T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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124.1 | | SELL1::FAHEL | Amalthea Celebras/Silver Unicorn | Tue Jan 07 1992 08:01 | 10 |
| I don't know if this helps, but...
Last year we got my father-in-law a kitten (name: Caesar). When Caesar
first moved in, he wouldn't eat ANYTHING. My FIL finally got him to
eat by mixing canned (9-Lives) and dry (same).
That was over a year ago, and Caesar is now big, sleek, healthy,
strong, and eats just about anything.
K.C.
|
124.2 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | some assembly required... | Tue Jan 07 1992 10:22 | 18 |
| Do you feed both cats together? If FM is a 'hearty eater' the new one may be
too intimidated to eat nearby.
Try adding some water to the wet food. I have done this for all my cats, since
if they eat the wet food, I *know* they are getting lots of water to help keep
those kidneys working ;^) Try feeding her in a separate room, giving her a
half hour or so at least to work on the food.
I leave my current kitten in my bedroom while I'm gone, along with his food
selection and a litter box - if I let him run loose, I'm almost guaranteed to
come home to wanton destruction!! My bedroom is relatively kitten proof. This
gives Hanna, my older cat, a chance to eat without being bulldozed over by a
stampeding kitten - the reverse situation.
The kitten may still be adjusting to the new living situation. It's had a lot
of changes in it's life in the last week.
Congratulations on your new addition.
|
124.3 | She eats, she's just really picky, apparently.... | TLE::WEISS | No way I'll crash, this is a *BEER* truck! | Tue Jan 07 1992 10:32 | 22 |
| Hi again.
Well, I went home at lunch today to make sure that the kitten hadn't fully
terrorized FM (or vice versa).
She still hadn't eaten anything, so while I warmed some chicken soup for
myself, a pulled out a small piece of chicken and offered it to the kitten. I
figured that if she refused that, there really was a problem. Well, she ate it.
So I opened up a can of turkey flavored kitten food, and gave that to her. She
did eat it. So it looks like I've got a picky little girl on my hands. She
had her choice of seafood, liver, beef, egg, and "original kitten formula"
flavored foods, but NOOOOOOOOOO. She has to have *poultry*. Oh well. When
she gets bigger, I'll try to wean her into some different flavors. She'll
probably end up being a fat load, since FM is tiny (weighed ~6 lbs over the
summer at age 2 1/2), and eats like a horse, and will eat anything.
They're still having fun playing. The kitten is getting braver, and FM is
getting a little less serious.
:-) :-) :-)
Dave
|
124.4 | | TNPUBS::C_MILLER | | Tue Jan 07 1992 11:18 | 15 |
| I (sort of) had the same problem when I brought my kitten home from (a
pretty dirty) shelter last year. They had her eating ADULT canned
garbage which she was only used to, so when I brought her home to Iams
she either refused to eat or threw it up. I brought her to the vet the
next day to discover she had worms. The vet gave me a sample of Purina
Kitten Chow which she took to immediately with no side affects.
I learned very quickly not to introduce too many *different* brands of
kitten food at once. This resulted in vomiting or diahrrea. If you can
find out what the kitten was eating *before* you brought her home and
mix in some new food, she may want it (because she'll recognize it).
I was told *not* to give her any type of "fish" flavored food because
of the high oil content. Sure enough, even as an 18 month old, she
still can't tolerate any type of fish-flavored food. Good luck!
|
124.5 | | VORTEX::TPMARY::TAMIR | Feline Navidad | Tue Jan 07 1992 11:24 | 14 |
| Well, Dave, old buddy, this 12 week old kitten should be called Genius, cause
she's training you very well!! Actually, in her defense, I'd suspect she's
just not used to having all that food around her, and not all different
varieties. Cats have this built-in defense mechanism that means they won't
go hungry unless something's wrong. I'd suspect The Kitten has worms--in fact,
I'd bet cash American dollars on it. Has she seen your vet yet?? A good dose
of roundworm medication might help. When I took in Biff, he was the same way,
but when he got rid of those worms, he ate like a pig. And, now that I think
about it, I'd bet that throwing up could have been cause by worms, too. Off
to the vet with her!!
But first of all, she needs a name!!!!!
Mary
|
124.6 | Yeah, she's training me well... | TLE::WEISS | No way I'll crash, this is a *BEER* truck! | Tue Jan 07 1992 12:43 | 18 |
| Hi again.
> lots of food at once.
I tried 1 at a time, and then we she ignored all of them, I left them all out.
That's pretty much academic now, though.
> worms.
According to the shelter, she had her first worming on Jan, 2 and she was
negative. So I'm not planning on bring her to the vet for her 2nd shots/worming
for a couple weeks. If the throwing up continues, though, to the vet we go.
Thanks everyone.
Dave
p.s. I'll introduce her and FM when she gets a name...
|
124.8 | | SANFAN::FOSSATJU | | Tue Jan 07 1992 12:43 | 8 |
| Same thing happened when I got Pippin. She was eating the day we took
her home and then she started vomitng that night. Next day she ate
nothing but was still up-chucking - off to the vet to find out she had
a good case of worms. She actually didn't start eating for another
couple of days - but then very early one morning we heard her screeming
at the frig and the rest is history.
Giudi
|
124.9 | this is fairly normal and common | MUTTON::BROWN | | Tue Jan 07 1992 12:55 | 17 |
| Cats under stress will usually not eat. Moving to a new home, and
staying at a shelter for a few days is stressful. So is being
introduced to a resident cat. She should start eating fine in a day or
so. She can go several days without eating without you having to worry
about her health. As long as she is drinking water you shouldn't
worry. Are you absolutely certain that she hasn't eaten when you
weren't watching her?
Be careful not to fall into the trap of *creating* a picky eater. Put
down what you wish to feed her. If she doesn't eat it after an hour,
throw it away but don't put anything else down until the next feeding
time. My philosophy is that when the cats starting buying the cat food
themselves (and paying for it!), then they can choose what they think
they would like to eat. In the meantime, I will choose it for them. :')
Jo
|
124.10 | Baby your baby | MRKTNG::ROSSI | Give me another word for Thesaurus.. | Fri Jan 10 1992 12:31 | 16 |
| Dave,
I would try all meat baby food, beef, turkey, chicken. Gerber's lamb
is very easily digestable. I wean my kittens with that. Haven't met
one yet that wouldn't eat it.
I also give it to my adults every once in a while as a treat. Beau
allows me to bring him to the shows and promises to be a good boy if I
promise to bring the baby food.
Hope this helps
Valerie
|
124.11 | An update | TLE::WEISS | No way I'll crash, this is a *BEER* truck! | Fri Jan 10 1992 16:16 | 14 |
| Hi All.
Well the kitten (who still has no name...) is eating fine now. In fact, she
doesn't even seem to want the canned food anymore. Is now eating plain old adult
dry food. Doesn't like the stuff for kittens.
Cheap and easy...The way I like it!!! :-)
Dave
p.s. She gets table scraps, too, so she won't get 'malnutrition' from eating
*only* supermarket dry...
|
124.12 | | VORTEX::DSSDEV::TAMIR | Feline Navidad | Sun Jan 12 1992 18:16 | 13 |
| Hi Dave,
You might want to try either ether Purina Kitten Chow dairy formula
or Friskies kitten formula. My kitten likes both over adult food.
The Kitten really needs the extra nutrition that the kitten foods
will afford her. But, I know how it always went in my house...the
adults eat the kitten food, the kitten eats the adult 'lite' food...
don't they know what's good for them?????
Poor T.K....no name yet. Just don't name her DECcat V2.0...
Mary
|
124.13 | Go figure... | SELL3::FAHEL | Amalthea Celebras/Silver Unicorn | Mon Jan 13 1992 06:23 | 8 |
| Table scraps (too much of them) are a no-no!
Its funny...when we first got Rico, we bought him some kitten food, and
he wouldn't go near it, but would go after Tiki's adult food. Now that
we have bought kitten food for Alex, Alex won't touch the stuff...but
Rico loves it!
K.C.
|
124.14 | A kitten by any other name... | TLE::WEISS | No way I'll crash, this is a *BEER* truck! | Mon Jan 13 1992 11:14 | 15 |
| > Table scraps (too much of them) are a no-no!
Yup, I know. They just get them as 'treats', never as whole meals. Kinda like
kids playing "I get to lick the pot..."
> Poor T.K....no name yet. Just don't name her DECcat V2.0...
Well, right now, it looks like her name with either be...
"Hamster", "Raspberry Wine", or "Zinfandel". Just gotta see which one she likes
best... :-)
Thanks for all the help...
Dave
|
124.15 | next he'll want his own wine cellar | MUTTON::BROWN | | Mon Jan 13 1992 11:27 | 20 |
| That reminds me of something that happened this weekend. I was tearing
down my cage at the show and Reste was still in it. I accidently
spilled a glass of Chardonnay that I was drinking, and the quilted
bottom of Reste's cage absorbed most of the wine. Well, naturally,
while I was frantically trying to sop it up with paper towels, Reste
was doing his best to walk all through it. About that time I realized
that Reste was on second call for a final! So, I had to pull him out
of the wet cage, try to dry his feet with a towel and then rush him up
to Betty Denny's ring.
I took Betty aside and explained what had happened, so that she
wouldn't think that his feet were wet from urine or something. Course,
she made a big joke out of it, telling everyone that I was trying to
get my cat drunk, while I sat there very red-faced. Next thing I know
the crowd is roaring with laughter and I look up and Reste is licking
his paws very intensely and then making funny faces to the audience.
What a clown!! He licked every drop of chardonnay off of those little
white toes.
Jo
|
124.16 | Duke's not eating... | RLAV::BARRETT | Is it safe? | Tue Feb 18 1992 06:53 | 39 |
| I am fostering a cat right now who I can't seem to get interested in
food. I have tried baby food, canned chicken and beef broth, tuna
fish, and various kinds of cat food. (I don't eat meat myself, so I
don't have any beef or chicken in the house, and never buy it or cook
it).
The only thing he even nibbles at is the tuna (sometimes mixed with a
little fishy cat food). He licks it a lot, but never eats very much.
I tried what someone put here earlier - I put water in his tuna/canned
fishy food and he laps the water up.
His story is he was surrendered to a shelter with his wife, his wife
got adopted and he didn't. He got very stressed out, and stopped
eating. He's a big guy, and I'd estimate that he lost about 1/3 of his
body weight (probably went from 14-15 lbs to his current approx 10 lbs).
This has all happened over the last month. He's sooo skinny!
Duke has a home, but will be staying with me a couple more weeks.
Any ideas? I am giving him nutrical supplement every other day or so,
but I cut back on that hoping he would be interested in food again. We
think he's healthy except for not eating. One thing that ocurred to me
is maybe with all the stress, his teeth are not right and are giving
him pain.
His normal diet was Iams dry free-fed, but he won't touch that (or any
hard food for that matter).
He's had a couple bowel movements, but hasn't had one since Saturday.
He's been with me for almost a week now. I keep him separate from my 3
cats at night and when I'm not home, so he can free feed, and so they
don't stress him too much. When they are together, it's been no big
deal - a very slight amount of hissing, etc.
He's just very unhappy and uninterested. Can anybody help? Do I just
need more patience?
Sue B (frustrated)
|
124.17 | | SANDY::FRASER | Err on a G String | Tue Feb 18 1992 07:04 | 10 |
|
Sue, I know what you mean by the frustration, as I'm going through this
right now with C.C. Has he been seen by a vet lately? I have a bag of
KD here, and it says that if a cat refuses to eat for two consecutive
days, he should probably be checked out.
Sandy
Btw, where did you get the Nutrical supplement?
|
124.18 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Feb 18 1992 10:21 | 2 |
| I would certainly take him to a vet; imagine what condition a human
would be in if they'd lost a third of their body weight.
|
124.19 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Tue Feb 18 1992 10:36 | 5 |
| A cat that loses that much weight that fast is a prime candidate for
hepatic lipidosis (fatty liver disease). I would get him vet checked
right away.
Jo
|
124.20 | | RLAV::BARRETT | Is it safe? | Tue Feb 18 1992 12:00 | 15 |
| Thanks, everybody....Duke has an appointment tomorrow morning.
As I mentioned before, he seems healthy enough, just skinny and
depressed. And he does nibble a little.
Jo, is he a prime candidate for fatty liver disease because he lost the
weight? Or is that rapid a weight loss a symptom of it? I.e. which
one comes first?
And I got the Nutrical at the shelter where I volunteer (and where Duke
was before I brought him home).
Keeping my fingers crossed for the guy...
Sue B.
|
124.21 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Tue Feb 18 1992 13:05 | 9 |
| It is a vicious cycle. The rapid weight loss can put him into trouble
with his liver, but also the not eating will mean that the liver starts
trying to digest his fat stores. Check with the vet for more info. I
haven't read up on this in a while. Last year my vet was treating a
male cat for this and it was really awful. They managed to pull him
through but he had to be fed by stomach tube through his nose for
weeks.
Jo
|
124.22 | Duke update - thanks for your advice, everyone! | RLAV::BARRETT | Is it safe? | Wed Feb 19 1992 14:37 | 24 |
| Duke went to the vet today. His gums around his front lower teeth are
inflamed, meaning it probably hurts him to eat. He's getting Antirobe
(25 mg 2x/d) for that. Also, his fecal showed coccidia, so he's going
on Albon for that. I read that that usually doesn't cause disease
symptoms in adult cats, but poor Duke's had such a rough time lately I
would think anything could get to him. He doesn't have diarrhea or
anything, but the vet said these things are variable, and felt that it
could be part of his problem too.
We are also getting a CBC and full blood chemistry.
If that comes back ok, and if the Albon and Antirobe don't do the job,
we'll carefully try an appetite stimulant. We want to rule out any
underlying causes first.
Also, it turns out he doesn't even weigh 10 pounds - only 8.7. And
he's a big, tall cat (easily a third taller than Trouble, who probably
weighs about the same as or a little more than Duke).
He seems a little more settled this afternoon - maybe it's because he
got put in a carrier, taken somewhere, but not left there like has
happened to him too much lately.
Sue B. + resident monsters + Duke
|
124.23 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Wed Feb 19 1992 16:08 | 3 |
| Poor Duke. Please let us know how he's doing. Sounds like he
needs all the cuddles you can give him....
|
124.24 | | MAYES::MERRITT | | Thu Feb 20 1992 05:09 | 8 |
| Hopefully they can diagnose the problem for poor Duke. Believe
me Duke knows you are trying to help him...and he is probably
very grateful.
Keep us posted please...
Sandy
|
124.25 | Duke's better (fingers crossed) | RLAV::BARRETT | Is it safe? | Mon Feb 24 1992 11:32 | 31 |
| Duke's doing better, I think.
His blood test results were normal except a couple enzymes just
slightly above normal. The vet said if he didn't gain some weight, he
wanted to rerun that portion of the test.
He's started to eat some, and he's now eating almost exclusively hard
food, which is what his diet was before all this started. We think his
teeth must have bothering him - when he started eating hard food, he
only gently mouthed it; now he's starting to crunch it a little. He
hasn't really gained much if any weight yet, but he's perkier and more
playful. I'm hoping the weight gain will follow.
He gave me a scare Saturday am - threw up a LOT! I talked to the vet,
and we think that he did that because he probably ate more than his
shrunken stomach could handle. No problems since then.
He goes to his new home this coming Sunday. Hopefully by then he'll
have gained a little and continues to improve, and that yet another
change won't set him back again. Any ideas on how to make this next
change easier on him?
The funny thing is I have tried all sorts of food on him (about 8 open
cans in the frig) - the only thing so far he'll eat is my cats' Feline RD
(for fat cats). It's not supposed to taste good, but he likes it best.
I'm also mixing in some CD to get him more nutrition, but he gets mad
at me when I do that....
Funny things, these felines.....
Sue B. + Duke
|
124.26 | | SANDY::FRASER | Err on a G String | Mon Feb 24 1992 12:08 | 9 |
|
I don't know if this will help Duke, but fwiw, I saw something at
my vet's this morning that I thought I should share. Hill's puts
it out, and it's called "Mixit". It's a product designed to get
cats to eat a new food. It sounds like a sort of a gravy that you
can mix into canned or pour over dry food. It can even be mixed
with water to get cats to drink more.
Sandy
|
124.27 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Mon Feb 24 1992 12:31 | 5 |
| I'm glad Duke seems to be doing better; will you (us too?) be getting
feedback from his new home?
When Holly eats in a hurry it all comes back up too.
|
124.28 | | MUTTON::BROWN | | Mon Feb 24 1992 14:07 | 5 |
| I use the Mixit to help wean kittens onto dry food. I mixit with the
Max kitten dry. It isn't nutritionally sound on it's own, but will
help tempt a cat to eat.
Jo
|
124.29 | Duke's in his new home now | RLAV::BARRETT | Is it safe? | Mon Mar 02 1992 11:30 | 18 |
| Well, I am happy to report that Duke went to his new home yesterday
(where his new name will be Bailey, after the guy in "It's a Wonderful
Life". Appropriate, I think....)
He had definitely perked up, and perhaps had gained a little weight
(hard to tell on my scales). He was eating a mixture of Hills Feline
RD and Feline Maintenance, and had finished his medication.
I took his blanket, stuffed puppy, Marty Mouse, toys and towel to his new
home with him so he could have familiar smells. When I left, he was
exploring his huge new home (3 times the size of mine!) with big eyes.
His new dad works in my office, so hopefully I'll get some updates
every now and then. His new parents are very nice.
Ahh, a happy ending! I love them!
Sue B. + back to the normal 3 monsters....
|
124.30 | Weaning advice sought | DEVMKO::BROWN_J | cat_max = current_cats + 1 | Mon Jun 29 1992 10:36 | 27 |
| We are currently "foster parents" for a mom cat and her two kittens
from the Pat Brody Shelter, and I need a little advice from
all you kitten experts. This is only the second litter we've
fostered and we still have lots of learning to do.
The two kittens are healthy and happy and well-fed, courtesy of
mom cat. But they have ABSOLUTELY no interest in canned cat
food -- they are now six weeks old with lots of teeth for chewing
(as my fingers demonstrate). I have tried putting little bits of
the canned kitten food in their mouth (thinned with chicken broth
and nuked) and all they do is spit it out at me!
Shouldn't they be showing interest by now? Should I find a different
food, or should I just wait them out? I don't want to raise
finicky eaters and they aren't starving by any means so my
inclination is to just wait until they are ready. They do seem
to be somewhat behind developmentally, having been found abandoned
mom cat was not getting proper nutrition until the Shelter got her.
The first litter we fostered dove headfirst into kitten food just
after 4 weeks of age, loved it from the moment I put a little in
their mouths to give them the idea. They taught themselves to drink
water and eat crunchies all by themselves, we just had to put it
in the dishes. Did we just luck out and have incredibly cooperative
kittens vs. the current batch?
Jan who_loves_getting_new_kittens_to_play_with_but_not_keep
|
124.31 | | MAYES::MERRITT | Kitty City | Tue Jun 30 1992 07:19 | 10 |
| What a wonderful Foster Mom and Dad!!!! I know most kittens
at the shelter start to "chow down" on some type of wet food
at about the age of 4-5 weeks!!
I bet you just have a "slower" litter...and sooner or later they
will realize what food is all about!! If your nervous you can
call Priscilla who makes this "kitty recipe" using (I think)
liver and KMR. The kittens love it.....but it looks yucky!!
Sandy
|
124.32 | try this | MR4DEC::PGLADDING | Noters do it with a 8-) | Tue Jun 30 1992 08:57 | 11 |
| Another "Priscilla Recipe for Cats who Won't Eat":
1 jar baby food (strained chicken, beef, etc.)
2 tbsp. dry Gerber rice cereal
KMR or evap. milk to make the mixture soupy
Try this on the kittens - maybe they're stomachs aren't
ready for the kitten food yet, and need "real" baby food.
Good luck!
Pam
|
124.33 | New addition won't eat - suggestions requested? | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jul 15 1992 11:27 | 15 |
| A co-worker recently adopted a kitten from the PBSFC (Pat Brody
Shelter) and he's been having trouble getting it to eat. He's brought
it to the vets and nothing major is wrong, but they think it was taken
from the mother too soon (not from the shelter, but as a drop off)
and never learned to eat. He also dosen't know how to clean up after
himself, so I guess he's pretty dirty by now.
The kitten is being force KMR fed w/ a dropper w/ baby food (chicken)
mixed in.
Any ideas on how to get this little kritter to eat, and clean up after
himself? The resident elder cat is not too thrilled with the addition,
but could he be employed as a sort of foster parent?
Thanks folks .......Michele
|
124.34 | | MAGEE::MERRITT | Kitty City | Wed Jul 15 1992 11:33 | 14 |
| Hi Michele,
One suggestion would be to have your friend call priscilla at the PB
shelter and find out if any of the littermates to this new baby had
a similar problem and how she got it to eat. I do know she has made
this special food for some of the kittens that had to be force fed
because something happened to the Mom...so maybe she could share
her recipe.
How old is the kitten? Does it play like a kitten should? Does
it drink water? Will it lap the KMR if it is in a bowl? Will it
lap food from a finger?
Kitty prayers for the little baby!!!!
|
124.35 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Wed Jul 15 1992 11:50 | 4 |
| Would it help to have it temporarily "adopted" by another mother cat
with a litter at the shelter? or would it feel abandoned at being back
there temporarily?
|
124.36 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jul 15 1992 13:55 | 9 |
| kitten is about 6-7 weeks old. He says the little guy dosen't do much
of anything. I really hope it pulls thru because they are just getting
over the loss of their first cat.
I hope you don't mind if I forward you notes to him.
thanks-
Michele
|
124.37 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Wed Jul 15 1992 14:06 | 3 |
| Maybe the kitten needs a lot of being held? Please let us know how he is
doing. Thanks.
|
124.38 | To the vet, to the vet, to the vet, vet, vet | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Four Tigers on My Couch | Wed Jul 15 1992 15:07 | 11 |
| I'm sure the shelter took good care of this kitten but maybe a vet
check is in order.
Going to a new home can be very stressful and the little guy may not
be feeling too well. Jo Ann had a kitten that wouldn't eat and it
turned out that its intestine had folded over on itself. I'm afraid
I don't know the technical term for the condition. I don't want to
scare anyone unnecessarily, I'm just suggesting that the kitten be
checked by a vet to rule out this being caused by a health problem.
Jan
|
124.39 | | MUTTON::BROWN | set home/cat_max=5 girls 2 boys 2 hhps | Thu Jul 16 1992 02:34 | 6 |
| >>>>>I don't know the technical term for the condition.
It was called intestinal intussusception and it proved fatal for her.
:'(
Jo
|
124.40 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu Jul 16 1992 06:09 | 9 |
| kitten has been to the vet. vet perscribed KMR for force feeding 5
times a day. also suggested offering baby food. resident elder cat
appears to tolerate kitten. called shelter for suggestions. suggested
taking another littermate. (and we all know the littermate will end up
with a new home ;^).
I'll get more info when coworker comes in today.
Thanks guyes.....Michele
|
124.41 | Shelter is taking him back (temporarily) | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu Jul 16 1992 14:08 | 11 |
|
okay, here is the latest.....kitten is going back to the PBS to see
if hanging out with the litter mates will help him decide to
eat again. For those of you who might stop by there this
weekend, it is a little balck and white guy. PLease give him a pat
for me.
Thanks-
Michele
|
124.42 | | MAYES::MERRITT | Kitty City | Thu Jul 16 1992 14:13 | 5 |
| Michele...I'll most likely stop by this weekend...so I'll give him
a big hug and kiss!!! Do you know if he is going to Priscilla's
house (semi-shelter) or the real shelter?????
Sandy
|
124.43 | Could be littermate I saw Monday | AIMHI::PMURPHY | | Fri Jul 17 1992 14:51 | 10 |
| Sandy,
I saw a little black and white kitten in the kitten room when there
Monday night. Wonder if it's the littermate to the one who won't eat?
That little one seemed to be doing okay though.
Maybe I'll see you at the shelter tomorrow afternoon.
Pat
|
124.44 | No go for mittens | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Tue Jul 21 1992 13:10 | 9 |
| I just got word that Mittens didn't make it. :^(
Poor little guy...at least he won't be suffering now......
Michele
p.s.
The people are going to look for another, but they want a gray tiger
male.
|
124.45 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Jul 21 1992 14:09 | 3 |
| :-(
|
124.46 | Cleo | ODIXIE::SINATRA | | Fri Aug 05 1994 09:49 | 21 |
| I'd like to ask for your good thoughts and prayers for my new kitten
Cleo, (originally introduced as Die Hard in the adoption notice -
nobody called and I couldn't let her go to the Humane Society, could
I?) Anyway, Cleo is almost ten weeks old and I've had her at my
apartment for about two weeks. (Shadow and Sammi are adjusting.) She's
been eating Healthy Blend wet food, and Purina Kitten Chow dry (moistened
with water) - really eating well and then day before yesterday she just
stopped eating. She purrs a lot, and when you put food in front of her
(and I've been trying all different things, just to get her to eat) she
sniffs it and her purr revs up, but she turns and walks away. She
weighed two pounds two weeks ago when I brought her in for her first
checkup, round of shots, and deworming, and today she weighed the same
:-(.
She's at the vet now - she's not running a fever, her coat and eyes
look good, she's playful, her stool doesn't look good. The vet is going
to try some different things to see if he can get her to eat and may
force feed her. I'm very worried. If anyone has any ideas, please share
- and thanks for listening.
Rebecca
|
124.47 | sometimes human baby food will get them eating | HELIX::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Aug 05 1994 10:08 | 14 |
| My cats haven't been wanting to eat their usual quantities lately; I
think that the hot weather is the casuse. If kitty doesn't want to eat
for a day or two, don't worry too much as long as the cat is drinkning
water. To bribe her into eating, you might want to offer her some baby
food (a reluctant cat can offen be tempted to eat when offered the
chicken noodle variety)
A another possibility is that the kitten could be constipated. Has she
left any stool in the box? And if she has, did it seem hard and dry?
Some cats are prone to constipation, and adding bulk (like bran) to
their diet will help that problem.
good luck,
Deb
|
124.48 | | USCTR1::MERRITT_S | | Fri Aug 05 1994 10:16 | 10 |
| I do agree that my cats aren't eating as much as normal...but I
would be concerned if a 10 week old kitten wasn't eating because
this weather does NOT bother kittens as much as adults and they
can dehydrate alot quicker too. I'm glad she's at the vet and
hopefully it will be nothing serious!!
Congrats on your new kitty....and I do agree "how could you give
him up"!!! (giggle giggle...that's how I ended up with SO many)
Sandy
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124.49 | You're doing the right thing... | TURRIS::EASI::GEENEN | Illud cape et ei fibulam adfige! | Fri Aug 05 1994 11:09 | 9 |
| ...in taking the kitten to the vet right away. Not eating at such
a young age is unusual and can be a sign of something wrong. I
hope it's nothing serious and that your kitten will be back to
normal eating habits in short order.
Everything crossed here, fingers, toes, and paws for a speedy and
positive conclusion.
Carl and Les Six
|
124.50 | | ODIXIE::SINATRA | | Fri Aug 05 1994 14:44 | 12 |
| Thanks for your encouragement - I just got off the phone with the vet.
He gave her an injection of valium to stimulate her appetite and she
did eat some. He's prescribing something similar to help with her
appetite and recommends that I give her really smelly, tasty food for
right now. He's not too worried - doesn't feel it's a serious medical
problem, but if she stops eating again, we'll do blood work and x-rays
then.
Thanks again for your support - let's hope she keeps eating!
Rebecca
|