T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2688.1 | Oh-oh, ... good luck! | WR2FOR::HARPHAM_LY | | Mon Jul 17 1989 20:59 | 13 |
|
Molly used to do the same thing! Except that with her it was jewelry,
cosmetics and small things like that. The big problem was we just
thought we'd misplaced all this stuff, until we accidentally found
her stash one day (3 pairs of earrings, necklace, straight pins
(ouch!) etc.) Anyway, the bad news is we never did find a cure.
The good news is she outgrew it at about 2 years old.
Good luck!
Lynn
|
2688.2 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon Jul 17 1989 21:08 | 11 |
| Can you let him have a shoe of his own for keeps, or does
he lose interest in them when they're sufficiently holey?
Maybe you could just leave that shoe in front of the closet door.
Also, I'm sure they must sell things to keep cabinets
fastened, so toddlers can't get at poisonous cleaning supplies;
your toddler just happens to be of the feline persuasion.
Also, maybe you are just a little irritable if your
baby is due soon? Maybe these things won't seem so
important once things settle down a bit.....
|
2688.3 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon Jul 17 1989 21:13 | 4 |
| P.S. one-year old isn't very far away from the Awful Eights (months),
which is akin to the human Terrible Twos (years), so I imagine he will
settle down after awhile of his own accord, if you can hang in there.
|
2688.4 | The great stuffed loon caper... | SWAT::COCHRANE | Solid gold question mark twenty feet tall | Tue Jul 18 1989 10:34 | 35 |
| They can surprise you, can't they? I have a three-year-old Silver
Tabby named Boogie. Well, Ms. Boogie "discovered" my stuffed loons
about a month ago, which until then had been minding their own
business underneath a table in the living room. They are a pair
of fabric stuffed loons, mother and baby (large and small). One
afternoon my husband and I returned home and opened the back door
to find the smaller of the two loons staring at us from the kitchen
floor, no cats in sight! This was the beginning of about two weeks
of "loon madness". We would come home to find the loon in different
parts of the house; halfway across the living room, on the stairs,
on my bed, in the upstairs hallway, and once, smack dab in the
middle of the kitchen table! As always, the perpetrator was no
where to be found. It got to the point where we would begin discussing
on the way home where we thought the loon might be this time.
Then, one morning I was in the bathroom and heard my husband
laughing hysterically. I came out, and there in front of the
bathroom door was Boogie, holding the loon in the mouth (the small
loon is still about half the size of Boogie) and looking at me
going, "EY-OOOO, EY-OOOO" (or however a cat meows whilst holding
a stuffed loon)! She was so proud of herself! After that, the
loon stayed put for the most part and Boogie has now developed
an interest in drinks and ice cubes.
Moral: it's probably a phase. Of course, I also lost a t-shirt to
Niniane when we first got her. I gave up retrieving the shirt
from various parts of the house, Niniane kept the shirt.
Suggestion: give kitty a shoe of her "own". But make sure when
you put it out, you specifically warn kitty the same as you would
with new shoes. Seems that it isn't as enticing if the risk
isn't there ;-)
Sorry this is so long,
Mary-Michael, Niniane, Charm, Dream, and Boogie
|
2688.6 | Restricted Access | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | Dancin' in the ruins | Tue Jul 18 1989 11:54 | 12 |
| I don't know what kind of closet doors you have, but I agree that the
preventive measures of keeping it shut annd putting child-proof latches
on your kitchen cabinets are a good idea - especially since the human
little ones will get to the curious stage eventually. If you have
sliding cupboard doors and/or closet doors, may I suggest attractive
eye and latch hooks from your local hardware store?
I'm sure your kit will outgrow this. And you might as well let him
keep the shoes he's already destroyed, at least until he gets bored
with them.
Carol
|
2688.7 | | ALLVAX::LUBY | DTN 287-3204 | Tue Jul 18 1989 12:44 | 22 |
|
T.K. is the thief in my house. He steals jewelry and my
roommates ponytail holders (one in particular). We keep the
jewelry in a box and my roommate keeps her room shut. He
also had a fetish for a two inch tall teddy bear which we
often found in his water bowl.
Bandit did have one thing he used to steal.... potholders!
His favorite was a mitt which I eventually gave him since
it had too many holes to be safe. He used to carry it around
and make little crying noises.
These situations are amusing in retrospect, and when someone
else has the problem. I found the base note very funny!
But, they can be annoying too, especially when the items
stolen are damaged and cost more than $1 to replace (ie
shoes and jewlery). Try the suggestions of earlier notes
about giving him his own shoe.
Good luck,
Karen
|
2688.8 | | WONDER::SKALTSIS | | Tue Jul 18 1989 12:54 | 12 |
| I won't go into the details of Panther's criminal activities (since
I only rarely caught him in the act, and even when I did he looked
so cute, how could I yell at him?), but suffice it to say that during
Panther's days as a thief (before we moved), I wound up putting
child proof latches on all cabinets (base and upper) and keeping
all closet doors shut. Where we live now, there are several closets
that have those folding doors on them. I wound up attaching hooks
and eyes between the door and the frame to keep the little darling
out of there. So now, instead of stealing stuff in the closets,
I find the bathroom rugs all over the house.
Deb
|
2688.9 | Those Lil' Darlins' | SWAT::COCHRANE | Solid gold question mark twenty feet tall | Tue Jul 18 1989 13:50 | 8 |
| Ya gotta admit, they do look *so* cute, and they
are *so* proud of what they've accomplished, but
the day I came home to find Boogie high steppin'
it around the house with a pair of my underwear,
I figured I'd better start keeping an eye on
things :-}
Mary-Michael
|
2688.10 | Hey, I didn't know they had pockets! | CLUSTA::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Tue Jul 18 1989 14:29 | 12 |
| It was either last year or the year before, but the B. Kliban
catcalendar had a picture of an orange tabby with his front paws
against the way, being frisked by a police officer. It was hysterical.
The drawing pictured the cat having two pockets that had been turned
inside out, and there were paper clips, keys, rings, money, and an
assortment of other things the little kitty had 'pocketed'. The cat
was looking back over his shoulder at the cop and the little feline
bandit didn't look at all pleased!
If anyone would like a copy of it, let me know...
Mary
|
2688.11 | Those were great! | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | | Tue Jul 18 1989 16:19 | 15 |
| I know that you are really having a problem here with Mijo, but
this note has been the best laugh I have had in a long time!!
The story about Boogie and the loons reminded me that when Momma
Kitty (RIP) first showed up as a stray, my girlfriend and I called
her Craven Loon cause of her antics. Don't know how we came up
with that name since I have never even seen a Loon, and don't know
if they are Craven, but the name made us laugh, and your loon story
brought that wonderful memory of Momma Kitty back for me.
Also, I really loved the 30lbs of Levi's story!! What a hoot, but
my guess is that if he weighed 30 pounds, he wouldn't make it very
far done the pant leg!!
Jo
|
2688.12 | yarn-fetish | CRUISE::NDC | | Tue Jul 18 1989 16:27 | 16 |
| Bumpy-tail has a yarn fetish. If I fail to tie up my skeins of
yarn securely enough I will come home to find several skeins artfully
distributed around the diningroom, kitchen, livingroom, hall (upstairs
and down) stairs, and usually one skein hanging off her collar.
We never have any questions as to the identity of the perpetrator!
This fetish also extends to my knitting. I'm NOT at all pleased
to discover a month's worth of work pulled and mangled. It is however,
hysterical to hear her when she's in the "throws" of knit-fever.
She patty-paws the knitting and cries and meows as if to say "I
can't help myself...". I don't believe that for a second.
:-)
Nancy DC
p.s. Dundee loves to nap in the sorted piles of dirty clothes.
|
2688.13 | | CRUISE::NDC | | Tue Jul 18 1989 16:35 | 4 |
| Oh - and when Dundee was teething he chewed the ears on my momma
cat pillow and the two kitten pillows. I think he wanted them to
look like he did.....bent ears.
|
2688.14 | sock thief | BLKWDO::PARKS | | Tue Jul 18 1989 20:32 | 13 |
| Tsunami always liked playing rough with our hands, but when she started
biting, we decided that wasn't acceptable. We decided on a compromise
and now when she wants to play rough, we put one of Jeff's socks on our
hand. That is her cue that she can attack(you should see her, her ears
go back and she tries to look fierce...but that's another story).
Well, now she lets us know she wants to play by bringing us one of Jeff's
socks(never one of mine).
We find Jeff's socks EVERYWHERE!
We went on vacation for 5 days and returned to find 10 socks in the living
room by the doorway. I think she was lonely.
She never hurts them though, so I guess I'll let her have her fun.
Becky
|
2688.15 | Thank you all!!! | WFOV12::GONCALVES | | Wed Jul 19 1989 15:34 | 27 |
| Thank you all for your ideas. Unfortunately, my closet doors are
bi-fold doors and pop open at the slighest pressure from a paw.
Mijo gets bored with the same shoes. I've tried that. Someone suggested
to me that I go out and purchase a shoe bag that I hang in the
closet. I bought it, arranged it, and it works!!!! I am going
to have to look for the children locks for the kitchen cabinets.
That will solve another problem. Thanks, everyone. I've really
enjoyed reading the responses. Yes, Mijo loves jewelry as well.
He stole a ring from my sister-in-law that was staying with us
last summer. She went home without it. Two days later we notice
a shining, glistening thing in Mijo's mouth. Sure enough, it
was my sister-in-law's ring. He hid it until she left. He wanted
to keep it!!! Those darn lovable furry babies. Maybe it was
Mijo's way of giving me a gift? I'm going to have to teach him
manners.
Now my next step is how my two will take to our baby. I'm not due
until late February. I hope they won't be extremely jealous. I've
got a ways to go, yet. However, my husband is taking care of the
cats' litter box, not me.
Shelly, Selina, & Mijo
P.S. In reading the notes, why do the cats cry when they have an
item in their mouth? Just curious????????
|
2688.16 | | CUPMK::TRACHMAN | ExoticSH=Persian in Underwear | Wed Jul 19 1989 15:58 | 6 |
| re:15
I have bi-folds also - I put a sliding bolt on them to hold
them closed and prevent paws from pushing them open! My
guys can even open my sliding door closets in my bedroom!
Talk about furfaces being creative .......
|
2688.17 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Wed Jul 19 1989 16:43 | 2 |
| Well, if they bring jewelry, they can get away with a lot :-)
|
2688.18 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | | Wed Jul 19 1989 18:44 | 7 |
| We have bi-fold doors on our laundrey room and the queen's like
to take their kittens there after they are born. I don't like to
have to crawl behind the dryer to get them out, so I put a bungie
cord around the handles of the bi-fold. It keeps them shut and
the cats cannot get them open.
Jo
|
2688.19 | | SCRUZ::CORDES_JA | By the shards of my dragon's egg | Wed Jul 19 1989 21:46 | 18 |
| Since this note has listed helpful suggestions on how to keep things
closed does anyone know of a device for reguar (straight) sliding
closet doors. Amelia (and now Carrie) likes to open the closet
doors and hide out in there. Bailey thinks this is terrific cause
then she has open access to any of my hanging clothes she wants
to feast on (lets see, today I'll try the blue units vest hem and
tomorrow I'll have the purple sweater sleeves). She literally chews
holes in them. So far I've tried blocking the doors with 10 lb.
weights but I only have enough for 1 closet and I have 4 closets
(so I chose to block the one with my laundry hamper in it; its a
good source of nylons and bras for her to munch on).
Anyway, back to the question...is their a device for sliding closet
doors. I haven't seen anything on my trecks through the hardware
sections of drug stores.
Jan
|
2688.20 | reverse the sliders | CUPMK::TRACHMAN | ExoticSH=Persian in Underwear | Thu Jul 20 1989 09:49 | 20 |
| re: 19
Hi Jan, I have the same problem with both types of doors - what
I tried with the sliders is to reverse the doors so that the
circles or handles recessed in the door itself, meet in the middle
and not one to the far right and one to the far left - for some
unknown reason it works most of the time! WeeZoo (Alexander) can
still work his way in - I have taken the closet pole out of one
of my two double sliding door closets in my bedroom and put shelving
in from floor to ceiling - the kids think it's great to sleep on
all my clean clothes (sweaters, sweatclothes, etc).
Thanks all I can offer - I hope some one else will have a better
idea - I sure would like to keep the hairbags off my clean clothes!
The sliding bolt works pretty well on the bifolds for the washer
and dryer - the only way they can open that is if they are rolling
around (two 15 pounders, that is) and smash into it and it opens
by accident! sigh
E.T.
|
2688.21 | | HPSTEK::BOURGAULT | | Thu Jul 20 1989 10:05 | 9 |
|
Here's another possibility for you. You could try putting up the
little latch and hook things that you find in so many bathroom stalls
in gas stations. They are easy to find in hardware stores,
inexpensive, and if put toward the bottom would prevent the furfaces
from getting in and not be overly obvious.
Faith
|
2688.22 | | ENGINE::FRASER | The Mill = 1,000,069 ft�. | Thu Jul 20 1989 11:17 | 15 |
| If the sliding doors are the way I imagine them, there are a
couple of possibilities you might be able to use. Assuming
double doors, you need to put something where they overlap, and
this will stop either from being opened - maybe drill a small
hole high up on the 'inner' door and insert a piece of dowel
(or a pencil) close to the 'outer' door, if you see what I
mean...
If it's a single door, then a simple hook and ring catch from
the hardware store will do it
Perhaps an electric fence or a pit bull chained to the door? ;*)
Andy
|
2688.23 | | SCRUZ::CORDES_JA | By the shards of my dragon's egg | Thu Jul 20 1989 15:43 | 14 |
| Thanks for the suggestions. I can't do too many modifications to
the closets since I'm only renting the place. The best I've been
able to come up with that won't damage the doors (and this is after
alot of heavy thinking) is to get those rubber door jam things that
you put on the floor to keep a door open and wedge one between the
double doors of the closet and hopefully they'll put up enough
resistance so the doors won't open unless you take out the door jam.
Course my cats will probably figure out a way around that too.
Now if I can just remember to look for these things next time I'm
in a drug store or hardware store...I'll let you guys know if they
work.
Jan
|
2688.24 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Thu Jul 20 1989 16:18 | 3 |
| A little hook and eye arrangement can be removed and spackled over
if you move out. No worse than a picture hanger in a wall.
|