T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2949.1 | mine, too! | NRADM::CONGER | What's ONE more cat???? | Mon Oct 16 1989 15:36 | 11 |
|
Rosie was the same exact way - she was a skinny, scrawny, nine-
month old pregnant stray when I got her and she had med/short
hair. I didn't realize it until I looked back at pictures, but
her fur is twice as long now as when I got her. I think age
had more to do with it than malnutrition, but it does sound
like our cats were in similar situations...
Sherry
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2949.2 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Mon Oct 16 1989 15:39 | 13 |
| Flea allergy will impede hair growth, once the flea problem is no
more, the fur grows to it's full length. Normally, a shorthaired
cat is a shorthaired cat, and a longhaired a longhaired. The best
indicators that I know of are the length of the individual hairs
on the tail, and the amount of fur in and around the ears. If your
kittens has those, then the chances are good it will grow to be
a longhaired adult. If not, the chances are good it is a shorthair.
When Jesse came to us, we thought he was a shorthair, but he actually
had flea allergy, and once the fleas were taken care of, his full,
almost persian coat grew in.
Jo
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2949.3 | | FSHQA2::RKAGNO | A Cat Makes a Purrfect Friend | Mon Oct 16 1989 17:08 | 14 |
| Oh, so does this mean that Kelsey's fur will grow longer and plusher
as he matures?! I keep telling his breeder that she sold me a bald
Ragdoll as his coat is nowheres near as full and lush as some of
his half brothers and sisters. It is starting to fill out now that
he is a little over a year, and I'm hoping it will continue to grow as
he gets older.
Does age make a difference in regards to coat or do some
cats in the litter develop better coats than others? I notice that
Kirby's coat is thicker and longer than what Kelsey's was at that
age.
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2949.4 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Mon Oct 16 1989 17:17 | 22 |
| Cats coats don't always grow longer and plusher with age. Usually,
with my Birmans, the kittens will just have baby fuzz until they
are about 4 months old. The baby fuzz is all the same on the whole
litter. The only indicator of more coat to come is the ears. If
the kitten has tufts on the tips of the ears, and plenty of hair
in the inside (we call them ear furnishings), then that kitten will
have a nice full coat later on. At about 4-5 months, the kitten
fuzz starts fading out and the adult coat starts growing. After
the adult coat grows in, all you can expect is seasonal changes,
shorter, thinner in summer, fuller and thicker in winter.
If Kelsey has a short coat now, it may be due to the weather. See
if he doesn't fill out a bit during the winter.
Also, it is very possible for some kittens in the litter to have
better coats than others.
Another thing about coat length, the longhair gene is recessive,
the shorthair gene is dominant, so, in order for a cat to be a
longhair, it must receive the gene for longhair from both parents.
Jo
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2949.5 | | FSHQA2::RKAGNO | A Cat Makes a Purrfect Friend | Mon Oct 16 1989 17:29 | 17 |
| Thanks Jo. This may sound strange but Linda told me that during
the summer months, she keeps her a/c up full blast and draws the
drapes to keep the sun from heating up the house. She also says
that this method does wonders for her cats coats. We visited her
on our honeymoon and my mouth just hung open when I saw her cats,
most around Kelsey's age, with these long, full coats while he looked
like a bald eagle. We have 3 full sliders in our house and although
we have central air, I never close the drapes and the sun streams
through daily. Since Kelsey loves to lie in the sun, I wonder if
this has any bearing on his short coat.
I'll take your advice and see what the winter brings. His ruff
is getting fuller. I'm almost determined not to turn on the heat
until we absolutely need it!
--Roberta (who will freeze so Kelsey's coat will grow)
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2949.6 | Try Olive Oil | SALSA::DEFRANCO | | Mon Oct 16 1989 19:36 | 22 |
| Re .4
If longhair is recessive and short hair is dominant, then what is
medium hair? My sweetie is a medium hair cat and from what I
understand her mom was short hair and dad was long hair (I think?)
Re .5
Roberta, you might want to put a few drops of good Olive oil in
Kelsey's food. We have done this with all of our dogs and their coats
have been gorgeous! For 10 years my vet has marvelled at how nice
their fur was compared to all the other dogs he had seen.
We haven't done this with the cats because they eat IAMS, which is very
rich and oily to begin with and their coats seem really nice (except
for Sweetie who lost a lot of fur after her last bath, but I think that
was due to the stress of moving). Besides, my cats are all a bit on the
chuncky side and I don't want to add any more fat to their diets.
Jeanne
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2949.7 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Mon Oct 16 1989 20:17 | 12 |
| Medium hair is the same as longhair genetically. Birmans and Ragdolls
are both semi longhaired cats. Basically, if it is not shorthair,
it is longhair. Semi longhair is still a recessive, so if your
cat's mom was a short hair, and her dad was a longhair, the mom must
be carrying the recessive gene for longhair. You can also get
longhaired kittens out of shorthaired parents if both parents are
carrying the recessive gene for longhair.
Adding olive oil to Kelsey's diet probably won't help the length or
fullness of his coat, but it will help the coat texture.
Jo
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2949.8 | | CRUISE::NDC | Nancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it all | Tue Oct 17 1989 08:38 | 3 |
| I've noticed since putting the "kids" on Perform that their coats
seem finer and softer. Any ideas why this would be?
|
2949.9 | Sounds right! | IAMOK::GERRY | Home is where the Cat is | Tue Oct 17 1989 09:45 | 16 |
| Nancy,
After switching my cats to No Ethoxyquin foods, Perform included, I
noticed changes in both coat color and texture. Not to mention overall
condition and appearance. I also had serious dandruff problems on a
few cats that now don't have a flake.
Well, Nancy, you noticed the difference in Flames coat color from the
first time you saw him to when you picked him up. He had been eatting
Iams, and I switched him to Perform, Lick Your Chops, and Blue Seal...
He went from being dull and rusty orange to bright and shiney, and you
know how his coat feels!!! ;-)
Do you think their coats are better or worse now??
|
2949.10 | | CRUISE::NDC | Nancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it all | Tue Oct 17 1989 10:06 | 10 |
| I like the way they feel better now. Bumpy still has a little
dandruff, but Isis doesn't. They also seem to have more "spunk"
than they used to and run around more - especially Mao who was
10 in July.
I should have a good look at Mao's teeth. she had quite a tartar
problem that improved significantly after a year on Hills CD. I'd
like to see if there's any difference since she stopped eating the
CD dry.
Nancy DC
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2949.11 | Fixing can make a difference! | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Oct 17 1989 11:55 | 8 |
| There is a book that I have at home about a cat doctor in NYC that
makes house calls. In the book, he states that in in 50+ years of
practice, he observed that cats that have been spayed/neutered seem to
have slightly longer hair than those that haven't. Much of his opinion
was based on comparing short haired litter mates; the "fixed" ones
usually had slightly longer coats.
Deb
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2949.12 | | CRUISE::NDC | Nancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it all | Tue Oct 17 1989 12:14 | 4 |
| Is this book perhaps "All my patients are under the bed"??
Fabulous book! Great fun.
Nancy DC
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2949.13 | | GIGI::GOLDBERG | | Tue Oct 17 1989 14:09 | 7 |
|
So is Perform cat food the preferred choice over Iams??
I've never heard of it.
F.
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2949.14 | We switched, and glad we did.. | WILKIE::IVES | | Tue Oct 17 1989 15:29 | 12 |
| Since we switched Mocha and Ming from IAMS to BILL-JAC their coat
is now softer and silkier. Ming had more the cotton type and Mocha's
was just sort of dry, since switching it's like different cats.
Mocha still matts (no end of those with him) but am really pleased
that we switched. Now if only I could put some weight on Ming. She
is such a tiny eater and of course old Mr Pig Mocha eats her's the
minute she backs away from the dish. If I could only get her to
fight back.... but she could care less. Our house is not the type
we can seperate them and their food dishes, so I don't know what
the answer is.
Barbara
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2949.15 | | PENPAL::TRACHMAN | ExoticSH=Persian in Underwear | Tue Oct 17 1989 16:07 | 6 |
| re:14
Gee Barb, maybe try Perform - that might help put some weight on
rather than the BilJac. I think that the Perform is a much better
quality food - also very good for coat and coat color, so I've
found with my guys.
|
2949.16 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Oct 17 1989 18:38 | 5 |
| Re: .14 Ming
I put Holly's dish on top of the table (following a suggestion from someone else
in here) and that works fine.
|
2949.17 | Up, up we go..... | WILKIE::IVES | | Tue Oct 17 1989 23:50 | 14 |
| Karen I appreciate the suggestion but....... you don't know Mocha.
Even if we hung it from the ceiling light he climb up to it somehow.
Nothing is safe from him no matter how high, huh Roberta.
Some of the first pictures I took of him he is on top of the frig.
and not too long after we got him I noticed things were moved on
the top shelf of our 6 foot 8 inch hutch. Yup, up, up, up I saw
him climb one morning while eating breakfast.
I will take ET's suggestion and Mocha will just blow up someday
from eating too much. Who ever said Ragdolls are huge they weren't
kidding. Mocha sure is a Hunka Munka.
Barbara
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2949.18 | Perform | CRUISE::NDC | Nancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it all | Wed Oct 18 1989 08:55 | 19 |
| re: .13 - If you're concerned about possible dangers from Ethoxyquin
then Perform definitely is preferred over IAMS. There are other
foods available without Ethoxyquin too - Bill-jac, Blue Seal, Lick
my Chops and a few others.
Perform is made by Carnation and sold by mail. Their number is
1-800-858-3500. I believe as a new customer you are entitled to
a free sample of either dry or canned, and a special discount on
your first 3.5 lb bag. Satisfaction is guaranteed so if your cats
won't eat it you get your money back.
If you do place an order make sure you tell them that you heard
about them from one of us - Hey Cindy, what's your customer number????
If you give them Cindy's number, she'll get a discount on her next
purchase.
Perform also has an automatic replenishment plan and they'll
automatically deliver whatever you request of a regular basis.
Oh and their shipping costs are very reasonable - .95 for orders
under $15 and 1.95 for orders over $15.
Nancy DC
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2949.19 | | CRUISE::NDC | Nancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it all | Wed Oct 18 1989 08:56 | 2 |
| Boy - I must have a thing for cat food - I keep calling
Lick YOUR chops, Lick MY chops!
|