T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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328.1 | See #15 | CLUSTA::TAMIR | | Mon Sep 15 1986 16:32 | 11 |
| You might look at note # 15 and all its replies. It requires a
great deal of patience! I used to sit on the floor in front of
my kitty's scratching post to show him how much fun it was to use
it, and he figured that since I enjoyed it so much, he'd use the
couch and let me have the scratching post! Fortunately, he how
uses his scratching posts exclusively.
It may just be a matter of finding the right kind of post for Pu.
Carpet vs. sisal vs. wood.... Good luck!
Mary
|
328.2 | Catnip might help | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Mon Sep 15 1986 16:34 | 5 |
| Have you considered rubbing catnip into the scratching post? and
if the post is near the furniture, the catnip odor may lure kitty
to the post when the urge to scratchcomes over her.
Deb
|
328.3 | | CLT::BENNISON | | Mon Sep 15 1986 21:51 | 13 |
| Many cats aren't susceptable to catnip.
As far as corporal punishment is concerned, I don't believe in sparing
the rod when it comes to cats. As long as you don't overdo it and
make sure you do it in such a way that any cat with an IQ of ten
could figure out why it was being beat, then I don't think you will
make your cat paranoid. When our current cat was 6 months old he
got it into his head that it was great fun to sneak under the covers
at night and practice mousing with my feet, no holds barred. The
last time he did that he got drop-kicked halfway across the room.
That was 12 years ago. He's a happy cat who now doesn't do anything
under the covers except sleep curled up in the crook of a warm knee.
|
328.4 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Sep 16 1986 12:48 | 6 |
| >Many cats aren't susceptable to catnip.
True, but many ARE. It's worth a try, and it worked with my twins
Panther and Eirene.
Deb
|
328.5 | hitting - NO!! | HIGHFI::BRODERICK | aka <momcat> | Tue Sep 16 1986 13:41 | 26 |
| i could not disagree with .3 more - .0, you are right to be reluctant
to hit your cat - you may very well end up with a nasty, unhappy,
resentful animal (who STILL may not do what you want) if you start
to do this - i generally feel this way about dogs, too, although i've
read a great deal in cat books/magazines that strongly support my way
of thinking, particularly about cats -
what you CAN do, is a little more difficult to say - i see a couple
possibilities:
1) provide lots of 'approved' places - my cats' favorite place seems
to be a unit with short looped carpet - a firm "No!" should be
applied when kitty uses 'unapproved' places (most of my cats
very much want to please, and this is usually sufficient)
remember, kitty may be bored - make sure lots of play-time and
play-things are offered
2) if #1 doesn't work, you could try clipping your cats' nails -
be sure you leave plenty of margin next to the quick, and take
it slow if kitty isn't used to this to be sure it is not an
unpleasant ordeal - if you're patient, most cats will probably
be very tolerant of this, but BE GENTLE and PATIENT!
karen
|
328.6 | | CLT::BENNISON | | Tue Sep 16 1986 13:55 | 10 |
| Clipping claws doesn't do any good. As I mentioned, even cats who
have had their claws surgically remove still "sharpen" their claws
on furniture (i.e., go through the motions.) And clipping claws
will not significantly reduce the damage.
Saying NO! may or may not have any effect on a cat. I suspect it
will have more impact if it is occasionally accompanied by a swat.
I've had many, many cats, and I've never made one mean or paranoid
by the few swats I've given them. As I say, the important thing
is that they know what the swat is for.
|
328.7 | Try this... | KOALA::FAMULARO | Joe, ZK02-2/R94, DTN381-2565 | Tue Sep 16 1986 14:02 | 11 |
| I agree with reply .5. I found that keeping a rolled up newspaper
or magazine handy and slapping firmly against MY hand at the same
time I yell, "NO!!!", does the trick. The loud noise of the paper
hitting MY hand combined with the voice works well. Use the same
word, such as "NO", all the time so that the cat equates one word
with disapproval.
Cat may think I'm pretty stupid hitting myself everytime he does
something wrong, but it does the trick and it's worked for all three
of them.
|
328.8 | good luck! | HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Tue Sep 16 1986 14:54 | 17 |
| I usually yell "CAT!" if one of them misbehaves - they know which
one of them is guilty. It took a few months when I first got The
Fickle (while she was an Only Cat) before she would react to that
(say, when munching houseplants). I got them a big floor-to-ceiling
cat tree when we got a new sofa, and after they got used to it they
seemed to prefer it (no bumbling humans come along and dump kitty
on the floor in order to sit up there). Sometimes I have had to
whack one or the other kitty on the nose - which is also how they
discipline each other if one of them (usually Nebula!) gets out
of line (say, grabbing the dangling tail of her sleeping housemate...).
They also do not like water being dripped on them - I'm not around
often enough to sit with a squirtgun guarding the furniture, though.
As it stands now, the sofa is in pretty good shape, but the kitchen
chair backs look pretty sad - we ended up putting balloons, which
the cats do not like, on the chair seats to discourage the kitties.
They also don't like the smell of "NO!", but neither do I so I seldom
use it. Good luck!
|
328.9 | | CLT::BENNISON | | Tue Sep 16 1986 16:22 | 29 |
| .8 just proved my case. I've had cats in my house for 16 years
and I have never had ANY furniture damage. If it doesn't hurt you
all that bad to hit your hand with the newspaper then why do you
think it will hurt the cat that bad to be hit with it. In fact,
I am told that cats skin is thicker then human skin. The cat won't
like it that much, that's the point, but it won't damage the cat,
either physically or mentally.
Now, there are only three corporal offenses in our house:
1) Fighting and biting (beyond play)
2) Failure to use the kitty box
3) Scratching the furniture
There are numerous disdemeanors:
4) Chewing electrical cords
5) Walking on dining tables or kitchen counters
6) Sneaking outside (for our inside cat, our outside cat came
to us wild and she gets the basement or outside as she
pleases)
7) Etc. Etc.
These are offenses for which the cat is only yelled at and/or chased.
Our cats never do 1), 2), or 3) except, of course, when they are
first being trained. Our cats are ALWAYS doing 4), 5), 6), and
7). The reason is obvious.
|
328.10 | catnip | TRUMAN::PLATT | | Tue Sep 23 1986 17:42 | 3 |
| I tried the catnip idea with Pu. She doesn't seem the least bit
interested. Guess she never developed a "taste" for it as a kitten.
|
328.11 | driftwood | ROLL::CIAVOLA | | Mon Sep 29 1986 16:39 | 8 |
|
I picked up a sturdy piece of driftwood at the beach! All 3 cats
love it. Its a bit of an eyesore (in the corner of the kitchen)
but it sure beats having your furniture torn up. Especially when
your not home to correct them!
Pam C.
|
328.12 | Purrsistence... | CANVAS::SAUTA | | Mon Sep 29 1986 20:06 | 22 |
| Our two cats are great around the furniture except for 1 chair.
We used the squirtgun and loud voiced NO approach with an occasional
slap at the paws if the first 2 approaches didn't work. They don't
bother the chair when we're home, but are clever enough to do it
when we're not around. It's at the point where it needs reupholstering
and I will probably resort to a spray when it first comes back to
see if I can break the cycle. We do keep their claws trimmed, but
that doesn't seem to make a great deal of difference. I don't know
what it is about that 1 chair, but they're good about the rest of
the furniture. We have 3 carpeted scratching posts located in various
rooms of the house, and these also get a workout.
Oh yes, we recently brought home a beautiful, hand-knotted (and
expensive!) wool rug from China. We left it rolled up and ran out
to do some chores. By the time we came back, it had obviously been
used as a scratching post. I guess the kitties figured it was new and
therefore was fair game. Needless to say, the next time we found
them even sniffing the rug, all you-know-what broke loose.
Lynne
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