T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4874.1 | | JUPITR::KAGNO | To cats, all things belong to cats | Fri Aug 23 1991 09:34 | 19 |
| Yes, neutered males do spray! I have one, and so do my parents. TK,
my neutered male, will only spray outside. The neighbors across the
way have a spayed female and TK will go into the bushes and spray to
mark his territory. He lives in a house with four other neutered males
yet has never (knock wood) sprayed in the house.
TJ, my parent's cat, does spray in the house. My mom had the vet put
TJ on a drug called Ovaban that reduces aggression and curbs spraying
in neutered male cats. Ovaban has side affects, though, so it should be
used with caution and only if the situation really warrants it. TJ
would back up to walls, wall units, etc., and spray... right in front
of my mom! The Ovaban has helped immensely. TJ is by nature a very
mellow, mushy cat so the spraying habit really surprised us.
Some cats, if neutered later in life, never stop spraying even after
neutering. My TK was a stray cat who was neutered at about 3-4 years
old. He was the neighborhood tom prior to losing his manhood so my
guess is that his old habits were difficult to break.
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4874.2 | Even spayed females can spray! | GEMINI::NICKERSON | | Fri Aug 23 1991 11:50 | 26 |
| Even spayed, female cats can spray if they get into a territorial
battle. We had 4 cats: Princess, Eve, Bryn and Misty. For whatever
reason, Bryn (a beautiful Russian Blue) and Eve got into a territorial
battle in our house.
Eve claimed my parents bedroom and spraying the bed, drapes, and
anything else she thought Bryn might want. Bryn claimed ME! I would
be sitting in a chair innocently watching TV, reading, etc. Bryn would
jump up in my lap and before I knew it she would be spraying away! The
spray smells JUST as bad as a male tom's does.
For some reason Princess and Misty never got into the act. In speaking
with our vet, he advised putting one of the cats to sleep to see if
that cured the other one. It was a VERY hard decision but my parents
decided to put Eve to sleep. I stayed with her and it was SO sad - the
vet let me stay in the room with her for as long as I wanted to, crying
my eyes out! Unfortunately, this didn't cure Bryn - she continued to
go after me with a vengence! So, my parents had to put her down too.
They stayed with her - I couldn't handle that one.
By the way, having been a cat-lover/owner all my life, these are the
ONLY two cats I've EVER heard of which had this problem so I wouldn't
get too concerned about it if anyone is considering adding another cat
to their household.
Just a [sad] but interesting story....
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4874.3 | | MCIS2::HUSSIAN | But my cats *ARE* my kids!! | Fri Aug 23 1991 12:09 | 4 |
| Spraying the owner or other areas of the house could indicate a
urinary infection.
Bonnie
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4874.4 | | SANFAN::FOSSATJU | | Fri Aug 23 1991 13:18 | 9 |
| I was surprised when I saw one of my males do this - Stitch was nutered
at 7 months so when I saw him aiming his back end to the bush outside
our front door I was a little taken back because I initially thought
that nutering would take care of this - he never displays this behavior
in the house - just when he goes out the front door with us to pick up
the mail or the paper - I think I've seen our other guy do it on
occasion but thankfully it's always been outside.
Giudi
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4874.5 | Ahem, Mother, I'm not pleased with you.... | ESCROW::COCHRANE | Rack and Rune | Fri Aug 23 1991 13:42 | 13 |
| Misha sprays as well. I've had him to the vet and checked out,
and he doesn't have an infection. Since my husband and I divorced
and we split the seven of them up somewhat (I have four including
Misha, Ian has two, my Mom and Dad have one), he's been a bit better,
but he seems to do it as a sort of expression of disapproval, ie,
I'm not paying enough attention to him, am away at work, the food dish
is below "Misha-tolerable" level, etc. I love the big guy to death,
he's such a sweet tempered lovable boy, so my nose and I just follow
him around with Nature's Miracle....Fortunately he doesn't express his
"dissatisfaction" very often. :-)
Mary-Michael, Misha, Mips, Belle and Dream
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4874.6 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313 | Mon Aug 26 1991 09:02 | 23 |
| Some male cats will go through the spraying motions but nothing comes
out. It is important to determine if this is what your cat is doing.
Now Dundee sprays! And just to be sure we're all talking about the
same thing here, "Spraying" is done from a standing position onto
vertical surfaces. usually the cat holds his tail straight up and
it quivers. "Marking" is urinating on horizontal surfaces and is
usually done from a squatting position. Spraying is very obviously
a territorial behavior, Marking may indicate a urinary track
infection or some other problem - like a dirty litterbox.
In Dundee's case it is most likely due to the presence of whole
females in heat since I'm a breeder. He IS on ovaban but this has
not eliminated the behavior totally. So, I now treat him more like
a whole male and keep him confined when I'm not around to watch
him. If his urine smelled stronger then I'd ask the vet who neutered
him if he was sure he got "everything".
I disagree with the noter who said that the urine of a spayed female
smells as bad as that of an unneutered tom! Nothing smells that bad
:^) However, an unspayed female can come close.
Nancy
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4874.7 | Concerned mom of 2 male kittens! | VIRGO::FRANCIS | | Mon Aug 26 1991 17:18 | 18 |
| Hi, my name is Kim and I'm the proud mom of two male kittens. There
names are Felix and Oscar and they just turned 7 months old. They were
fixed at 5 1/2 months. I'm extremely concerned that they will start to
spray. My land lord told me I could only keep the kittens if they were
declawed and clean. Well unfortunately they have been declawed and are
not allowed outside. They are friendly as ever and do not seem upset
by the changes is their life. They have the run of the house and are
pretty spoiled, unfortunately if they start to spray, or spray urine
all of us could end up homeless. Is there anyway I can prevent this
from happening? Or any signs to look for? The two kittens are
brothers and not only are extremely friendly towards anyone with legs,
the also do not like to be separated for any length of time (i.e.
vets). Any suggestions or adivce would be greatly appreciated.
Regards,
Kim
P.S. I'm a first time owner
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4874.8 | | BOOVX2::MANDILE | But ma, it followed me home,honest! | Mon Aug 26 1991 17:31 | 8 |
| Hi Kim!
If they have not sprayed yet, or did not before they were
neutered (fixed) you probably will not have that problem.
Did they spray before?
Lynne
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4874.9 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Mon Aug 26 1991 17:31 | 5 |
| Kim, my guess is you're safe. It might make you feel better to buy a
bottle of Nature's Miracle at a pet store so you could clean up any
accident quickly, but it sounds like the prompt fixing plus the company
they keep each other and your attention have you all in fat city.
|
4874.10 | Shooting Blanks | SANFAN::FOSSATJU | | Mon Aug 26 1991 17:43 | 11 |
| Upon close observation this weekend I found that Stitch, who I thought
was spraying the bush by our front door is not. He's acting like he is
but nothing is, ahemmm, coming out. He'll back up to it tail straight
up in the air and then the tail twitches as in spraying but that's
about it. Again, he never demonstrates this behavior in the house.
Gino has also done this out front but I'm going to assume that he's
spraying "blanks" as well. I guess this is what you call mock
spraying. They were both nutered at 7-1/2 months and are respectively
7 and almost 4.
Giudi
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4874.11 | Thanks!!! | VIRGO::FRANCIS | | Tue Aug 27 1991 12:45 | 9 |
| I just wanted to say thanks to Lynne and Karen for their replys.
Hopefully all will go well and the only problem I'll end up with is
trying to sleep with 20lbs on my chest. My vet told me they will
probably grow out of the stage of sleeping on top of me, he said that
they probably enjoy listening to my heart.
This was the first time I've written in this file for help and it's a
great feeling to know that their are experienced cat lovers to help out
new moms.
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4874.12 | | TOOK::DUGAL | Lisa | Tue Aug 27 1991 14:09 | 4 |
| VIRGO::FRANCIS --> Really? Your vet said that cats outgrow sleeping on top
of you? I must have had an overgrown baby because I had a cat for
16 years that insisted she absolutely positively couldn't not sleep
without being on top of me. :-)
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4874.13 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Aug 27 1991 14:31 | 4 |
| re; outgrowing sleeping on top of you
Tell that to 9 year old Holly.
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4874.14 | | BOOVX2::MANDILE | Her Royal Highness | Tue Aug 27 1991 16:18 | 4 |
| Tell that to my two 4 yr old, Casey & B.K. (-;
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4874.15 | | TPMARY::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Wed Aug 28 1991 13:31 | 6 |
| You know, some day, when you've had a bad day, you'll want nothing more than
a warm purring kitty sleeping on your chest.....
Julie still clings to me, as does baby Beth.......
Mary
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4874.16 | keeping the boys from spraying | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 03 1991 14:51 | 9 |
| re: spraying
if you have males cats that are neutered, kept inside, and not exposed to
other cats who spray (in this case, they seeem to "learn" to spray), you
are pretty much assured you won't have a spraying problem if it doesn't
show up prior to neutering. Once neutered, indoor-only cats usually don't
start spraying if they haven't sprayed before the operation. One
thing that can start a neutered cat spraying is to have a whole male or
whole female mark the outside of his house while marking their territory.
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