T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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812.1 | Maybe just the lesson she needed ! | HLIS07::VISSERS | N..N..NOTorious! | Mon Oct 05 1987 13:18 | 20 |
| Well, you may suppose when it has been a nasty experience for her
she'll think twice before climbing a tree again...
Some time ago, Chanel was heavily involved in a project "The three-
dimensional appartment" or "Just let's see where I can come if I
JUMP". Well, she could get into a rather big and heavy plant pot
that stood on one of my speaker-boxes, but on one nasty occasion
she tipped it over and broke a bone in her paw.
Luckily, not much harm was done, within 10 days she could use the
paw again, and within 2 weeks she was on full speed (you can't imagine,
it takes two grown-up humans, me & the vet, to make one silly X-Ray
of such a tiny cat's paw, and to succeed only on second try !).
The plant pot was unharmed, and is in its old place. As far as I
can guess, Chanel has declared it Taboo-area, and got a LOT more
careful about what she jumped to!
Ad
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812.2 | Give her a boost of confidence | SALES::RFI86 | | Mon Oct 05 1987 13:34 | 10 |
| One of our kitties likes to go up but not come down trees. What
we do is stand under the tree and coax her down. Reassuring her
all the way. It usually works after about 5 minutes. If you make
a habit of going up a ladder to get her she will never try to come
down but will wait for the ladder to come out and get her. Good
luck in the future. And remember, no matter how often she tells
you she can't get down the tree, she knows she realy can
Geoff
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812.3 | FOOD WOULDN'T EVEN GET HER DOWN! | SACMAN::GOLDEN | | Mon Oct 05 1987 14:13 | 19 |
| Reply to #2:
Thanks for the advice, Geoff. By the way, I DID try to coax Katie
out of the tree, but after an hour, I gave up and asked my husband
to get a ladder and get her down (it was now midnight and there
was no sense in losing sleep over it).
I got really creative (I thought). I got a flat iron rake and strapped
a pillow to the end of it. On top of the pillow I put a handful
of dry food. As I reached the rake up to her level, she put her
front paws on the pillow and got a few bites of food, but didn't
dare put all fours on the pillow (which I was sure she would!)
When my husband came out to see what I was doing, he thought I flipped!
(of course, he had to try the pillow routine himself, though!)
Was it probably a dog that chased her up the tree? When we first
saw her she was VERY high in the tree, but managed to get down to
the "V" spot before the trunk.
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812.4 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | | Mon Oct 05 1987 15:29 | 8 |
| Normally, if someone seems to be really not able to come down, I
climb to the rescue. However, when I first catsat for kaliph, my
next door neighbors' half Siamese kitten, I fetched him off the
roof several times, and then I realized it was a game, sigh. The
next time i let him get down by himself, which he did perfectly
well. I do think cats can get themselves into tree situations they
can't get out of safely, however, so I always check things out.
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812.5 | As P.T Barnum said... | TLE::SAVAGE | Neil, @Spit Brook | Mon Oct 05 1987 17:53 | 9 |
| The 'kitty-up-a-tree' is a time-honored trick. The cat can get down
if it got up under it's own power. Cats like the sensation of going
up but dislike the sensation of coming down. They are resourcefull
enough to know how to persuade sympathetic humans to 'rescue' them.
Once they've succeeded it's doubly hard to convince the cat that
you are not going to rescue them the next time. Cats have prodigious
patience, in clement weather, they will meow and appeal for many
hours, before coming down on their own. And like the watched pot,
NEVER when you are looking.
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812.6 | sometimes they really need rescuing | CIRCUS::KOLLING | | Mon Oct 05 1987 18:46 | 9 |
| Toulumne, a cat of my neighbors, once got treed in a very tall palm,
and was there for a week. It is an extremely tall tree, and no
one had a ladder tall enough and the fire dept (bleah to them) said
they don't rescue cats. My neighbors were trying to rent a "cherry
picker" when Toulu finally managed to get down. Meanwhile the retarded
20 year old or so son on the people across the street tried to climb
the tree to rescue Toulu, and fell, breaking his back. Fortunately,
he healed okay. Double bleahh to the fire dept.
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812.7 | I think cats dislike backing up anyhow | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Oct 06 1987 14:36 | 34 |
| I think it is more than not liking to go down as much as they like
to go up: I think cats do not like to go backwards in general, so
they get panicky if they get stuck someplace where the only way
out is to go backwards.
A friend of mine at one time owned a small house trailer out in
the woods in central New Hampshire, where he lived with his big
black ex-tomcat, Rufus. Rufus did not generally go outside. One
day he disappeared. Dave poked around trying to figure out where
the cat, who was used to eating dinner when his pet human did, had
gotten to, and discovered the next day when he went to take a shower,
that the BATHTUB WAS CRYING! Rufus had discovered that if you wedge
yourself into the edge of it you can "break into" the closest in
the bedroom, and similarly if you work at it with your claws you
can open the PLUMBING ACCESS for the bathtub in the back wall of
the closet. Than, if you aren't any bigger than Rufus, you can
squeeze into the area INSIDE between the inner surface of the tub
and the wall! Rufus wasn't really "stuck" in there in that he could
have gotten out if he had backed up, but none of us could reach
him to pull him out backwards, and he didn't seem to be able to
cinvince himself to get out on his own. After a few days, we
disassembled the wall on the other side of the tub, allowing a hungry
and scared kitty to emerge face first into the trailer's living
room - good thing it was a trailer so that the walls were easy to
take apart without ruinging them; this would have made a kingsize
mess in most houses! Rufus never, ever did that again! He was
a pretty smart cat, so he got into one kind of trouble after another
on a regular basis.
The few times my kitties have gotten "stuck" in trees, they have
gotten themselves out again, though I did end up rescuing a neighbor's
cat with a ladder after he had been stuck for several days; I think
he was too dumb to climb down backwards (good thing I own an extension
ladder).
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812.8 | Bertha's Kitty Boutique | MANTIS::HANEKE | | Thu Oct 08 1987 14:07 | 10 |
| Do any of you remember Garrison Keillor's routine about Bertha's
Kitty Boutique in Lake Wobegone, which sold a little seat on a
very long handle for rescuing kitties from trees?
He said he never bought one because he figured cats knew how
to get down by themselves. Otherwise, half the trees in town
would be full of little cat skeletons. And we all know they
aren't...
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812.9 | Mount Kittymore | RHODES::WARD | Is there intelligent life down here? | Fri Oct 09 1987 02:57 | 8 |
| RE: .8
Here of them (Bertha's Kitty Boutique) ... I have one of their T-shirts
(smirk, smirk). It is lavender and has what looks like a kitty's
version of Mount Rushmore. I just love it.
Bernice
Trouble's Mom
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812.10 | A little patience ... | BCSE::MENARD | | Mon Oct 12 1987 10:02 | 29 |
| Well, I guess that I have to add my two cents in on the topic of
kitty-in-a-tree.
A few years ago, I had my cat spayed, but not until after she'd
had a litter (oh well). Anyway, she managed to "put on a few pounds",
but wasn't grotesquely fat.
One day, I came home from work to find her approximately 40 feet
up a pine tree next to the house. No amount of coaxing would get
her down. We re-aimed the spotlight on the side of the house up
the tree, we tried the 'basket' trick, suggested in one of the other
replies. Nothing. Yes, we *did* call the fire department, but
they didn't have a ladder long enough (this was a small New Hampshire
town -- we counted ourselves lucky to have a fire truck! ;-) )
Finally, after 6 days, my SO called the Animal Rescue League in
Boston. The gentleman there gave us the advice to ignore her.
She was getting too much attention, and would come down when she
was ready. So, we turned off the spotlight. We stopped the basket
trick (which never had much hope of working, but we had to do
*something*). 24 hours went by, and she was still up a tree.
Yes, this story does have a happy ending -- one of my cat's kittens
was returned to us, because the new owners had an allergy. It took
about 1/2 hour, and Winter was back on solid ground. Nothing like
a little jealousy ...
Oh yes -- when she came down from being in the tree for 8 days,
she was her original *thin* self again!
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812.11 | fat kat | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Mon Oct 12 1987 12:20 | 7 |
| maybe I should stick Sulkitt in a tree for a couple of days? :-)
:-)
(just kidding)
Rita
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812.12 | button | DAMSEL::TAYLOR | Certified Chocoholic | Wed Oct 28 1987 12:17 | 10 |
| A few years ago, we had a calico cat named button. We were living
on the second floor of an old house which had a very large oak tree
in the back yard. Button used to clime this tree quite regularly
and she could get down all by herself. Even without any coaxing.
She seemed to like it up there, it's was probably one of the most
peaceful places around. It was very funny when you were doing the
dishes and you look out the window and see a cat looking back at
you!
Holly
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812.13 | have a little sympathy for our feline buddies | 3D::CHABOT | But no one withstands the Machine | Tue Nov 10 1987 16:59 | 26 |
| Yes, cats can get up places they can't get down from--it's a lot
easier to leap up from a small platform than it is to jump down
onto a small platform. (For a silly example of this, if you saw
the movie "Remo Williams", remember the exercise in which he jumped
up onto higher and successfully smaller places in the loft?)
Also, when you hold baskets or platforms on poles up to cats, consider:
would you jump into something like that? Kitty may not be good
enough at Newtonian mechanics to calculate the force necessary to
balance a cat weight at the end of a long moment arm, but Kitty
probably has a kittenhood full of experiences of jumping onto an
unknown/unstable platform and falling several inches. Not to mention,
Kitty either knows you well enough to know you're weird (why does
she talk into that thing at the end of the springy-cord toy?) or
if you're a stranger, may not know you at all.
If I hear the line about cat skeletons in trees one more time, I'm
going to blandly turn to the person, and say, "Oh, well, you do
know that raccoons climb trees, and they *can* be rather vicious."
(And if I received a blank stare, continue along the line that if a
hungry raccoon can't get garbage it might settle for...)
Sorry, but I get a little grouchy about this one.
Elsewhere in this notesfile of stories about why one cat or another
couldn't climb down because it was injured or whatever, and that
it's rather hard to determine this from 20 feet below.
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812.14 | LOOKS OK ON OUTSIDE BUT.... | AIMHI::OFFEN | | Tue Dec 15 1987 16:49 | 35 |
| RE 812.13
I know exactly what you mean about a cat being injured and you not
aware of it.
I had a beautiful tom cat named Smoky. He really thought he was
a dog because he would follow me anywhere and come when he was called.
One day I had just come home from work and was calling Smoky. He
came running towards me. Out of nowhere came three (not one but
three) huge dogs zeroing in on Smoky. Now Smoky could always hold
his own against any one dog but he definitely knew he was out-numbered.
He took a quick look at me and then at a nearby tree to see which
was closer. He decided that the tree was closer and made a sprint
for it. He almost made it.... By the time a got close enough to
scare the dogs away they had already gotten to Smoky and had him
down. Boy, what a fighter... Once I got the dogs off of him he
made a dash for the tree and went up about twenty to twenty-five
feet. After trying to coax him down for about an hour, a good
samaratan (sp) brought out a ladder and climbed to get him. Smoky
was wary of strangers and did claw the gentleman, but he persisted
and finally brought him down.
When I finally got Smoky into the house and put him down he just
fell over. The dogs had damaged one of his back legs. I rushed him
to the vet and found out that they had damaged a nerve in his leg.
It took Smoky two months to heal but he was fine.
Morale to story:
There are indeed times that a cat can't get down from a tree
even if they look ok on the outside.
Sandi
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