T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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456.1 | | NZOV03::PARKINSON | Hrothgar | Fri Jan 23 1987 01:23 | 8 |
| Have you tried a water pistol? This is how we persuaded Kimi and
Sura to stay off the kitchen bench and the dining table. Well, let's
be accurate... we persuaded them to stay off said surfaces when
we are not in sight!
After we had used the water pistol for a while, we found that pointing
a finger at them and making a gun noise had the same effect; Kimi
even rolls over as if he's been shot! He is a very dramatic cat.
|
456.2 | Our chance to play "Great Hunter" | DECWET::KOSAK | | Fri Jan 23 1987 10:38 | 9 |
| Yes, a water pistol should do the trick. In order to have this
treatment be effective even when you're not around, try to be sneaky
when you shoot them. If they don't associate you with the water
pistol they will think that unpleasant sqirt of water is triggered
by the countertop, and not by you.
Get a pistol with a long range, and good aim. Have fun :-) !
-- Craig
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456.3 | Plant Mister | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Fri Jan 23 1987 13:00 | 10 |
|
A plant mister will usually work if you unscrew the spray nozzle
a bit. The one I use has a range of about 20 feet. Also, I found
that if you let the cat see the thing when you squirt it, then you
can "protect" the area by simply leaving the mister out on the
countertop. I relaize this last part one day when I decided to
mist my plants, and the cats all dove under the couch.
- JP
|
456.4 | | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Fri Jan 23 1987 14:31 | 18 |
| I have used the plant mister and it works for me too. JP was right
about it being left in the room to keep things under control.
Sometimes I leave it in the room to discourage rough play. The
cats behave like little angels when the mister is around. And you
can also set the mister on stream to hit the cats at long range!
Oh what fun!!!
Another method that I have used with one of my cats (the obstinate
one) is to remove him bodily from the counter top and put him into
the bathroom. If he gets on the counter, he gets put in the bathroom
for time out. After about a half an hour, I let him out of the
bathroom. I don't yell and scream at him I just remove him. You
have to be consistent about this. It is the only thing that worked
on this cat, the mister seemed to be a treat to him!
Jo
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456.5 | The bathroom! I never thought of that... | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Fri Jan 23 1987 23:42 | 10 |
|
Jo, the bathroom is a good idea. I used to put one of my
cats outside when it misbehaved, and accidently trained him
to misbehave anytime he wanted to go out! The retraining
was real messy for a while, since go out usually equated to
go poop. Once I started with the mister, he learned that
the best way to get out dry was to meow at the back door.
- JP
|
456.6 | Children:The Challenge or Cats:The Challenge | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Mon Jan 26 1987 12:39 | 9 |
| JP-
Just remember to put a litter box in there with him! We keep our
litter boxes in the bathrooms anyway. This method also works great
for indiscriminate urination. Confine them to the bathroom with
the litter box following meals. Continue this practice until they
relearn proper litter box procedure. Cats are like kids, after
so much yelling and screaming they become "mother deaf"! I think
it works better to just take action.
Jo
|
456.7 | mouse traps | NEBVAX::BELFORTE | Steven's BEST half | Tue Jan 27 1987 13:55 | 7 |
| Try using mousetraps that are set, but placed upside down. They
snap real well, but they don't get the paws if they are upside down,
it just scares the heck out of the cats. HONEST, it will not hurt
the cat. You can even slightly spring them if you feel safer that
way, but the noise really does the job.
Mary-Lynn
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456.8 | aluminum tins also good | NEWVAX::BOBB | GO GIANTS!!! | Tue Jan 27 1987 15:35 | 17 |
|
Something that we've used is to put out aluminun pie tins (or the
smaller ones that you get with frozen dinners, etc.) on the counter.
When the cat jumps up, the tins make a terrific noise and that
supposedly bothers the cats.
I say "supposedly" because when I put the tins out, the cats don't
seem to go on the counters at all (since the tins don't appear to
be moved). But, when I don't put the tins out, there is cat fur
on the counter. So, they do know when the tins are/aren't there!
(smart little monsters that they are....)
Good luck!
ps - I used to use the bathroom trick when the cats would start
playing too rough with each other or with us. It was a good "quiet"
time/place.
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456.9 | masking tape | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Jan 28 1987 13:06 | 7 |
| I'm not home often enough to be effective in training the cats
(especially Nebula!) to not go on the counters by squirting them;
I find fur up there but they know better than to get caught misbehaving
(usually). A friend discovered that her long-haired kitty hated
getting things stuck in his fur, so she would put strips of masking
tape on the counters. I think he went on the counter once after
that, got tape stuck to his toes, and never tried it again!
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