T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4703.1 | a lotta nerve for such a little pipsqueak! | MCIS2::HUSSIAN | But my cats *ARE* my kids!! | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:03 | 15 |
| Well, I've had the same thing happen for about the passed two months.
Callie & Tabitha like each other (Love each other actually) and they
play together a lot, but sometimes Callie (4 months) is a bit rough on
my little petite Tabitha(one year). Tabitha became withdrawn to a
point. she still played w/ callie & stuff, but was less "people
oriented". Lately, she's been back to her old self, and actually gives
callie a run for her money sometimes. I do still have to break them up
when they'rre "playing" too rough, and Callie seeems to get retalitory
for Tabithas liking. Tabitha CAN take care of herself, she's just a
bit laid back.
I'd be interested in hearing other experiences, and wish the base noter
luck!!
Bonnie
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4703.2 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | I'm51%Pussycat,49%Bitch-Don'tPush it! | Mon Jun 10 1991 13:31 | 18 |
| This note hits home! I know I've written in here before that my
newcomer, Taja, about 11 months old now, is a devil, not in disguise
either!! He dominates and the other cats let him. I know he will
mellow out with age; for now he simply gets a lot of discipline when he
instigates too much fun and games. One thing my husband and I did
notice, though, is that a lot of the times Kelsey has approached Taja
to play and then wimps out when Taja gets too rough for him. He goes
into hissy fits and runs away whining. So, now I try to watch who does
the instigating and if it is Kelsey, not scold Taja for it.
I was going to bring in a young kitten for Taja to play with and then
rethought that idea since Taja is almost an adult himself. Then, he'll
mellow out and the new kitten will need a new kitten and pretty soon
I'd be way over my feline limit!! So, I decided to bring in a new boy
halfway between the age of Kelsey and Taja. He's used to a houseful of
cats and seems pretty adaptable. Hopefully, this won't make matters
worse. Only time will tell!!
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4703.3 | Intestinal fortitude wins the day.... | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Mon Jun 10 1991 15:58 | 8 |
| Although the following was a statement made relative to the Canine
species, I think it could easily relate to the Felines as well....
"It's not the size of the Dog in a fight, it's the size of the
fight in the Dog that counts.."
JM
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4703.4 | | SANFAN::FOSSATJU | | Mon Jun 10 1991 18:23 | 17 |
| We had Pippin and Gino for 4 years before we got Stitch. Gino weighs
between 12-1/2 13 lbs and Pippin is about 10. They could have weighed
100 lbs each and it wouldn't have mattered to Stitch at all. From the
very first day he took over. He'd hopp up to Pippins favorite spot and
she'd batt him off and he'd just climb back up again until she got sick
of it and gave up her space. He'd walk over to Gino and push his face
out of the food dish - Gino would batt him away and make some serious
threatening sounds but Stitch kept it up until Gino gave up the dish.
This tenatious behavior applied to everything Stitch did. It's eased
up a little over the last 2 years but he still rules the roost. They
all really get along beautifully but the little Sh!! just established
himself from day one and the pecking order got changed.
No - it's not the size of the animal at all - it's the attitude.
Giudi +3
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4703.5 | the little devil | KAOFS::J_GREGOIRE | | Tue Jun 11 1991 09:57 | 10 |
|
REF: .04
THAT'S IT, that's what happening with my cats, the little
is sort of taking over one example he took over the bed my
older cat is not allowed to come and sleep on the bed soon
has he jump on the bed the little one start nagging him until
he leaves, I cannot beleive that my older cat is such a big
wimp, I hope everything is going to get better I'm missing not
having my older cat not sleeping with us.
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4703.6 | Dominant & Aggressive | FSOA::LCHESTER | | Tue Jun 11 1991 10:54 | 27 |
| re .5, I doubt things will change. My Jessica is 8 years old and
has been bringing up kittens (none of whom have made it to year-old
cats through various illnesses - 6 of them) for years. Then last
fall Alexander came into her (our) life. A ball of black fluff
who just wanted to be held and petted constantly. After the first
two weeks of hissing at him, Jessica began to accept - altho' not
like - him. That little ball of fluff has turned into one of the
worst hellions you have ever seen. Jessica was always queen of
the roost through all other kittens. But now she cowers to
Alexander. He chases her and the fighting can get rough. He
has her completely terrorized. The water bottle is no longer
doing any good. When my husband got out of the hospital last
week - Alexander bit him and it got badly infected, so the
doctor popped him in for 5 days of 24-hour intravenous penicillin
feeding - we had a serious discussion about whether Alexander will
remain with us. He was just neutered a couple of months ago and
we're waiting a bit longer to see if he will calm down. But I
also ask myself is it fair to cat #1, Jessica, to live in fear
of him? Or will he eventually mellow to the point where they
can live in the same house peacably without the fur flying
constantly?
So if your older cat has taken second place, I doubt whether that
behavior will change. But I hope I'm wrong.
Laura
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4703.7 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | I'm51%Pussycat,49%Bitch-Don'tPush it! | Tue Jun 11 1991 12:16 | 7 |
| Laura, I think that Alex will mellow out. Give him time. Years ago I
took in TK, a stray tomcat who dominated the neighborhood. He would
frequently terrorize my 2 neutered males. I finally got hold of TK and
got him fixed and he ended up to me the mellowest, mushiest cat I have
ever had. He's a real love now and a big coward! So, give Alex time.
It takes awhile for those boys to become men...errr, I mean its!!
|
4703.8 | dethroning | KAOFS::J_GREGOIRE | | Tue Jun 11 1991 12:47 | 9 |
| REF: .6
That is terrible what is happening to you I hope I'm
not going to get the same problem.
Well my older cat is getting push around by the little one
but they still play together, I just feel guilty to have
brought a new kitten who took is thron,but I think he'll
get use to it with time.
|
4703.9 | | SANFAN::FOSSATJU | | Tue Jun 11 1991 12:48 | 11 |
| re.5
There was also some confustion about sleeping arrangements when Stitch
took over but then that mellowed out as well. We had to take some
responsibility on our part as well - if he chased the other one(s) off
the bed then we would go and collect them and put them back on. Now
each has his/her special spot - and sometimes they just like to sleep
some place else. My Gino is much more passive than his sister is about
things - he's the 13 lb. Siamese wimp!
Giudi
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4703.10 | | MADRE::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Jun 11 1991 15:43 | 10 |
| What I've found is that there are different sleeping arrangements
so that everyone has time to cuddle. My two older ones
own the bed at night (Holly doesn't let LB on), but on the
weekend days or rare occasions when I'm home during the day weekdays
the two odler ones sleep in the living room and LB gets the bed.
After a year and a half things are slowlyyyyy mellowing out so
that all three are in the bedroom in the morning, LB usually
perched on a window sill watching for birds, which Holly wouldn't
let him do before.
|
4703.11 | | MADRE::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Jun 11 1991 15:45 | 7 |
| Re: Alex
If this behaviour persists for another couple of months, you might
ask your vet about a hormone shot (one time) for Alex; this worked
wonders with my Pussycat, who was originally feral and didn't
"relax' even after neutering.
|
4703.12 | "Cats are one of life's joys!!" | ODIXIE::BANTEKAS | | Wed Jun 12 1991 10:29 | 23 |
| I'm in the same boat with TaiTai (13 lb. Siamese) and Figaro (a 5# ball
of energy). This is the second stray we have brought in for Tai to
adopt. The first one was female and 3-4 weeks old.. "Chiggar" was so
pathetic that softie Tai just couldn't resist. Chiggar nursed on Tai's
front foot (even at 5 years old Chiggar in times of stress or fatigue
would do the same thing). We lost Chiggar to diabetes and were happy
with one cat. Tai is 10 and the most placid, loving, laidback cat I
have ever seen. But, fate stepped in and on a long vacation weekend
found this little black abandoned waif hiding on the deck. Verified it
was a stray (check in office said a whole litter was left and one by
one they were either hit or found dead by people. We brought "Figaro"
home (first stop vet) and Tai took one look and took to the top of my
kitchen cabinets. We have been through severe diahreah (sp?) which has
finally cleared up thanks to the suggestions from noters (albon did it)
but Figaro has been giving Tai a run for his money. Tai has a slight
heart problem and I worried that the "Hell bent for election" races
through the house were stressful to Tai. According to the vet, on the
contrary. Last check up he went from a class 3 to a class 1 problem
(don't understand but the vet was impressed). But Figaro beats up on
Tai all the time....so right now Figgie is at the vets to be neutered
and front declawed. This way Tai has a fighting chance (when Figgie
got feisty Tai simply sat on him). Will pick Figgie up after work and
hope the neutering will calm him down some.
|