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Title: | Meower Power is Valuing Differences |
Notice: | FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY |
Moderator: | MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO |
|
Created: | Sun Feb 09 1986 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jan 11 1994 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 5089 |
Total number of notes: | 60366 |
1526.0. "SIAMESE PROBLEMS" by USMRW7::JCORACCIO () Wed Jul 06 1988 14:28
Hello, fellow feliners! I'm new to the Notesfiles and am using a
friend's, as I have limited privileges for my account (being a DecTemp
has its drawbacks)...I'm in DIRE straights as a new feliner, and
have seen no advice on a problem that is rapidly escalating.
My friend, Patsy, is a seal-point siamese shelter-baby; it's estimated
that she's about 3 1/2 yrs. old, and I've little info. about her
except that her owner DUMPED her on a neighbor when he moved abroad.
She's a lovely kitty, (naturally she's extremely vocal and demanding),
and has one extremely bad habit so far (I've only had her about
a month)...
She likes to EAT acrylic/cotton knits; when I mean EAT, I mean LARGE
chunks of the stuff...when I first got her, she was very stressed
out and couldn't eat anything (had to be hospitalized, poor thing!),
so when she came home from her ordeal, I didn't think much when
she made a beeline for my boyfriend's dirty sock, and promptly started
shredding it. Imagine my surprise, when I found it had been digested!
It's not only dirty socks, but clean ones too (straight out of the
dryer, two pairs of tennis socks-mine-)---and no longer in my sight,
but usually when I'm out. The worst disaster was a double-size
cotton-acrylic blanket...we came home after work one day to find
it with large holes chewed away (and no sign of the remnants, except
for days later in the litter box...)---5-6" wide holes, at least
a dozen of them.
She's been banished from our bedroom, when we are away at work,
as we have no doors on the clothes closets, and has been doing O.K.
as long as all questionable items remain out of sight...but if she
gets mad at me for going to the store after I've arrived home (even
for 5 minutes around the corner), and anything's in sight---it's
history!
I haven't been able to catch her in the act after the first incident,
as she runs to the door when I return, but SOME of the evidence
at the scene of the crime has been FRESH (as in saliva stains)...
all I've done is thump her NOSE with the evidence, YELL a lot, and
isolate her briefly in the bathroom with the litterbox..........
I haven't been a parent before, so I need HELP with this-only one
cat person (at the shelter where I got her ) has had a siamese with
this problem, and she had no answers; obviously, I can't allow her
to eat material, even a pet sock, due to possible intestinal blockage,
and I feel badly because she can't even run around the whole apartment
when I'm at work. As far as getting her a friend, I have only a
one-bedroom basement apartment (very limited in its size), and was
told when I brought her home that she hates other cats, and wants
to be THE QUEEN of the house!
Thanks in advance!
m&m
HAS BEEN FRESH
clothes closets
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1526.2 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Wed Jul 06 1988 15:04 | 7 |
| I think you're lucky you can shut all the "edible" stuff away.
It doesn't sound like restricting her to one room while you're at
work is a real hardship -- is it a fun room with window perches
etc.? There was a discussion of fabric-eating furfaces in some
recent note, but I don't recall a solution except keeping things
hidden. Now, Sweetie and Holly have a taste for book corners....
|
1526.3 | | SSMP20::DALEY | | Wed Jul 06 1988 15:46 | 22 |
| the problem with eating fabric - unlike eating paper - is that the
threads can become lodged in the throat or intestines. We had a
small dog once who ate a "ped" (i.e., a stocking for the foot only)
and couldn't pass it. He had to undergo surgery to remove it. Luckily
he survived.
Perhaps you could ask you vet if the cat is missing some particular
vitamin or mineral in her diet which makes her resort to eating
cotton/acrylic items. Or maybe you could divert her attention by giving her
a catnip toy (altho that may entertain her for only a short period).
But I would ask your vet about it. It wouldn't require a visit as
such, but simply a telephone call - and talk directly to the vet
- not the assistant.
However, being locked in one room while you are at work doesn't
sound like a hardship - especially in her case. As Karen suggested -
make it a fun place - with a window perch, toys, etc. You can make
it quite comfortable and she'll do well.
|
1526.4 | | EDUC8::TRACHMAN | | Wed Jul 06 1988 16:57 | 10 |
| My friend Janice has a Siamese that ate sweaters and socks - she
learned to be VERY neat! Or else have a very mad husband. Other
than picking up after herself, I don't know of any other cures.
Katenka is a "corner of a book" chewer also. She will stand on
the counter, stare me right in the eye, and chew my cookbooks!
She does so few things naughty, that I can't really yell at her.
Yeah, I know, she is very spoiled rotten! She can really make
a mess of corners even with her two upper canines missing!
Friends at the shows are calling her "chicken lips".
|
1526.5 | Notes 469, 624 & 1033 discuss chewing too | SCRUZ::CORDES_JA | By the shards of my dragon's egg | Thu Jul 07 1988 23:08 | 16 |
| You might want to take a look at notes 469, 624, and 1033. There
have been a few discussions about similar problems. I should know,
I started one of them. My cat Bailey eats clothes, shoestrings, etc.
(Might help a little to know you're not alone with this problem.)
We've made quite a bit of progress (see note 624.4, 1033.8) since my
original note on chewing (469). She now knows that when her head is
poking in the closet and I say NO, or when she's eyeballing my
shoelaces and I look at her mom-like and call her name with that
question to my voice (like "What are you up to?"), that she'd better
make a beeline for the other end of the room.
We still slip up and she gets to something I would have liked to have
kept uneaten but this is still a major improvement.
Jan
|
1526.6 | | SCRUZ::CORDES_JA | By the shards of my dragon's egg | Thu Jul 07 1988 23:17 | 16 |
| One thing I forgot to mention. When Bailey first started her chewing
thing I used to get so upset and yell and scream. I noticed after
a while that Bailey never wanted to be around me. She associated
me with the yelling and screaming I did when she ate something.
I started using a new approach of calmly picking her up, disengaging
whatever she was chewing from her mouth and putting her in the cat
carrier for a cool off period. After a short time (I'm too much
of a softy) I'd go open the carrier so she could get out, but still
ignore her and go about what I was doing until she came to me.
This approach has worked wonders. Bailey and I have the best mom/kitty
relationship at this point than we've had since before the chewing
thing started. She has become an extremely lovable/affectionate
cat where before she was very standoffish.
Jan
|
1526.7 | Stress? | CHEFS::GOUGH | | Mon Jul 11 1988 12:09 | 10 |
| Siamese do chew things - my friend's Balinese eats (literally)
blankets, if given the chance.
However, maybe insecurity has something to do with it. When we
first got Hector (non-Siamese stray cat), he used to suck on cushions,
bedcovers, clothes, and so on. As he settled down and became a
happy cat who knew where his next meal was coming from, he gradually
stopped doing it.
Helen.
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