T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3305.1 | | ROYALT::MORRISSEY | Get up and move that body | Mon Feb 05 1990 14:36 | 12 |
|
We have four cats and a bird....a cockatiel. We have no
problems unless Coco (the bird) decides he wants to fly
of Cary's shoulder. Even then the cats don't touch him.
They just look at him.
We have him up high enough so that they can't get to the cage.
And everyone is hunky-dorie! =)
JJ
|
3305.2 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Mon Feb 05 1990 15:01 | 7 |
| On a Nature (or somesuch) program, it said that cats that grow up not
being taught that birds or mice, etc. are prey never realize that
they are and so don't molest them. (Switch to picture of pet mouse nursing
along with a bunch of kittens). So my guess is that a kitten is
your safest bet. Of course, this type of upbringing means the kitten
would be really helpless in the wild if it ever got lost.
|
3305.3 | PEACEFUL CO-EXISTENCE | BSS::WALTERS | | Tue Feb 06 1990 10:20 | 8 |
| I HAVE A SPA ROOM WITH 3 BIRD CAGES (6 BIRDS TOTAL) AND A CHINCHILLA
IN A CAGE ON THE FLOOR. MY 3 FUR FACES ARE ALLOWED IN THE ROOM
UNSUPERVISED AND HAVE NEVER BOTHERED ANY OF THE CAGED PETS. IN
FACT, THE BIRDS DON'T EVEN GET EXCITED WHEN THE CATS ARE ROAMING
THE ROOM! I ALSO HAVE DOGS THAT ARE ALLOWED IN THE ROOM AND
AGAIN, THEY ALL GET ALONG FINE.
--KITTY
|
3305.4 | Size counts | STAR::PMURPHY | The Paws That Refresh! | Tue Feb 06 1990 12:17 | 4 |
| I know of folks who have parrots and cats living in the same household
with no problems. The cats seem to respect the size of the birds (as
well as their large, strong beaks) so they all get along fine. :-)
|
3305.5 | Cohabitation is possible, with training. | DELNI::L_FISHER | | Tue Feb 06 1990 12:29 | 46 |
| When I was a teenager at home, our cat, Sandy, was notorious in the
neighborhood for bringing home sparrows, bluejays, and an occasional
pigeon, even though she was wearing a collar with a LARGE bell on it.
We always talked about Sandy grabbing the bell with one paw while
pouncing on the unsuspecting bird.
At the same time, I raised parakeets. In my bedroom lived the first
parakeet who hatched out - Peewee. He had complete freedom of the
whole house to fly around in, and at night he would fly up to my
bedroom and I'd close the door of his cage. Sandy knew that Peewee was
off limits to her, even though I'm sure she salivated at the thought of
catching him. She never dared even look hungrily at him, or the humans
in the family would scold her. This had to be constantly reinforced,
as well as not leaving the outside doors open and checking where Peewee
was before we opened outside doors. Peewee would fly all over the
house and perch on windows, and always joined us for suppertime when
the whole family was present.
When I married, I left Peewee at home, since that was his home, and I
don't think my mother would have let me take him, anyway. To make a
long story short, and also to prove a point, I came to visit for a
weekend once with my family, dog, and cat, who was not used to having a
bird flying freely in the house. Peewee swooped down too close to my
cat, who instinctively jumped up and grabbed him in his mouth and ran
under the couch with Peewee. When we were able to retrieve poor Peewee
from the cat, he seemed to be unhurt, but he never recovered. He died
during the night. We had called the vet, and he seemed to think that
the stress of being caught by a cat caused his demise, since he was
over 11 years old. The vet also said that Peewee would never have
lived that long had he been confined to a cage all his life, so even
though he was caught by a cat who was unused to living with a
free-flying bird, Peewee's life would have been much shorter if he had
been in a cage all his life.
Peewee was the only free flyer in the house - all the breeding stock
were in large walk-in aviaries in the cellar, and Sandy used to love to
sit down there and watch them, her tail twitching all the time.
Sometimes we'd here a bang, the birds would flutter and squawk a bit,
and then Sandy would come up the cellar stairs looking very
disgruntled. We were sure that there were times when she couldn't
control her frustrations and banged against the wire cages. But she
never tried anything like that with Peewee. God love him!
If my husband didn't have so many allergies, I'd still have a parakeet,
but it's all I can do to keep a balance of one cat, one dog, and a
husband who wheezes, sneezes, and blows his nose constantly.
|
3305.6 | | STOREM::DALEY | | Tue Feb 06 1990 12:37 | 6 |
| I have cats, a LARGE dog and two caged finch. All the cats were
adopted as adults. At first they were intrigued by the birds but
I guess they get bored after a while - maybe a week or so- because
the birds don't fly around.
I've had the same pair of finch for almost seven years now.
|
3305.7 | Another bird/cat/dog household | SOLANA::MAPPS_LI | Linda Mapps | Tue Feb 06 1990 13:18 | 8 |
| I too have three cats and one bird. The cats were taught that my
cockatiel was off limits as kittens. Absolutely no problems now.
They don't even bother to gaze longingly, although outdoor birds
are a different story. It took about a month of positive reinforcement
before I was pretty positive I didn't have to worry. Now, I can
leave them all together, and everyone is fine.
LInda
|
3305.8 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Feb 06 1990 14:33 | 3 |
| I'm sorry about Peewee. I sure wish I could have a parakeet again,
but s/he wouldn't last 2 minutes around Mighty Hunter LB.
|
3305.9 | | STNING::DSM_SEC | Rainbow In The Dark | Tue Feb 06 1990 15:50 | 8 |
|
I had a parakeet (Kito) for about a year, and although my cats loved to
gaze longingly at the birds outside, they never bothered Kito. In fact,
JellyBean took to sitting right beside the cage, and they'd chatter to
each other like old friends. She never made a move to touch the bird,
or knock the cage over, or anything. It was just her friend, and it was
almost as though she were protecting it by sitting there all day.
|
3305.10 | Friend or Pet? | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Feb 06 1990 19:42 | 6 |
| RE: .9
I've heard that often a cat will regard another animal (of a different
species) not as just a friend but as a pet as well.
Deb
|
3305.12 | | WMOIS::H_TAYLOR | Chocolate! A dieter's delight! | Thu Feb 08 1990 12:13 | 51 |
| Hi everyone,
I have read all of these good things about cats and birds and I can't
believe it! When I first brought Tabitha into the house with Charlie,
the parakeet that I had for 2 years, we nearly had a CATastrophy (pun
intended). We tried everything possible to get Tabitha to leave
Charlie alone, but she just wouldn't. And it's not that we got her as
a cat either. She was only about 5 weeks old when we got her. But no
matter what, we couldn't get her to leave Charlie alone. We finally
had to give Charlie to my cousin. Charlie is now QUITE happy with no
felines around!
You may want to refer to note 1085 for more information on cats and
birds together. That has Tabitha's and Charlie's story in it.
Holly
p.s. Following is the first note to 1085. It's Tabitha's and
Charlie's story.
<<< VAXWRK::$1$DUS6:[NOTES$LIBRARY]FELINE.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Meower Power >-
================================================================================
Note 1085.0 Near Tragedy--How to prevent this in the future? 16 replies
FIDDLE::HTAYLOR "Cat lovers are a special breed" 23 lines 2-FEB-1988 08:40
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I need some advice. When I first joined this notes file, I asked
about bringing a cat into a home with a bird. Things have geen
going fine so far except for last weekend when Charlie the bird
almost had a major CATastrophe.
Tabby has looked at charlie's cage every once in a while, but
hasn't really bothered him. Saturday night, I had just gone to bed
when I heard a big crash out in the other room. I got up to
investigate. When I turned on the light, Charlie's cage had been
knocked over and Tabby had Charlie IN HER MOUTH!!!! I chased the cat
around the house and finally got her to let go of Charlie. He flew
up onto my shoulder and I checked him to make sure he was ok. He was
obviously nervous, but he seemed fine.
Now my question is, what do I do? Charlie's cage is in my room
right now, but I would like to bring him out with the rest of the
family. any suggestions?
Holly
|
3305.13 | well, you might pull it off... | FORTSC::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Tue Feb 13 1990 13:04 | 24 |
| If you bring a bird into an already-established cat household, you
can expect your cats to say, "FOR ME??!? How sweet of you...lunch on the
hoof, as it were!"......that doesn't mean you won't have that unusual
cat that understands the difference between outside and inside birds, but
you can EXPECT to have to deal with a POWERFUL instinct to hunt and EAT
creatures with feathers. As most birds are very vulnerable to stress,
I would be VERY concerned whether the bird would survive the "breaking-in"
period during which you attempt to convince the cat not to eat "THIS bird".
If you do not yet have pets, you might try to get the bird first (a VERY
BIG BIRD WITH REAL SHARP BEAK AND CLAWS) and THEN add 2 very small kittens
(10 weeks or so) so they could entertain themselves.....and then try to
train the kittens to LEAVE THE BIRD ALONE. You would not, in my opinion,
have a prayer of keeping ONE kitten involved enough with other things to
keep it away from the bird. I would also never let the kittens outside
to learn to hunt birds from the other cats in the area, and I would consider
declawing the kittens in order to keep the bird to cat power ratio in
the bird's favor....
At the price of BIG BIRDS WITH SHARP BEAK AND CLAWS, I personally would
not risk it....there is only so much I'm willing to spend on my cats'
food -- and the last time I looked, a parrot, etc. can cost $800.00 and
up.....a little too rich for my blood! 8^}
|
3305.14 | | AKOV13::LAJEUNESSE | | Thu Feb 15 1990 12:02 | 9 |
| Thanks for all the reply's. I think what I'll end up doing is getting
a very young kitten.
Hopefully it will become familuar with the bird and ignor her.
Thanks again,
Mark
|
3305.15 | Success Story! | SALSA::DEFRANCO | | Mon Mar 12 1990 16:06 | 19 |
| Mark,
Did you get your kitten yet? I wrote into feline and pet_birds looking
for similar advice but my situation was the other way around. I
already have cats and wanted to add a bird. Well, I did it and to my
delight it is working out wonderfully. The (3) cats have looked and
sniffed but have not made any aggressive moves what so ever. I even
take my bird out with the cats around. They (the cats) don't even
bother with her now and simply go about their normal routine.
My husband had the bird out over the weekend and she and one of the
cats came nose to nose. The bird peeped and flapped her wings and the
cat went scampering off to the other side of the counter.
I'm very pleased and confident enough that I am getting another bird
next weekend (to keep the first one, Rosie, company).
Jeanne (Cali, Sam, Sweetie, and (Rosie the bird)
|
3305.16 | | AKOV13::LAJEUNESSE | | Mon Mar 12 1990 17:11 | 9 |
| Hi Jeanne,
Not yet. I still haven't moved in yet. Once I do I'm planning on
getting kitten. Hopefully it will all go well.
I'll let you know.
Mark
|
3305.17 | | ABYSS::sandy | C'mon everybody! Smurf's up! | Tue Mar 13 1990 08:37 | 7 |
|
Did anyone else see 'America's Funniest Home Videos' on Sunday
night? There was a great film clip of a cat and a cockatiel
playing with a shoestring, and it looked like the bird was
winning :^}
Sandy
|
3305.18 | | NRADM::ROBINSON | did i tell you this already??? | Tue Mar 13 1990 08:45 | 5 |
|
Yes, Sandy, I saw that one!! My parakeet used to chase my
dog (corgi) around the same way - the dog was terrified of
him!!
|
3305.19 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Wed Mar 14 1990 07:25 | 3 |
| Did anyone happen to record that on a VHS recorder?? If so, I'd
love to borrow it.
Nancy DC
|
3305.20 | Harmony (almost) | SALSA::DEFRANCO | | Mon Mar 19 1990 12:00 | 13 |
| I got another bird this weekend and I'm happy to say that my 3 cats
haven't even seemed to notice it. I'm sooooo proud of them! They just
seem to know that these birds are part of the family which means paws
off! Of course I will never completely trust them, after all, cats will
be cats, but all in all, things are working out beatifully.
Jeanne (Cali, Sam, and Sweetie)
P.S. The one I'm having trouble with is the dog! For some reason,
she's determined to get to these birds. Needless to say, she is not
allowed in the house when the birds are out.
|
3305.21 | Hey, that's easy! | TPMARY::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Mon Mar 19 1990 17:39 | 10 |
| Jeanne,
I know the answer to this one! Sweetie hired the dog to do the dirty work
for her! She's just like her biological Mom...why do the work yourself
when you can hire someone! Meg always had me doing her work for her, so
Sweetie must have learned from her!
Give the little angel a hug from me and her sister, Julie!!
Mary
|
3305.22 | Little angel! You've got to be kidding! | SALSA::DEFRANCO | | Tue Mar 20 1990 10:46 | 11 |
| Mary! What ever gave you the idea Sweetie was a little angel? You
would not have written that if you had seen her SWINGING from my newly
purshased wall hanging last week or climbing up the screen door to get
a better look at the outside world, or taking a hissy fit at 2:00 in
the morning because she saw a ghost or something outside!
I should have named her "Diablo"
Jeanne
|
3305.23 | Accidents Happen | WR1FOR::BROMARTH | Theresa Bromar | Mon May 07 1990 19:37 | 18 |
| I use to have a canary, parakeet, and a cockatiel. My orange tabby
cat of 14 years never bothered them. However, he died last summer,
and I adopted a 3 yr. old female torbie, and a 1 yr. old silver
male tabby. The older female learned quickly through verbal commands,
not to bother the birds. However, the younger male knocked over
both the canary and parakeet cages. (The cockatiel cage was a hugh,
heavy, victorian, wrought-iron cage that he couldn't push over.)
The result was that even though neither bird was eaten, the canary
died the next day of a heart attack. The parakeet had all it's tail
feathers pulled out, but he was fine, and his feathers grew back prettier
that ever.
Advice: Make sure tht your parrot is in a very heavy cage. Also,
train your cats (either verbally, or with a water sprayer) not to
even look at the bird. It can work, but accidents do occur. After
the rules have been established, our cats and birds co-exist just
fine.
|