T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
469.1 | ...look out stomach - here it comes! | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Mon Feb 09 1987 10:15 | 15 |
|
Experience with a chewer? Oh yes, I've had plenty. My Shawsheen did
that quite a bit for about 4 or 5 months. He was not quite a year
old when he started, and he stopped for no known reason. He seemed
to like the same things your kitty does. Once he ate the tie on
my bathrobe. It was a very long one - perhaps 10 inches or so.
Yes, He did in fact eat it, but everything came out ok in the end
(if you follow me). He also liked slip straps and head phone cords.
He seemed to go in phases. For the first six months of his life,
all I seemed to ever say to him was "what have you got in your mouth
now!". He would eat anything. Then, he went thru this chewing
thing. Then he got over both. He now is very normal about what
he eats and he never chews anything. Hang in there - it sounds
like a kitten thing to me.
|
469.2 | She's chewing some of her own belongings now...yea! | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Mon Feb 09 1987 17:07 | 12 |
| Well, I've borrowed some rawhide chews from the dog I'm babysitting
and Bailey thinks they're great to bat and carry around but as for
chewing...the other stuff is still better.
I've noticed some little red things in the litter box lately and
have determined she's now chewing the red sock cat nip toy. At
least we're getting into her own belongings and away from mine...hope
this trend continues.
Thanks for letting me know I'm not alone with this problem. Hopefully
Bailey will decide to stop chewing like your kitty did.
|
469.3 | watch that plastic wrap! | PARITY::SICARD | | Mon Feb 09 1987 21:58 | 18 |
| MMMM, my coon kitten loves to eat plastic,shoelaces and string.
So far things come out ok in the "end", but I was really worried
after I found him just about finished with a quite large piece of
plastic wrap, the cellophane kind. I never thought that would pass
through, but it did, just like all the others. I have found that
shoes must be hidden if they have laces, and anything plasticy,crunchy,
has to be carefully disposed of. Meat wrappers are also a favorite,
especially if it held steaks. The vet said it could very possibly
be because of his being taken away from his mom much too early,
(6 weeks) - should be 3-4 months for coons.
But it is a bit aggravating to be rushing off to work, slipping
on a shoe and finding the laces chewed right down to the little
holes! I think by eliminating all sources of things like this to
munch on, he's beginning to forget about it, and hopefully will
stop doing it. He's 1 1/2 now.
Denise
|
469.4 | Good luck | USHS01::MCALLISTER | TARDIS Sales and Service Co. | Tue Feb 10 1987 09:21 | 8 |
| Good luck on the forgetting...
My 4-5 year oldsd sure haven't
Crunch will eat leather laces off your shoes while you are wearing
them.
Dave
|
469.5 | Don't know if this will help, but... | ZEPPO::ROMBERG | Kathy Romberg DTN 276-8189 | Tue Feb 10 1987 09:24 | 8 |
|
...Josh and Becky seem to ease up on their chewing forbidden
things (plants, phone cords, q-tips, rubber bands, etc.) if they
have some dry food to crunch on once a day. This is against their
doctor's wishes, but he agrees that if it keeps potentially
dangerous things out of their insides, it's preferable to surgery!!
|
469.6 | Our's too! | CANVAS::SAUTA | | Tue Feb 10 1987 13:20 | 23 |
| Hi Jan,
Boy does your story sound familar. Our first cat ate shoelaces,
my bathing suit straps (from my favorite suit too!), bra straps
and the inner ties to several bathrobes. He also had this thing
for velcro - we have diving watches and prefer the velcro straps.
Well, every time we forgot to hide the watches at night, we'd have
a frantic hunt in the morning all around the house to see where
they "walked" to. Usually the staps were non-functional once we
found them.
Our only thought was that he liked the salt that was probably on
the clothes and watch straps. We tried hanging things up, he'd
go on search and destroy missions in the closets and bathrooms.
I remember literally pulling things out of his throat if we caught
him in time.
We never did break the habit, but he never got sick either.
Good luck!
Lynne
|
469.7 | FUS, dry food and chewing | GALWAY::SMARTIN | | Tue Feb 10 1987 17:31 | 11 |
| I agree with the dry food to 'crunch' on. When mine had to lay
off dry food for a while (vets advice to straighten out hair ball
problems) they chewed on lots of things - which the hadn't before
and quit doing once the dry food was available again.
The vet on PBS's Cats and Dogs said the other night that wet food
versus dry food wasn't a major concern in preventing FUS. (May
very well be a useful choice after a cat acquires FUS - but she
didn't say.)
Sally
|
469.8 | But she has dry food... | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Wed Feb 11 1987 15:34 | 10 |
| Thanks for the advice about dry food. Only problem is that she
has dry food to crunch on all the time. She's a self-feeder. I
give her Science Diet Feline Growth. She loves it. I give her
wet food occasionally.
Last night I got a little careless and left my new Isotoner gloves
within reach (the ones I bought to replace the first pair she chewed)
so now I have an air conditioned thumb in one glove. I could have
sworn I put them away. I don't know what made me angrier, her chewing
them or me being so careless.
|
469.9 | Mine ate sweaters!!! | DONJON::SCHREINER | Go ahead, make me PURRR... | Thu Feb 19 1987 11:28 | 12 |
| I used to have a "chewer", and what I did was take some material
scraps and cut them into strips, then tied knots down the strips
to create "material toys". This seemed to be a great substitute
and the cat would play with these for hours. She also couldn't
swallow it because of the knots.
Might even be a good idea to create these out of something she's
already destroyed!!
Hope this helps.
cin
|
469.10 | Bailey's not feeling too will right now | PUZZLE::CORDESJA | | Thu Feb 19 1987 20:39 | 26 |
| Thanks for the advice Cin, I think I'll give this a try.
Actually she hasn't chewed anything lately, partly because I've
been trying to remember to keep everything put away. I'm taking
her to the vet on Saturday. Her personality has suddenly changed.
I'm worried something she swallowed may be giving her trouble.
All she wants to do is lay around and sleep. She doesn't talk to
me or lick my face. Usually she naps on the sofa arm and keeps
her distance when the tv is on but lately I'll start to lean back
and their will be Bailey curled up behind me. She's still eating
her food but not as much, I can tell because there's alot of food
left when I come home in the evening and usually its almost gone.
I'm really worried about her. She half-heartedly played with her
favorite toy last night. This is the one that she usually goes
nuts over.
She's still taking care of her major duties like meeting me at the
door and sitting on the sink making sure I get my makeup on right
and brush my teeth properly. She just doesn't have the energy for
her lesser obligations like playing with Amelia
Jan
|
469.11 | chin up for Bailey | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Fri Feb 20 1987 10:28 | 14 |
|
Jan,
I know it is useless to say this, but "don't worry". Not yet at
least. I had a kitty once that would get that way every few years.
I would take him to the vet, and he would be very cranky, so the
vet and I had a hard time telling if he was hurting somewhere, or
just being a pain in the you know what. It would be determined,
however, that he was running a fever. A few pills later, he would
be as good as new. We never figured out if it was a pending abcess,
urinary problems discovered early, or what. The bottom line is that
this one cat would start laying low, I would bring him in for a
check up, he would get antibiotics and then be good as new. So
- save your worrying. It might not be needed this time.
|
469.12 | Chew Chew Chew Chew Chew Chew Chew Chew | SCRUZ::CORDES_JA | | Fri Jun 12 1987 14:46 | 29 |
| Well, its June now and my chewing problems have not gone away.
We've moved on to bigger and better things. I still get careless
every now and then and Bailey discovers a new treat to munch. I've
lost several T-shirts, my rugby style night shirt has gotten the
worst of it (I think its going to become one of the suggested material
toys), a bathing suit, and my powder blue Firenza sweater now has
air conditioning in one sleeve. I've tried to remember to throw
my clothes in the closet instead of around my room but Amelia opens
closet doors and Bailey probably sits nearby encouraging her to do it.
I bought some "Bitter Apple" and have sprayed it on shoe laces and
other favorite things and this works until the Bitter Apple evaporates
out of whatever its on. I have to spray the Afghan my grandmother
made on a regular basis. Its either that or store it in a closet
instead of on the couch.
Jo Ann keeps telling me I ought to break her of this. I've tried
and tried. Does anyone know of a good animal psychologist in the
San Jose, CA area. Maybe she has deep-seated feelings about her
mother. I don't know...I'm grasping at straws. Anyone have any
better ideas??
[Just to recap, leaving dry food for her doesn't help. She gobbles
it all down then goes to work on the clothes.]
Jan
P.S. I forgot, she also has this amazing love for chewing the feet
out of panty hose and workout tights.
|