE: .3 You're forgiven. I WISH i had a basement (was raised in
Vermont). As for toys - he has a whole cardboard box full of them.
He HATES cat toys, so I have to buy him things like small chilrens
stuffed animals... and yeah He tears them up.
He also likes to get into the Toilet Paper. remembering that he
has now claws? He can reduce a full roll to a pile of pieces in
less than an hour! (i've been curing this behavior with tabasco
sauce on the remains, and then back in his mouth - With this method,
we've reduced the frequency from once a week to once every couple
of months.. just when he forgot how tabasco sauce tastes...)
Any suggestions of better toys, greatly appreciated.
|
213.5 | How about the bathroom? | TLE::DAVIDSON | | Mon Feb 17 1986 09:27 | 5 |
| Does your bathroom have a window? One of my family's cats, a
wonderful Burmese, would be put in the bathroom while we were out.
The worst that would happen is that she'd pull down all the towels
and take a nap on each!
|
213.6 | I know how you feel... | ZEPPO::ROMBERG | Kathy Romberg DTN 276-8189 | Mon Feb 17 1986 09:35 | 37 |
|
I have to sympathize with you - Josh and Becky are much the same
as your kitty (and there's 2 of them!!!). I came home after
Christmas in NYC, Maryland and Virginia to find 3 chewed strings of
Christmas tree lights, 2 chewed telephone cords and a chewed modem
cord. Needless to say, I was not very impressed. They even had my
roomie for company most of the time I was gone!!!!
My solution to my problems is to cover all exposed cords (run
them through plastic tubing, tape them into corners, etc. I think
the next time I go away I will remove all phone cords and put them
in a closet.
I have a small suspicion that when J and B get hungry, if
there's nothing in their food bowl, they start chomping on whatever
they can sink their teeth into and get some resistance (kind of like
chewing gum for cats :-)).
Like you I have no basement, and locking the cats in the
in a single room is liable to lead to destruction of that room. I
now have a ritual of trying to put away (in a drawer or something)
those items that I don't want to have fanged to death. Many of my
paperback books have puncture wounds in the covers because of being
left on a table!
I solved MY toilet paper problem in the following way, albeit
not very glamorous: cut the middle section out of a 2 liter soda
bottle (the part that makes a nice cylinder). Cut it so you can
"open" it up to be a rectangular piece. Put over toilet paper roll.
This has solved almost all of my TP problems (occasionally I forget
to put it back on after using the TP, but....)
Good luck - I'll also be watching to see any new solutions!!
Kathy
|
213.7 | Keep looking for a companion! | SHOGUN::HEFFEL | Tracey Heffelfinger | Mon Feb 17 1986 11:17 | 20 |
| Try putting your bills in one of those letter holders that hang
on the wall. (I realize that this doesn't stop widespread destruction
but it'll stop your bills from being eaten.)
At the risk of stating the obvious, Can you spend more time with
him? Try to tire him out when you play with him.
Cat Toy reccomendation: Peacock feathers. Our cats go beserk
over them. They are great to really get them moving. Get the reallly
long ones. The only problem is that they are fairly fragile so
they eventually bend and break. We repair them with tape till they
break and them give them to the cats to shred. And shred them they
do! They have reduced 3 foot feathers to a pile of 1/4 inch long
pieces.
If you can't find them anywhere else, try a cat show the next
time there is one in town.
tlh
|
213.8 | | VIRTUE::AITEL | | Mon Feb 17 1986 11:38 | 21 |
| The best toy I've found is a fur/pipecleaner spider on an elastic
string. This has been tied to one of the kitchen chairs for about
2 months now (the previous one wasn't tied up and got completely
torn apart in about a month). The cats go nutty over it - Chorniy
was up late last night miouwing at it until I rescued him!
We had to keep our bathroom door closed for a few months while the
habits of tp shredding and shower curtain fighting (one cat in
tub, one on the floor, large holes in the shower curtain resulted...)
were broken. Having 2 cats does NOT reduce destruction, although
it's not quite twice as much.
We tend to put away in drawers or behind closed doors anything moveable
that the cats have decided is destruction material. Then we give
them something else to do. They're like 3-year-olds but a lot more
mobile (I've never seen a 3-year-old on top of a curtain rod batting
at a spider-web!) and a lot less smart (Thanks for that!). Some
of the same strategies seem to work - more attention and a substitute
toy for the thing that you're taking away.
--Louise
|
213.9 | CATS: Train your owner! | USHS01::MALLORY | Kevin Mallory -Dallas SWS | Mon Feb 17 1986 13:13 | 18 |
| RE .-3 No there aren't any windows in the bathroom. This is another
thing that the cat book that I mentioned in .0 talks about.. So
now I have all of my mini-blinds up 5-6" where the cat can sit in
the window and look out during the day. As for locking him in ANY
room, well he's a screamer - And i'm sure the neighbors (i have
a condo) think that i'm beating him... The best punishment solution
that i've found lately, is "locking" him in the shower - He has
a real hard time getting out, and usually gives up, frustrated..
RE: .others - I try and spend as much time as I can with him, and
when we do play I usually can tire him out... but like I say,
he's real hard to please when It comes to toys.. he'd much
rather play with the TP than that "cute little furry mouse"
Some other time i'll tell you about the houseplants that I used
to have!
|
213.10 | How about a rabbit's foot? | CLT::DICKAU | Martin Dickau | Mon Feb 17 1986 14:55 | 9 |
| A friend of mine gave my kittens a "mouse" made out of a real
rabbit's foot. This toy proved quite destruction-proof (the phony
tail and eyes lasted only a matter of seconds, but the rest hung
in there), and it kept them busy for hours -- I believe the smell
and taste had something to do with it (no catnip on it, though).
The only problem is finding it after it ends up under furniture,
etc.
Martin
|
213.11 | tub-hockey | TRIVIA::TABER | Prosthetic Intelligence Research | Tue Feb 18 1986 08:43 | 4 |
| Another device that seems to keep cats happy is a couple of ping-pong
balls tossed into the bathtub. They can play hockey for hours, and the
shape of the tub keeps the ping-pong balls moving.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
213.12 | Cheap thrills | MANANA::DICKSON | | Tue Feb 18 1986 11:52 | 11 |
| We have given up on store-bought toys for our cats. They are just
as amused with things we find around the house. The only bought
thing they like is the Hartz hollow plastic ball with catnip inside.
We have two of these to cut down on the amount of time spent looking
under the sofa. It is also important to put these away before going
to bed, lest you are awakened at 3am by the sound of the plastic balls
bouncing of the kitchen cabinets.
When he can't get at the plastic balls, Izzy will scoop the ice
cubes out of your glass and play with them. He will also steal
your pen if you lay it down.
|
213.13 | hmmm... in the tub? | USHS01::MALLORY | Kevin Mallory -Dallas SWS | Tue Feb 18 1986 21:02 | 13 |
| I like the idea of the ping pong balls, however I had to move the
litter box in there 'cause he used to do it on the floor when he
was mad at me.... so now if he's mad he either a) does in on the
floor where the litter box USED to be or b) goes in the bathtub.
I'll try the ping pong balls just the same, though. 'cause it isn't
hard to wash the litter down the drain.
RE: .12 i'll try one of those hartz balls, and see... I can't seem
to get Sebastian interested in things like ice cubes... he likes
things like trash cans better.
|
213.14 | rawhide | RAJA::SKI | | Wed Feb 19 1986 08:23 | 6 |
| My cat used to chew everything. Finally, I tried using rawhide chew
sticks for dogs. He chewed those for a while and hasn't chewed
anything else since.
Stan S
|
213.15 | write rings are fun too | ISTARI::SKALTSIS | | Mon Feb 24 1986 15:28 | 18 |
| My 4 little "angles" love those raw hide chew sticks better than
the furniture legs that they used to chew on.
Have you got any cat furniture? ever since we got the delux
kitty playground, they tire themselves out doing all sorts of
acrobatics. They also seem to be facinated by anything round, and
in particular, write-rings that I've "borrowed" from the lab (my
cat Gus can catch them like a frisbee, unless of course I'm trying
to show him doing it to a friend.
Also, one more TP suggestion. My cat Pip used to grab the end of
the roll and run thru every room in the house with it. What I did
was to take wrap a wash cloth around the roll and fasten it with
a close-pin. (It looked stupid, but it broke her or the habit).
Good luck,
Deb
|
213.16 | Another cheap toy | CFIG1::DENHAM | Beam me up Scottie | Mon Feb 24 1986 20:31 | 8 |
| Get an empty thread spool, tie a string through it and tie it to
a doornob. My cat's will play with this cheap toy for hours, except
when the younger one takes the string off of the doornob so she
can carry it all over the house. This is the best toy I've ever
seen for cats.
/Kathleen
|
213.17 | And furthermore ... | MMO01::BAKER | | Sat Mar 01 1986 00:13 | 8 |
| Since this topic seems to have turned into 'cat toys', I might as
well throw my two cents worth in. Tie a bunch of rubber bands together,
roll up some aluminum foil into a tight ball, attach ball to end
of rubber bands, and hang 'rubber band ball' from the middle of
an open doorway so that the cat will have to jump up to retrieve
it. Guaranteed to drive the cat beserk and tire him/her out.
-fmb (Nashville Cats)
|
213.18 | thanks a bunch! | USHS01::MALLORY | Kevin Mallory -Dallas SWS | Tue Mar 04 1986 02:42 | 4 |
| Thanks everyone for your responses. I'll let you know
which of the toys work out the best.
Kevin
|
213.19 | | MANANA::DICKSON | | Tue Mar 04 1986 10:40 | 2 |
| I would advise against aluminum foil and rubber bands as cat toys.
Neither one is good for a cat to swallow.
|
213.20 | another sad story | DPD03::MALLORY | | Sat Nov 15 1986 12:10 | 34 |
| Well i have another 'sad' story to add to this conference. 2 weeks
ago after an out of court legal settelment with my condo's builder
(which is another story in itself), I was fortunate enough to have
to move. I took Sebastian (who is now over 2) out to some friends
house in the country where he was going to live for a couple of
weeks until I could get another place together and get moved in.
He freaked... started running circles around the dining room table.
When I tried to pick him up, he bit a big chunk out of my hand.
Recall that this is the same cat (or did I not tell this story) who the
Vet asked me not to bring back.... (after this I had in-home vet care
that went very well) This cat is the most loving wonderful cat at home
with me where he knows/undertands what is going on. He was even fine
in the car... not happy about it but not viciously biting me.
Well... my friend called her friend (a Vet) who suggested we see
if we could catch him and bring him over. We did (after an hour
or so) and he just wouldn't calm down.
I had to have Sebastian put to sleep. And of course since he had
bit me they had to do nasty things to his body to make sure that
he didn't have rabies (I *KNOW* that he didn't have them).
Sebastian almost NEVER went outside the enviornment of my house.
I guess that the moral of this story is to take your "housebound"
kittens out with you a few times while they are young.
needless to say, my whole life is in a shambles over this loss.
Thanks for a sympathetic (furry) ear.
Kevin
|
213.21 | Every Cat needs a chance to adapt! | DONJON::SCHREINER | danger zone | Mon Nov 17 1986 10:04 | 41 |
| Kevin,
I feel very sorry for your loss, but...
Did you ever consider giving the cat time to calm down...
Sorry to flame, but I just have to...
You bring the cat to a strange environment, and then chase it around
and wonder why it bit you...then you chase it around some more,
stick it in the car and bring it to the vet....
Wonder why the cat won't calm down???
What ever happened to putting the cat in a quiet room, giving it
food and water and forgetting about it for a while???
I feel very sorry for your loss, but you just weren't fair to the
cat. Any cat taken out of it's normal environment will be stressed
for a while. Especially one that is so attached to its owner.
I experienced a similar incident about 6 weeks ago when myself and
a friend moved in together. He has a cat that had lived in the
same house with no other cats for 4 years. The cat was very nervous
for about a week or so, and then calmed down and now interacts with
my cats.
I really don't think you gave Sebastian a chance. And I think your
idea about bringing kittens out to socialize them is really not
applicable. Any cat/kitten whatever is going to act displaced in
a strange environment....the idea is to get them through it as best
you can.
Sorry, I read this earlier this morning and then had to come back
and add my 2 cents. Your previous note really made me angry.
cin
|
213.22 | Putting a healthy animal to sleep | YODA::BACON | | Mon Nov 17 1986 18:38 | 50 |
| RE: -1, -2
Kevin,
I'm going through the same heartbreak right now. A month ago I
made the choice to put my two Bouviers to sleep. It was the hardest
decision I ever made. But now that it's over, I think I made the
right decision, and I think you did also.
My situation was similar to yours, in that my Bouviers were very
friendly and loving towards me, but they weren't socialized properly
when they were young. (I got them as adults). I loved them VERY
much. I live alone, except for my dogs and cats, so my pets are
my companions and joy in life. I'd had several problems with aggressive
behavior, and uncontrollable behavior from the dogs. One day one
of the dogs was playing too roughly with one of my cats, and when
I went in to save the cat, my hand got hurt. That's when I started
realizing that this was a long term problem. It wasn't going to
just go away or cure itself. After a lot of soul searching and
talking to experts, I realized that my dogs would always be problem
dogs because of their rough puppyhood. Anyway - your situation
sounded similar to mine, and I wanted to let you know that you're
not the only one who's had to make this tough decision.
Also, the last reply irked me a little. I think this person was
much too hard in their judgment. Anyone who loves their animals
as their children, and has to make the decision to have them put
to sleep, deserves the credit of being given the benefit of the
doubt..... that it wasn't an impulsive, or emotionally easy decision,
and that ALL THE ALTERNATIVES HAD BEEN CONSIDERED.
Since a vet has refused to treat your cat, I would guess that poor
Sebastian was a little worse than just your standard skittery cat.
And we have to think a little bit practically in this situation....
In my case, I was looking at living the next ten years afraid my
dogs my hurt someone seriously some day. And the same for Sebastian,
since he had already exhibited a tendency to bite. I think the
person who wrote the last reply should "wear our shoes" for a mile,
and have to go through what we've just gone through before such
a harsh judgment is made. We loved our animals very very much,
and never would have had them put to sleep unless we felt it was
the right thing to do.
- Molly -
P.S. Sorry to talk about dogs in the cats notesfile, but I think
this is more an issue of putting a physically healthy animal to
sleep, than of cats and dogs. Also.... sorry to be so long-winded,
but as you can tell, this is a subject that is very close to me
right now and it struck a nerve. I guess I should have said <flame
on> at the beginning!
|
213.23 | SNAP Decision? Hardly... | DPD03::MALLORY | | Mon Nov 17 1986 23:07 | 26 |
| link .22 says... you need to walk in my shoes for a while.
Sebastian had a history of biting and had been refused treatment
by not only 1 but 2 VETS!
<!!!FLAME ON!!!>
Of course I have him time to calm down... I placed him in a room
by himself and let him explore for nearly 3 hours. It was after
this 3 hours that he bit me....
IT WASN'T A SNAP DECISION AND BY NO MEANS WAS IT EASY!
Sebastian was all that I had in my life to make it stable.
I can be very thankful that there are other people in my life that
do understand what I've had to go through in the last weeks and
do sympathaize with me.
<FLAME OFF>
Forgive me if i'm a little more than a little upset, or if I didn't
give enough information the first time but.... I can't be anything
but emotional about this right now.
|
213.24 | No flame intended! | GLINKA::GREENE | | Tue Nov 18 1986 21:29 | 29 |
| Admittedly, it IS difficult for us "outsiders" to understand what
you were experiencing, but please understand that the ONLY information
we have is what you share with us.
Concerning you previous reply (.23), for example, you mentioned
leaving the cat in a room alone for 3 hours. Some of us (me included)
will leave cats alone in a room for several days (sometimes many
days) to let them settle down. My two new "middle-aged kittens"
are isolated from the other cats and the rest of the household
routine, and will be *gradually* introduced. For the past 3 days,
I have visited them for short times, sat quietly, and brought food,
water, and toys. They are slowly becoming less timid around ME,
but the next step involves The Meeting of The Cats. And here we
have no violence or frantic behaviors.
On the other hand, about 20 years ago, we had a little kitten who
truly ATTACKED my feet from under the bed. NOT playful -- she would
lunge, sink her teeth into my achilles tendon, and hang on for dear
life. We took her to the vet for observation finally, and he concluded
that there was indeed something wrong with her, and that we would
have to either place her on a farm to be a barn mouser or put her
to sleep. We couldn't find a farm to take her.
What probably concerns some of us is that you were dealing with
a cat that had already successfully been a pet/family_member, and
now needed help/time adjusting to a new environment.
Penelope
|
213.25 | | NINJA::HEFFEL | Tracey Heffelfinger | Wed Nov 19 1986 10:11 | 40 |
|
Another "don't judge til you've been there" reply.
I have a vet shredder myself. I know how hard it to describe
to someone how frightening my cat can be at the vet's. (And
occasionally at home.) Bear in mind that I've had cats all my life.
I've worked at a vet's as an animal handler and was complimented
by the vets and animal owners alike for my ability to calm animals
in tense situations. I could work with/handle many animals that
no one else could touch. I'm not easily intimidated. Pippin at
the vet's scares the shit out of me. (And he gets worse everytime
we take him in.) I come out of the examination room with my heart
pounding and my hands shaking. I consider myself VERY fortunate to
have a vet that continues to see him. He would be well within his
rights to refuse to treat him.
I once read an article about wills that stipulate the destruction
of pets upon the death of the owner. I thought that was the most
egocentric thing I'd ever read. (Well, I'm not alive, so my pets
have no need to live any longer either.) UNTIL Pippin's behavior
started to degrade. I probably won't have to worry about it, since
I'm very likely to outlive my cat, but, I'm seriously rethinking
my position on this. I'm the only one who can come anywhere close
to controlling Pippin. (And that control is tenuous and becoming
more so all the time.) The bad thing is that Pippin is an FUS cat.
If I'm not there, I don't know how they are gonna get this cat treated!
Most of the time, Pippin is a lover. But if it gets to the
point that I can't treat him, he'll be put down. Better an easy
death than a painful one of FUS .
For the benefit of those of you who have never been "Blessed"
with the opportunity to see a truly terrified and panicking cat:
a) Be aware that they can get so out of hand that they hurt them
selves, running, fast, straight into things and b) I invite you
to come help me, the vet, and his assistant to get Pippin in the bag
the next time he needs to go to the vet.
tlh
|
213.26 | This is not a "flame", just an opinion | DONJON::KBLUBAUGH | | Wed Nov 19 1986 15:38 | 15 |
| Re: .24
I can't help agreeing that 3 hours certainly isn't enough time for
a cat to adjust to a new environment. When I brought my second
cat into my house, it took AT LEAST a week for her to stop howling,
running, scratching, hissing, biting (and everything else she could think
of doing), before I could consider getting her to the vet's for a
checkup. And, believe me, there is nothing more frightening (and
heart wrenching) than to see a panic_stricken cat acting this way!
Please don't get me wrong, I'm not "flaming" at Kevin for the decision
that he made. I'm only trying to say that you have to give a cat
more than 3 hours to adjust to something new.
_kab
|