T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1244.1 | Not just for scratching! | SHARE::SSMITH | | Wed Apr 06 1988 12:53 | 6 |
| Our eldest, Tigger (the tiger) won't sleep in anything but a cardboard
box. We bought him a nice new bed one time. You know the kind. All
nice and padded, high walls with an opening in the front. He pee'd
in it. He got his cardboard bed back.
Steve
|
1244.2 | | GRECO::MCNAMARA | | Wed Apr 06 1988 14:03 | 3 |
| My cats love plain old cardboard boxes which have a corrugated side.
Perhaps you could use some of those rather than buying a cardboard
post - it'd be cheaper!
|
1244.3 | | FIDDLE::HTAYLOR | Cat lovers are a special breed | Wed Apr 06 1988 14:07 | 7 |
| In our house, all cardboard boxes have this invisible sign on them
that only cats can see. It says, "All cats enter here!" This is
the same with any bag left on the floor.
Holly
|
1244.4 | Aja saw that sign, *once*. | JAWS::COTE | Did you set your MIDI clock ahead? | Wed Apr 06 1988 15:17 | 22 |
| Aja HATES cardboard boxes....
...when she was about 6 months old and I had bought something that
came in a VERY large cardboard box. Due to the size of the box,
the only place I could store it (until dump day) was in the kitchen.
Knowing how curious she was, I figured if I left the box open she'd
get in there whilst I was at work. To prevent this, I securely folded
the flaps in. (You know, the method where one side of the flap is
visible and one side is tucked under...)
...so I get home and can't find the cat. The box is still solidly
closed, so it never occurs to me to look in there. After a bit I
hear a faint crying coming from... you guessed it... the box.
It seems that Aja predictably jumped up on the box during the day.
Her weight was enough to cause the flaps to bend in and drop her
through. Then the flaps returned to their original position!
She'd EXPLODE before using a cardboard litterbox...
Edd
|
1244.5 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Thu Apr 07 1988 11:38 | 14 |
| As it happens, there are cardboard boxes scattered throughout the
house. And yes, the cats do love to play in them.
However, they're not the same thing as the cardboard scratching
box, and they don't really use the cardboard boxes for scratching.
Although I suppose we could try taking some of the corrugated cardboard
from the regular boxes, cutting it into strips, rolling it up, and
putting it into the scratching box, to rejuvenate the box. Still,
I wish I could find the real things -- well worth the $5.
Do the readers understand what I mean by a cardboard scratching
box? Or should I try to describe it?
Gary
|
1244.6 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Thu Apr 07 1988 14:39 | 3 |
|
re: .5 what is it?
|
1244.7 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Fri Apr 08 1988 12:21 | 38 |
| I don't know why I bothered asking, as I knew someone was going
to want a description. Here goes:
The box we have is a long flat box, about 2-3 inches high, 4-5 inches
wide, and a foot and a half to two feet long. (You can tell I'm
just guessing at the dimensions.) To use it, you open up the entire
front panel.
Inside, it is filled with a single block of corrugated cardboard.
The holes formed by the corrugation face you, so that it looks like
the cardboard equivalent of honeycomb. That way, the cats are not
scratching a smooth sheet of paper on the outer surface of the
cardboard (the way they do when they scratch ordinary cardboard
boxes). Instead, they get their claws into the honeycomb holes,
and scratch through the tops of a few of the columns. And by the
way, there's catnip inside the box, under the honeycomb block.
These things can be hung or otherwise positioned vertically on a
wall. We keep ours on the floor, and the cats have learned to
stand on the box when they scratch. That way, there's no problem
with the box moving out from under them. When they scratch, it
looks as though they're trying to dig through to the bottom. (Perhaps
they are. They've also been known to tip the box over. They really
want to get at their weed.) I can't say how effective it is at
keeping their claws neat, but the it certainly gives them something
fun to scratch. (Fun for us, that is.)
From the sound of these, you wouldn't think the box would last a
week. That's what I thought when I bought it, but I figured it
was going to help a shelter, so I considered it a donation. That
was six or eight months ago, and it's still going strong. The cats
have worn it down to about half its original thickness, and it's
getting to the point where it's no longer strong enough to give
them any resistance.
Hope this makes it clear.
Gary
|
1244.8 | Did you find them? | SHIGEO::SASAKI | Marty Sasaki LTN1-1/D07 226-6011 | Thu Aug 04 1988 14:05 | 7 |
| You asked this question a long time ago, I was wondering, did you
every find a cardboard scratching post? And if so, where did you
find one? My SO is moving in and I need to make sure that Bonkers
won't attack any of her furniture, so it is time to really get a
scratching post...
Marty
|
1244.9 | CALDORS | GEMVAX::GRANT | | Thu Aug 04 1988 14:40 | 5 |
| I found some at Caldors in Westboro (off of Route 9).
Don't know if every Caldors carries them, but it's worth checking.
Marleen (Sly, Adrienne, Springer, Paws, Midway)
|
1244.10 | Mail order | FREKE::WARD | I leave Trouble behind | Thu Aug 04 1988 17:41 | 7 |
| I also saw an ad in either CAT FANCY or CATS (can't remember which)
last month. I'll _try_ to remember to look it up tonight and post
the address tomorrow.
Bernice
Mother_of_Trouble
|
1244.11 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Thu Aug 04 1988 18:00 | 10 |
| Holly-the-cat likes to use the cardboard case of CD as a scratching
place. I discovered this by accident when I left one on the floor
in the kitchen instead of putting it away. The box is maybe two
feet long, maybe 18 inches wide, and 5 or 6 inches high. She can
almost stretch out on top and scratch, scratch, scratch. The weight
of the cans keeps it from moving or collapsing. A case lasts several
weeks. On the other hand, open cardboard boxes have a sign that
is visible only to Holly, and says "pee here".
|
1244.12 | Breeder's Pride | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Fri Aug 05 1988 11:50 | 11 |
| Yes, we got the boxes at Breeder's Pride, in Sudbury. Thanks to
Roberta Waxman for the pointer.
So far, the cats don't seem to have attacked the carpeting in the
new house. I don't know whether it's because they have alternatives,
or because the deeper pile (as compared to the old carpeting) isn't
attractive to them. They still sometimes attach the couch, though
they clearly love and use their cardboard boxes. We have three
of them set up.
Gary
|
1244.13 | `New Bed' | AIMHI::OFFEN | | Thu Sep 15 1988 12:50 | 8 |
| Lightning also sees the `sign' that says "This is Lightning's New
Bed". I don't care how small the box is, she will try to get in
it. She looks so cute laying in a small shoe box with her paws
and her big fluffy tail sticking out.
Sandi (Lightning's, DejaVu's & Thunder's mom)
|