T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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209.1 | Perfectly normal reaction... | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Fri Feb 28 1992 06:56 | 15 |
| Yup!! And that is the USUAL and normal reaction when a cat eats
grass. Usually what they throw up is just grass and mucous. I guess it
has soemthing to do with cleaning thier digestive tract out or
something.
Another thing that you may want to try is 'alfalfa' sprouts. I've
grown some of that and the vomiting doesn't seem to go with that like
it does with grass.
In the summer we usually let our cats into the fenced-in dog kennel
area where there is a lot of grass growing...we always supervise these
excursions, and it's a panic to see all of them "grazing" like a bunch
of little feline sheep....and then they all barf...
John McD
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209.2 | Good Stuff ! | AIMHI::BOYKO | | Fri Feb 28 1992 08:57 | 4 |
| Sounds funny, but throwing up is good also because they send up hair
balls along with the grass and mucous.
-Nancy
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209.3 | I think I just ate some grass... | SALEM::DILLON_M | It's never to late | Fri Feb 28 1992 09:22 | 4 |
| When am I going to learn not to read this notes file durning lunch?
Anyone want my salad?
Mike
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209.4 | Grass-who needs it? | GUCCI::SMILLER | | Fri Feb 28 1992 09:51 | 6 |
| I grew some of that grass for my babies since they're indoor cats
They never touched it-go figure
shannon
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209.5 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Fri Feb 28 1992 11:56 | 6 |
| The little plastic pot ones are really expensive if you keep buying
them, about $1 apiece.
I bought one of those sacks of seeds and dirt from TreeHouse, and
I just refill a plastic pot. Saves mucho dinero.
|
209.6 | To grow, or not to grow?! | MCIS5::ENSLEY | | Fri Feb 28 1992 12:10 | 8 |
| RE: .1
Actually what he threw up was his dinner (re-gurgitated IAMS all
over the place!)
Sooooo, is it recommended to have one of these type plants around?
I mean, I don't want him throwing upp all the time!?
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209.7 | wheat | BPS025::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Mon Mar 02 1992 03:15 | 8 |
| Mine does not like grass. She eats my wife's roses. But flowers can be
dangerous. So I put half a handful of wheat in a small flowerpot. After
a week it's grown grassy. I swap two pots. She loves them and normally
does not vomit from. If she has inner problems, then she chomps a lot
of that wheat, and then she clears herself from hairballs etc. Nice
from her, that she's doing it in the bath tub...
Nat
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209.8 | where? | MCIS5::ENSLEY | | Mon Mar 02 1992 09:32 | 3 |
| RE: .7
Where does one find "wheat" plants/seeds?
|
209.9 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Feeds for all your pet's needs! | Mon Mar 02 1992 09:53 | 5 |
| Local grain mill or feed store...
Whole oats work well for growing a kitty grazing pot, too!
|
209.10 | | SANFAN::FOSSATJU | Ask Me-I Might | Mon Mar 02 1992 10:01 | 4 |
| I've been growing wheat/oates for them for years and they love it. We
always keep several pots going so they don't run out.
Giudi
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209.11 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Mon Mar 02 1992 11:56 | 3 |
| TreeHouse sells them thru its catalog, also pet stores have the
little dishes.
|
209.12 | Baby's breath? Harmful? | FSOA::PHOUDE | | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:59 | 10 |
| Mine loves babys breath from my flowers or when I am doing craft stuff.
She will sit with her head buried in the flower arrangement on my
kitchen table for hours just snacking away on them. I joined her last
night in doing this from the other side of the bouquet (I wasn't really
eating it - just teasing her) - of course thats when my husband walked
in and now think that I have completely lost my mind.
Is this harmful? She doesn't throw it up.
|
209.13 | Use for sprouting onions | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Mar 03 1992 15:57 | 5 |
| Several of the FIRM like green onions. In the spring, when my onions
start to sprout, I put them in water to let them grow a bit more. Alex
loves them (but it doesn't do much for her breath).
Deb
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209.14 | mine eat the flowers too - silly beasts! | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Wed Mar 04 1992 09:20 | 10 |
| I can't keep flower arrangements around - Nebula eats the babysbreath
and The Fickle eats the ferns. Neither seems to be able to keep the
demolished flower arrngement down, though... about on par with letting
them eat grass. They don't seem to be any the worse for doing this
(they are getting to be old kitties these days, but don't tell THEM
that!), but their human servants don't appreciate cleaning up after
them so we try to make sure that any flower arrangements that do arrive
are displayed someplace the cats can't get at.
/Charlotte
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209.15 | | SENIOR::DDOUGLAS | | Tue Mar 10 1992 09:15 | 12 |
|
Domino doesn't care much for the grass, but Tykey absolutely loves it.
I put a tray down for them yesterday and she ran over to it and
started eating it. She does get sick sometimes after eating it.
In the summer last year when she was out with her harness, she would
walk around and around til she found the right grass spot to start
munching on.
Diana
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209.16 | Saves wear and tear on house plants | KAHALA::GOODWIN | | Tue Mar 10 1992 09:36 | 5 |
| Since I started giving Eddie Haskell his own tray of grass (he's an
indoor cat), he hasn't been quite as obessive about chewing on the
house plants as he was.
ng
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209.17 | Sprout bird food | MAST::HOFFMAN | Joan, 223-5168 | Wed Mar 11 1992 13:37 | 10 |
| Before we moved to our house, I sprouted bird food for the cats. Just
put a thin layer of dirt in a plant saucer, and press some bird food
(mixed) into the dirt; water it, and in a few days it will sprout.
It's a lot cheaper than buying the packaged "kitty greens".
Mutu liked to eat chives, and she'd come over to Munch and meow. Munch
would make a face, turn his head away, and poor Mutu had to sleep by
herself the rest of the day/night. Talk about "kittitosis"!!
;-)
|
209.18 | | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | | Thu Mar 12 1992 17:39 | 11 |
| Jimmy is the one for flowers and grass in our house. He doesn't seem to
mind what sort they are - I've even known him to chew up silk flower
arrangements! Dried flowers go down pretty well, too. I do have problems
with him, though, because I do the flower-arranging for my Church and
usually have my flowers in a bucket for a day or too. Jimmy has been
known to scoff the lot, resulting in a hasty trip to the garage for
replacements. Carnations and freesias are his favourites, with roses
close behind.
He also loves house-plants: all my spider-plants have chewed and broken
leaves, and he totally destroyed a dragon-tree (ate leaves, sat on the
stem).
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209.19 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Mar 12 1992 18:25 | 5 |
| Re; Jimmy
I think spider plants have a mildly toxic substance in them, so it's
probably best to not let Jimmy at them. (What's a dragon tree?)
|
209.20 | Thanks for the warning | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | | Fri Mar 13 1992 14:19 | 18 |
| re:19
It's full name is Madagascar dragon tree (part of the Dracaena group -
I think that is how you spell it). Its stalk is like a minature
palm tree and the top (crown) is like a spider plant, but dark green
narrow leaves with a thin red border. It was a lovely looking plant till
Jimmy demolished it.
I didn't know about the spider plants being toxic. My cat "bible" does
have a list of poisonous plants, such as Ivy, which I won't buy, but
they admitted that the list was not exhaustive. I suppose they only
included the really dangerous ones. I'll certainly move the spider plants
out of reach though. It doesn't seem to have affected him so far (they're
his favourite alternative to grass), but I'm not taking any chances.
He'll have to stick to the carnation leaves (and rose petals, and
freesias and Gypsophilia and September and....!!!)
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