T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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206.1 | | CSSE32::RAWDEN | Cheryl Graeme Rawden | Wed Feb 26 1992 09:02 | 2 |
| Could a few keywords such as SCRATCHING, CLAWING be added for use with
this note?
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206.2 | | SANFAN::FOSSATJU | Ask Me-I Might | Wed Feb 26 1992 09:16 | 10 |
| We've been using one for the last year and the cats love it. We
actually have a couple of them and then another one made of rope. If
one is using a board in the living room another cat will come charging up
and shoo him/her away and then take over - so the one removed moves on
to the other one and cat #3 does the same thing - it's like musical
scratching boards. Adding the catnip is a good idea and makes it more
attractive. I think they're great.
Giudi
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206.3 | DUH! | JUPITR::KAGNO | Kitties with an Attitude | Wed Feb 26 1992 09:19 | 12 |
| Cheryl,
My cats use those scratching boxes, and seemed to figure it out pretty
much on their own. Actually, now that I think back, it was more of a
"monkey see, monkey do" sort of thing. You know, the intelligent cat
scratches the box and the dumb ones look on in amazement like, 'Oh! So
that's what it is for!!"
Try scratching on it yourself to see if they get the hint. :^) :^)
-Roberta
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206.4 | | CSSE32::RAWDEN | Cheryl Graeme Rawden | Wed Feb 26 1992 09:35 | 13 |
| Roberta, I tried scratching the cardboard box and all the cats looked
at me like I was crazy! If one of them would take the initiative to
scratch at the box, the others might get the hint. Guess we have three
dumb cats on our hands! :^)
I'm content with the fact that they don't scratch any of the furniture
but I want to be sure to provide them with a few different places to
"scratch with approval". At least the cardboard boxes are low to the
ground and can easily be hidden out of sight when guests are around.
Sure beats the mangy looking scratching post in the corner of the
living room!
What is the average life span of one of these scratching boxes anyway?
|
206.5 | | MPO::ROBINSON | You have HOW MANY cats??!! | Wed Feb 26 1992 09:53 | 15 |
|
I've got one that's been laying around for 4 or 5 months...It
did take them a couple of weeks to figure out how to use them
at first, but yours will figure it out on their own, too. I also
made a post out of a heavy cardboard roll (it had material/cloth
on it originally), and roll of sisal rope, and a hot glue gun. I
just glued and wrapped as high as it would go, they love it and
use it all the time. It took me about 15 minutes to make...
The Christmas Tree Shop in Shrewsbury had the cardboard boxes for
.69 each a couple of months ago, don't know if they still have
them...
Sherry
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206.6 | mine like it! | DELNI::GASKELL | | Wed Feb 26 1992 12:10 | 7 |
| Of my four, only Charlie really uses it. The long lost Robbie would
enjoy a good strop but the rest look at it like it's cheap cat food.
I opened up the folds and put the catnip deep in the folds so that they
had to scratch at it to get at the good stuff. But with fresh catnip
in a pot on the floor (actually 3 pots) who needs to work for the
stuff.
|
206.7 | | WMOIS::GERDE_J | | Wed Feb 26 1992 12:24 | 4 |
| I have a scratching box near the kids' feeding area. And they use it
with a "purpose." Since the two boys always eat first, the girls use
the scratching box while they're waiting to eat. When the boys are
done eating, they use the scratching box right after they eat.
|
206.8 | 4 different reactions.... | MODEL::CROSS | | Wed Feb 26 1992 13:13 | 12 |
|
I have one too, and I find that I get a different reaction from all
four of my cats.
Suki uses it as a bed and sprawls across the whole thing....
Bear scratches with a vengeance....
Cyrano is determined to just destroy the little box that the
corrugated scratch bar is in,
and Zuzu just stands by and watches....she almost is in disdain
of the whole thing... (maybe she wants one from Bloomingdales?)
Nancy
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206.9 | | AUDIBL::GERMANN | | Thu Feb 27 1992 12:16 | 10 |
| Hey, Cheryl, I'll send Zelda over to teach your Zelda and Chubs and Lea what
to do with this. Zelda thinks here scratch box is the best thing in the world.
Bob has absolutely nothing to do with it. Of course, that probably has to do
with the fact that Bob won't have anything to do with Zelda either...
Ours has lasted since last summer although I must admit that it is starting
to look very shabby. I was thinking of getting one for the living room as
well so that Zelda might leave my chair and couch alone.
Ellen
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206.10 | I want my catnip...NOW! | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Feb 27 1992 12:34 | 9 |
| the scratch box at our house is the "catnip dosing center"...I load it up
with catnip each saturday for everyone's enjoyment. All cats rub around on
it for awhile...and then Missy Hana takes up residence on it, sitting as if
to hatch it, and there she stays until I settle down after dinner is cleaned
up...several hours. Even though we have two cats with claws, they only do
cat trees, no carboard boxes, no furniture...just cat trees, thank you. I
have some furry drug addicts on my hands now...they start milling around the
scratch box around 3:00 in the afternoon....waiting for a fix....oh well, they
can't have chocolate. 8^}
|
206.11 | good thing we only bought one! | CSSE32::RAWDEN | Cheryl Graeme Rawden | Thu Feb 27 1992 13:23 | 4 |
| Wonder if catnip brownies would do the trick? :^)
All three still ignore the cardboard box. I wonder if they'd pay
attention to it if we moved the location of the box?
|
206.12 | | CAPITN::CORDES_JA | Set Apt./Cat_Max=3..uh,I mean 4 | Thu Feb 27 1992 18:38 | 21 |
| I have a Bizzy Kitty brand scratching pad. My girls love it. The
little guy hasn't quite figure it out yet but since he's so good at
using the scratching post, there isn't a problem. It came with a bag
of catnip.
Amelia likes to lounge on the pad. She rests the front part of her
body on the box and scratches on it periodically. Bailey makes
special trips to it and scratches vigorously for a little while and
walks away. Carrie doesn't use it quite as often. She likes to use
the little carpet covered house in the bedroom. When I add fresh
catnip the all rub and roll all over it.
I tried to show Onyx what to do with the box the other day. I put
him on it and pressed his paw between thumb and forefinger gently
until the claws came out then I stuck them into the pad. He got
the idea and scratched for a few seconds and I haven't seem him
try it again since then. It was only a momentary revelation, then
it was gone, never to return again until mom tries the teaching
method again.
Jan
|
206.13 | guess we don't have 3 brain surgeon candidates! | CSSE32::RAWDEN | Cheryl Graeme Rawden | Tue Mar 10 1992 05:38 | 3 |
| We were finally successful with getting the cats to use the cardboard
scratching box. A week after aquiring it, we put the box behind the
couch (in a more private spot) and voila!
|
206.14 | | RAYBOK::WHITLOCK | Coming to you from the IOU state. | Wed Aug 26 1992 16:32 | 10 |
| My babies drag their cardboard scratching post all over the house. I'm
on the third one in two years, the first one was shredded. I buy the
ones with catnip imbedded. Cosmic Cat. There are several other brands
on the market.
My biggest cat, Patterson, lays on it to keep the other cats from using
it when he's inside. He's not the heavyest, but he's the biggest,
Norwegian Forest Cat. So he covers it quite well.
Candy
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206.15 | how to convince Houdini to use scratching box | PCBUOA::BOWERS | | Thu Mar 09 1995 13:56 | 19 |
| I have another question... Houdini is really great, has almost no bad
habits, except he claws the carpeting on the stairs mercilessly...
to the point it is now getting that fuzzy look on two or three places.
Usually just as we're about to go to sleep, we hear the sound of
claw pulling, then he comes and flops on the bed all worn out.
He's an outdoor cat, but we found out quickly that he doesn't like
New England winters one bit... so doesn't spend much time outside, and
claws more because of it. I bought one of those fancy little
scratching boxes scented with catnip... he loves it, rubs his neck all
over it, but seems to have no idea about scratching it... so $7 wasted
on a large catnip toy!
All the advertisements I've seen for these scratching boxes, scratching
posts, etc. say that once you get one they will never claw the
carpet again... but no luck! Any ideas on how to get him to start
using it? I've tried a scratching motion with my own nails, but
he just "fuzzes" my hand when I do it.
Nancy
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206.16 | Use HIS paws to show him! | KAMALA::DREYER | Where's the snow?? | Thu Mar 09 1995 15:17 | 15 |
|
Nancy,
Have you tried taking Houdini's paws and raking them over the
scratching pad? Squeeze them gently so his claws come out first.
Most likely he'll catch on, but I have never been able to train
my cats to scratch in one place only...I'm not home enough to
consistantly show them each time they scratch in a "bad" spot
where they should be scratching instead!
Good luck!
Laura
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206.17 | | PADC::KOLLING | | Thu Mar 09 1995 15:50 | 10 |
| I've had good luck with initially putting catnip on top of a scratching
post (and having a post that is tall enough and heavy/stable enough so
that it doesn't move around and frighten the cats). My cats like
carpeting on posts, but some cats prefer sisal (the rope-looking
stuff). Some cats, like my Little Bit, do prefer horizontal surfaces to
scratch on. LB used to shred my carpet until I brought home one of
those tunnel type carpet covered horizontal cylinders, now he hops onto
the top of that and scratches away. Holly thinks cardboard boxes
(copy paper boxes) are the best scratching items.
|
206.18 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Fri Mar 10 1995 06:00 | 13 |
|
The best thing we've found for indoor scratching is a BACK side
of a carpet. We just got a piece of remnant, rolled it up jelly roll
fashion with the back facing out and just left it on the floor.
The rolled up carpet is about 3' by 3', big enough for a cat to
stand on and scratch. The back side does not get worn out easily
and there is no pieces of yarn to pick up. When one side does get
worn out, we just roll it up in a different way so that a different
side faces up. The cats prefer that over lumber leftovers and
scratching posts.
Eva
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206.19 | Praise them | TIMBER::PEDERSON | | Fri Mar 10 1995 07:43 | 11 |
| I bought a triangular shaped, roped covered scratching post for my
two cats. At first they didn't seem to know what it was about. So,
I tried rubbing (gently) their claws on it. That made them sort of
get the idea. After that, whenever I saw them scratching on the post,
I praised them highly. Telling them they were the most wonderful
cats (or cat). Whenever I see them scratch something they're not
supposed to, I quickly say no, then praise them for stopping. Not
too much, though, because, it seems, just like kids, sometimes
they're in the mood for negative attention. This seems to work, so
that 90% of the time they scratch on the post (at least when I'm
around).
|
206.20 | Carpet-covered pyramid? | WEORG::STUART | | Fri Mar 10 1995 08:07 | 37 |
| I had exactly the same problem. My cat loved to scratch the carpeting
on the stairs. I went through a number of scratching 'options' before
I found one he'd use. He didn't like the cardboard box with catnip
thingy (I think because it moved). He didn't like a carpet covered
tube thing because it fell over once and scared him. He didn't like
the carpet covered boards that you can hang over a doorknob because
they moved too much. I finally got him a pyramid shaped scrathing post with
carpet on it. He loves it. It doesn't move much (if you put it
on carpet) and it never falls over. It took hime a while to decide
it was better than the stairs though. Some things I did:
1) I put it right by the stairs so that it was in a place where
he was used to scratching.
2) I made sure the carpet on the pyramid was a very different
color from the carpeting on the stairs. (Stairs are cream,
pyramid is dark grey.)
3) Taking his paws and "making" him scratch on the post didn't
work. He got mad. Instead, I put catnip on it and kept
tossing his toys so they landed on or near it. Eventually,
he accidently scratched it. Doing that a few times seemed
to hook him on it.
4) Once he was using the pyramid fairly consistently, I rented
a "steam" cleaner from the grocery store and shampood the
stairs. I'd heard that when they scratch something they
mark it and that they tend to continue scratching places
they've marked. I figured the shampooing would make the
stairs smell neutral and his pyramid be nice and smelly to
him. (I can't smell it -- but he can.)
5) He still uses the stairs once in a while. But 95% of the
time he uses his pyramid.
Good luck!
|
206.21 | | DELNI::PROVENCHER | | Fri Mar 10 1995 09:30 | 13 |
| Besides having one of those huge cat trees, I also have a piece of
carpet flipped upside down with the end stuck under a heavy piece of
furniture to stabilize it (they dont like things that move on them)
and boy they use that up real good. In fact, they shred it. They love
the feel of the backing, like sisal rope. My guys never scratch the
furniture anymore since I got the tree, I think having more than one
cat helps too. They learn from each other. The piece of rug thing
started when I had used a piece under a very heavy box that I didn't
want to damage the floor. The part that was sticking out, they kept
shredding. So, it has kind of become another one of the unusual piece
of decor in my "cat house".
D
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206.22 | stubborn kitten scratches where she likes | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Mar 10 1995 09:44 | 14 |
| Meoldy, the Maine coon kitten, likes to shred the back of the dining
room chair my husband normally sits in. I think she likes it because
it smells like him, or something - she is really crazy about Paul. She
is a real stubborn kitten as kitties go - if you yell at her when she
misbheaves, she just looks at you like "I know, but I'm going to do
this anyways, human servant!" You have to actually physically remove
her from whever she is misbehaving. She'll scratch the cat tree and
her scratching post, but that doesn't stop her from liking that one
chair. Maybe I ought to spray "No!" on it? That is supposed to smell
bad to cats, and maybe then it won't smell like Paul.
Good thing I like cats... endearing little nuisances, aren't they?
/Charlotte
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206.23 | Houdini has a mind of his own... | PCBUOA::BOWERS | | Fri Mar 10 1995 11:34 | 16 |
| Hi again,
Thanks for all the suggestions... I especially laughed at .5...
describing all the different types of scratchy-things your cat
*doesn't* like, because they slide, move or whatever. Houdini gets
upset if something moves when he's not wanting it to. I tried all the
suggestions here, such as gently rubbing his paws over the scratching
box. And, it's scented with catnip, plus I put more on the top...
to no avail. I also tried pushing out his claws a bit, he got angry at
that.
I like the pyramid idea, but have never seen one... did you make it,
or can you tell me where you got it?
Thanks everyone!
Nancy
|
206.24 | Where to get | WEORG::STUART | | Fri Mar 10 1995 12:24 | 5 |
| Where do you live? I've seen them at the pet supply store in the
same strip mall as Purity on the Daniel Webster Highway in Nashua, NH.
This is *not* the one next to Home Depot. Sorry, I forget what
its called. Maybe someone else knows?
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206.25 | PETSTUFF? | ABACUS::MACDONALD_M | The Tincture Tree | Fri Mar 10 1995 13:03 | 2 |
|
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206.26 | yup | WEORG::STUART | | Wed Mar 15 1995 13:40 | 1 |
| Yes, Petstuff is it.
|