T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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305.1 | only four for me | AKOV68::BROWN | | Tue Aug 19 1986 12:33 | 18 |
| I don't know if this will work in all multi-cat families, but I'll
tell you how I feed my four cats and generally avoid conflicts:
everybody has a separate dish, put down in a separate corner of
the room. In the beginning I had to use the plant sprayer to
discourage raids on the others' dishes but now they are pretty good
about only eating from their dish. This lets me give them different
amounts of food according to their size and activity level, and
give individual medication as well. I'm sure the hungriest one
steals leftovers anyway, I can't deny that I do find the 'wrong
cat' at the 'wrong dish'. At least they start out at the 'right
dish' and get their fair share -- even my timid littlest one. I
have found that my cats try very hard to maintain their individuality
and really seem to prefer having their very own dish; of course
I also have to feed them in a specific order or all h__l breaks
loose! They are very set in their ways and in this instance it
works to my advantage. In the beginning you'll have to stand guard
and apply discipline until they get the idea, as I said a plant
sprayer worked well for me. Good luck!
|
305.2 | separate rooms | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Tue Aug 19 1986 16:36 | 12 |
| No manner of aversion will deter KIWI from eating any and
all food he can get at. When he hit 14 pounds we realized
a change was in order. Not only did we put Kiwi on a diet
(Hill's R/D), but we fed him separately in another room.
We continue to feed Kiwi in a separate room and he doesn't
get let out until the other 2 cats are done eating. If you
don't want to stand guard every night as you say, then this
may be your only solution. Actually, it's not too much of a
hassle to do this.
Donna
|
305.3 | no space | STUBBI::REINKE | | Tue Aug 19 1986 17:20 | 6 |
| I don't have enough rooms! Other than one bedroom (and I can just
*see* my son's reaction if I suggested feeding a cat in his room!)
the only downstairs places with doors on them are the bathroom which
can't be locked from the outside (it has a latch not a handle) and the
top of the cellar stairs. I lock the dogs outside while I feed the
cats to keep *them* out of the cat food.
|
305.4 | cat cages? | NZOV01::PARKINSON | Hrothgar | Wed Aug 20 1986 02:39 | 9 |
| We had this problem with our two, Sura used to eat his dinner really
fast then start on Kimi's. We have a cat cage we use for visits
to the vet, cat shows etc, so we started feeding Kimi in the cage.
You'd need more than one cage with five cats (maybe four cages?)
but you could probably use at least 2 cages for general transport
etc. Kimi usually jumps into his cage at dinner time as a hint that
he ought to be fed (subtle isn't he?). Maybe you could isolate the
chronic food stealers in cages (the reverse of what we do).
|
305.5 | little cats , big bellies | FIXER::WRIGHTON | | Wed Aug 20 1986 05:01 | 10 |
| Our two little terrors , Sooty & Sweep , get through about 12oz
of tinned food per day each plus a handful of munchies for good
measure . They weigh in at about 9lbs each and are 1 yaer old
(is this a normal age/weight ratio??)
One thing that i find curious is that don't appear to drink much
unless they are doing that when they are out , and couldn't
care less about milk . Any comments ???
regards DC
|
305.6 | don't need much space | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Thu Aug 21 1986 12:33 | 17 |
| A downstairs bedroom is exactly where we feed KIWI.
They don't take too long to eat so maybe your son
wouldn't mind too much volunteering his room twice
a day for 10 minutes or so. Doesn't seem like too
much to ask. You don't necessarily have to split
the 5 up into separate areas. You could just se-
parate the aggressive eaters from the non-aggressive
ones.
re .5 Maybe because 1 year old is still a growing
stage for cats, but 12 oz. is a lot! As long as
they're not overweight, and 9lbs isn't overweight
for an average size cat. My adult cats get approx.
4oz of wet food and 1/8 cup of dry food per day.
They weigh in at 6, 9, and 12 lbs.
Donna
|
305.7 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Thu Aug 21 1986 15:52 | 7 |
| RE: .5
12 oz seems like a lot for a 9 lb cat; have they been checked for
tape worms??
Deb
|
305.8 | Feeding 6 cats | SHOGUN::HEFFEL | Tracey Heffelfinger | Thu Aug 21 1986 22:19 | 20 |
| We have 6 cats that we have to separate for their food.
Merry was up to 20 lbs at one point. (Not all fat. He's a
BIG cat. His "normal" weight should be around 15 lb.) We had him
one room with his restricted food. Two FUS cats with their CD in
another and the remaining 3 in the kitchen with their Science Diet.
They quickly learned where to go for their food. Two of the rooms
we used to feed in are bedrooms. There really is no mess. And
just a few minutes of keeping the door closed.
Nowadays, we feed 3 in one room and 3 in the kitchen. The 3
that eat in the bedroom, come running and the ones that eat in the
kitchen stay there until I get back to give them their food. ALthough
agression was not the cause of our seperate feedings, we did have
a competition problem. Merry would bolt his food and throw it up
a few minutes later. Now that he only has to compete with 2 other
cats instead of 5, he hardly ever throws up.
tlh
|
305.9 | 3 cats and a kitten | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Mon Nov 24 1986 13:05 | 13 |
| We now only have four cats to feed at once, but we still seperate
them at mealtime. Monroe is at the bottom of the pecking order
so he eats by himself in the front bathroom. Jesse and Winston
eat together in the master bathroom(all three of them get C/D for
FUS). Jouissance has to eat by herself in the cat room because
she is so tiny (13 weeks) and easily distracted from her dinner.
The others would play "hey Jou Jou... look at this neat toy", and
then when she started playing they would gobble up her kitten food.
The only cat that doesn't like this arrangement is Jou Jou, she
is a social kind of cat and doesn't like being by herself even if
it is for her own good.
Jo Ann
|
305.10 | update | STUBBI::B_REINKE | Down with bench Biology | Tue Dec 02 1986 16:34 | 4 |
| We seem to have solved our feeding problems. I bought more dishes
so that no two cats share even a double bowl. We also have made
liberal use of a spray bottle to keep them off the table until
the food has been served.
|