T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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347.1 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Jul 30 1992 18:05 | 14 |
| How long have you had Hitter? Is this still an adjustment phase?
I had a similar problem with Holly, and what worked (pretty much, she
now has a slight tendency to avoid Little Bit as opposed to snarling at
him) was to shut her (Holly) away in "coventry" when she misbehaved.
Since she is very attached to me, this is a major punishment. 5
minutes may be sufficient, immediately repeated if she goes after
Catnippy again when she comes out of Coventry. In our case, Coventry
is the second bedroom with the door closed. This process has to be
repeated from time to time.
I also reassure Little Bit, but I think Coventry is more effective in
changing Holly's behavior. Reassuring LB just makes Holly more
jealous, while she views avoiding Coventry as desirable.
|
347.2 | | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Four Tigers on My Couch | Thu Jul 30 1992 19:58 | 6 |
| I believe I read something on this problem in Cat Fancy yesterday
while I was flying back from Dallas. I was so tired I can't remember
clearly what it said. I'll try to remember to check tonight and let
you know what they say.
Jan
|
347.3 | Are Four Tigers easier than this? | CSC32::K_KINNEY | So shine a good deed in a weary world | Fri Jul 31 1992 11:30 | 25 |
|
Thanks for the replies. I do like the Coventry idea.
That is sure worth a try because Hitther really
is attached to me (like the velcro cat). Yes,
this is still an adjustment period. I have had
both of them since the end of May (I think). I guess
I just am hoping for an end to the hard part of this
adjustment period you know? Kind of like "Grant me
patience-and I mean RIGHT NOW!"? arrgh.
Major cat altercation in bed last night. Catnip was
sleeping on top of the bed. Hitther came out of her
basket and slithered up under the covers on the edge
to cuddle. Catnip got up and stretched and scared
the daylights out of Hithher who immediately went
berserk under the covers with hissing and snarling
and they both blew off into various corners of the
house leaving their mom slightly shell shocked trying
to restart her heart...sheesh! Meantime, old mellow
Winston was cruising around the room trilling and trying
to find someone who would play with him. (btw: Winston
is in the cat hospital today being neutered. Not a fun
day for Winston.)
kim
|
347.4 | "Adjustment period" = 4 years and counting | TLE::BODGE | Andy Bodge | Fri Jul 31 1992 11:39 | 42 |
| This may not be too encouraging.
After a period of apprenticeship, Fluffy had finally become Sole Feline
Proprietor and Queen of our household. She became a very mellow cat.
About four (?) years ago, when Fluffy was 10 or so, the Pilou-monster
entered our lives. We expected the first time he saw Fluffy he would
realize (perhaps after some persuasion with a paw) that she was boss.
But no. At their first encounter, Pilou arched up, puffed out his
kitten fur, stiff-legged it over to Fluffy's vicinity, and hissed.
Then he stiff-legged it into another room ("advancing to the rear" as
cats will do) and threw up. Both events were prophetic.
Fluffy took a dim view of this, as can be imagined.
From the start, Pilou wanted to wrassle with Fluffy and he wanted to
play rough. Fluffy wanted none of it, and would try to bat him
away, but she couldn't escape or discourage the constant stalking and
pouncing. In time Pilou grew up and physical intimidation didn't work.
Fortunately he attacked less frequently, but his attacks carried a lot
more freight. To this day, he occasionally launches attacks of
astonishing violence that leave Fluffy running to some dark corner of
the house, hissing madly. He knows it's bad because as soon as he does
it, he looks around for me, expecting to get yelled at and/or swatted.
It's almost as if he can't help himself. ("Stop me before I pounce
again!")
As a result, Fluffy is always on the lookout for Pilou and sometimes
cuffs him just for good measure. Other times she is fairly friendly,
sniffing him when he's been outside for example. (Oddly enough, they
rarely fight at the food dishes.) The only place she will sleep -
apparently the only place she feels safe - is right by our heads. I
think she would crawl into my ear if she could. Pilou owns the bottom
half of the bed, and we make do with what's left.
All this is tolerable and sometimes amusing, but it demonstrates that
time doesn't necessarily alleviate this kind of aggression. I don't
know what we could have done differently. It seems as if their
relationship was set when Pilou was a playful little boy and Fluff was
a bit of a grande dame, and they can't break out of those roles.
Andy
|
347.5 | adjustment time | VMPIRE::BACHELDER | | Fri Jul 31 1992 11:56 | 10 |
| When I brought my second cat (Boo Boo) into the household, Ebony
became a maniac! For 4 whole months Ebony terrorized the new little
kitten (Ebony was 6 months old at the time). But after 4 months the
two became the best of friends.
It was hard to watch. I spent private time with both cats; Ebony to
show her that I still loved her and Boo Boo to show him what love was,
because Ebony sure wasn't doing that!
It all worked out....thanks goodness!
|
347.6 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Winds of Change | Fri Jul 31 1992 23:23 | 17 |
| Cleo is the mom cat of my other three. Katie was in her first litter,
Skeeter and Alex in her second. I came home from work one day and the
cats were scattered to the 4 corners of the house. The tension was so
thick in here you could cut it with a knife. For some reason there was
a fight between Katie, Skeeter and Alex. Alex and Katie have *never*
liked one another. Skeeter and Alex are best buddies. To this day I
don't know what happened, but they have never been friends again.
Katie is the outcast and Alex will go after her whenever she comes out
of what is now her room. Katie is not allowed in my bedroom at all by
Skeeter and Alex and they don't like it when she comes near me.
Occasionally there are major blow-out fights, but most of the time
Katie knows the rules and follows them. I don't know what to do to
resolve this problem. It doesn't seem very fair to Katie and she
doesn't get the attention that the others get. Sometimes I feel really
sorry for her.
Karen
|
347.7 | Get Thee to a Coventry? | CSC32::K_KINNEY | So shine a good deed in a weary world | Sat Aug 01 1992 12:15 | 12 |
|
Thanks for the help here. I do appreciate it. So does
Catnippy. She rather likes this 'get thee to the coventry'
approach. Hitther would like to know what exactly is
a coventry? For her, it appears to be a rather lonely
guest bath. Boring, but I hope effective. She is quite
mellow and purring when she comes out after five minutes.
She has spent a few "five minutes's" there since yesterday.
kim again
|
347.8 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Mon Aug 03 1992 10:41 | 10 |
| Re: Hitther would like to know what exactly is a coventry?
Coventry
(kuv <schwa> n tre, kov-),
n.
1. a city in West Midlands, in central England: heavily bombed 1940.
337,000.
2. send to Coventry, to refuse to associate with; openly ignore: His
friends sent him to Coventry after he was court-martialed.
|
347.9 | Hitther thanks you | CSC32::K_KINNEY | So shine a good deed in a weary world | Mon Aug 03 1992 10:53 | 8 |
|
Hitther thanks you. She is definitely beginning to
make the correct association with this Coventry
location. Catnippy thanks you especially. So
does her mom (me) and dad.
Kim
|
347.10 | KITTY ATTITUDES | ICS::MORGAN_C | | Thu Aug 13 1992 10:20 | 16 |
| I had a recent episode of the terror's myself upon bringing
Peaches home from the vet.
Actually Mittens (the bully) wasn't going after Peaches...
but me! (For bringing this foreign animal into the house!)
Peaches has actually lived with Mittens for over a year,
but those two days away at the vets changed her smell just
enough to confuse and p.o. Mittens off.
Had to show the nasty furface (and I mean spitting, hissing,
swinging) who really ran the household...a 30 minute "holding
period" in the bathroom did the trick! He came out snuggling
and over his attitude!
C.
|
347.11 | Problems with aggressive cats | PASHUN::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Wed Jan 06 1993 07:05 | 38 |
|
My cats have an aggressive behavior problem. Here's the story.
In about October my husband and I came home after being gone about
4 hours to find that our spayed female was stuck up a tree. (Her
neutered brother was fine.) Near the tree was this vary large
yellow cat, a Tom I assume but am not sure. He was very aggressive
towards my husband. The cat tried to go up the tree after Pretty
Girl and my husband had to forceably remove him, whereupon the Big
Cat bit my husband. (We havent gotten ill or died so I don't
think Rabies is a concern.)
Now, we just got back from being gone for 6 days and having some
cat-lover neighbors care for our cats. I found many scratches on
both cats. The night we got back we were relaxing when we heard
this horrible rucus. Howling, screaming, banging ... I ran to the
dining room where the sounds were coming from to find Spike-fur all
over the rug; that mean Tom Cat outside the sliding glass window;
and Pretty Girl under the table howling like I've never heard. MY
husband tapped on the glass to scare the Tom and the cat tried to
attack through the glass, throwing himself at the window, hissing ...
We opened the door to chase him away and he ran.
Now, to complicate matters, Spike, Pretty Girl's brother, is also a
yellow cat. He was outside last night and I was sitting in the dining
room. I hear this loud bang, look up and see Pretty Girl pratically
attached to the glass door. She'd thown herself against it all
legs spread out in different directions. (Looked sort of like the
road runner when he falls off a cliff.) As soon as I let Spike in and
Pretty Girl realize it was him she was fine.
So a) why is this Tom Cat so aggressive, b) why is Pretty Girl
so aggressive and c) how can I stop this situation? It seems that
Pretty sees this Tom Cat outside; freaks out; and beats up her
brother.
Rachael
|
347.12 | forgot to mention this | PASHUN::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Wed Jan 06 1993 07:07 | 8 |
|
And I've thought about trying to use a Have-a-heart on the Tom Cat
but since it's still so cold, I wouldn't want to freeze him to death.
Plus I'm not so sure that he's the only problem.
Rachael
|
347.13 | Nasty furball! | ICS::MORGAN_C | | Wed Jan 06 1993 07:54 | 15 |
| Any idea who's cat it is? If so, try contacting them.
Otherwise....do dog catchers take cats? Tell them you think
it's rabid and going after small children (I mean it did take
off after your hubby, didn't it?)
Last resort, cold weather or not, a bucket of cold water in
his direction should cool him off. He's become too much of a
terror (by the sounds of it) and what happens when you're not
around to save your babies the next time. This means war!
Good Luck!
C.
|
347.14 | | MAYES::MERRITT | Kitty City | Wed Jan 06 1993 08:02 | 23 |
| Just a warning if you tell the dog officer the cat might be
rabid...the cat will probably be shot on the spot!! That is how
our area is dealing with calls from folks who think animals
are rabid...it doesn't matter if it's a cat/dog/raccoon!! Even
though the kittie might be aggresive....I don't feel that is the
route to take.
I think contacting the owners is a good suggestion...or try
capturing the cat and have him neuter...or bring him to a shelter...
or try keeping your kitties in for awhile....or squirt him with
water...or try to scare him away by banging pots and pans!!!
The cat is probably aggresive because he hasn't been neutered...
might not have a home...and has had to fight to survive!!
Good luck...
Sandy
|
347.15 | Similar situation | VMPIRE::BACHELDER | | Wed Jan 06 1993 08:59 | 13 |
| I have a similar situation...
Every time my male cat (neutered) see another cat outside his tail
puffs all up (it gets HUGE) and then he attacks my female cat. Luckily
this doesn't happen all to often, but when it does I have to draw the
shades, separate the cats, and let my male cat chill-out for 10-15 minutes
before I'll put the two cats together again.
It must be a territorial thing(?). I don't like it, but I don't know
how to stop it.
- Lauri
|
347.16 | clarification | CHEEKO::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Wed Jan 06 1993 09:28 | 18 |
|
Thanks for the info so far. I think there are a couple points of
confusion.
currently, the problem occurs, (or I only see it), when
the any yellow cat is outside and Pretty Girl is inside.
anytime my husband or I open the door to spray the cat with
something, he runs so fast we cannot find him or reach him.
I'm just hoping to solve this to prevent Spike from getting beaten
up anymore or to prevent Pretty Girl from breaking anything while
she smashes into the glass door.
I could put a note up in the post office asking the owner to contact
me. That way I can find out if he even has a home.
Rachael
|
347.17 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Wed Jan 06 1993 11:15 | 20 |
| I'm a little confused -- do Pretty Girl and Spike have a cat door,
or do you let them in and out?
One thing you could do is keep them inside all the time; they should
adjust and stop asking to go out in about two weeks.
It's normal when a cat is freaked out by an aggressive situation, like
an alien cat nearby, for them to attack anything in their
range, including their brother cat or owners. The way that I know
of to deal with this is to not try to handle the cat and to keep the
sibs separated until they calm down. The real way to fix it is to
deal with the alien cat problem --
Probably the tom is not neutered, and that and possibly being
feral and having to fight for food is why he's so aggresive. If you
can't find his owners, I'd try leaving him food some where away from the
house, like near a shed or something, so he wouldn't tend to home
in on the house. I'd definitely keep your cats indoors to
prevent further conflicts.
|
347.18 | Alien Cats Are Beings Too | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Thu Jan 07 1993 02:28 | 19 |
| I strongly disagree with .13, and strongly agree with .14, Sandy is
right. To lie the cat is rabid and after children is not fair. The poor
beast has to fight for his life, which life is hard because of us
humans. Never be hasty... and putting out food is a good idea of Karen!
BTW, attacking own people/cats while being confused of a stranger, you
remember, I had it, and have asked for help as my loving furball bit
through my hand. I solved the problem with a water pistol for the
attacker, and some (don't laugh) deo spray sprayed thickly on the stone
floor before the windowsill in the strangercat's absence. He hated
human deo! (Do not spray the cat!). Too much water on the cat is bad in
cold days - the poor furball might freeze to death. Oh I would love a
problemless world even if it is boring...
I read a book from the Strugatsky brothers (sci-fi) with the title:
'Hard To Be A God' - how true.
Nat
|
347.19 | | DELNI::MANDILE | Toepick! | Thu Jan 07 1993 05:52 | 4 |
| Your best bet is to capture the tom, and get him neutered, while
trying to find his owners. (good luck...sounds like there are not
any, or that they don't give a hoot about the cat!) If you can't
keep hi after the neutering, try to find him a home.
|
347.20 | Thanks! | PASHUN::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Thu Jan 07 1993 11:48 | 20 |
|
Thanks for all the replies. To answer some questions:
- the cats don't have a cat door. we let Spike out if he wants
to go. Pretty Girl we don't let out since we had to "save" her
from out of that tree.
The problems only occurr through the glass door. The Tom Cat is on
the other side of the glass door. That's what I meant by 'through
the door". that's why I'm concerned about Pretty Girl ramming her
head into the glass door. I know my head would get hurt doing that!
(Maybe I ought to rename her "Pretty Dumb Girl").
I'll try feeding the cat, although he's really huge. I can't imagine
that he's a stray, but who knows!
Rachael
|
347.21 | | AYRPLN::TAYLOR | In hibernation 'til spring! | Thu Jan 07 1993 11:55 | 20 |
| Rachel,
don't let his size fool you! A friend of mine has a barn and there's
one particular cat that comes by every so often that they KNOW is a
feral cat and he's HUGE!! Probably a good 15 lbs!
My advice ... get a have-a-heart trap and catch him .. bring him to the
vets and have him fixed.
In the mean time ... is there a way of blocking that glass door so that
she can't see out of it??
Cats often can't see glass, that's why they "run into" the glass. You
may want to try and find a way to "mark" the glass. In our old house,
we had a glass door and finally had to get some colored tape and run it
along the bottom of the glass so that the cats could see that there
actually was something there.
Holly
|
347.22 | Ooops, didn't mean to write so much | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Three Tigers on my Couch | Thu Jan 07 1993 12:06 | 46 |
| Rachael,
I'm dealing with a similar problem (difference is my cats never
go out). I have a whole male living on my patio. Onyx hates him.
I'm sure it has something to do with him being a whole male. I
plan to have him tested and neutered soon but financially I've
been having alot of problems so it is having to wait a while.
Onyx does charge the glass door periodically too. It sounds like
the whole door is coming down when he does it. I've also had some
trouble with him doing his version of spraying around the glass door
and my front door.
I'm hoping that getting the whole male (BTW I call him Dusty) neutered
will help the situation. With any luck at all it will help enough
that I can eventually bring Dusty into the house. I want to clean
him up and find him a home (of course, he may already belong to me
if Onyx will accept him after neutering...I'm getting very attached).
Since it has been raining so much, Dusty is sticking very close to
the patio in the perch I've set up for him. You should see the set
up he has. High up on a cabinet as far out of the rain as I can
get it is a cardboard box covered on the outside by a white kitchen
garbage bag I've taped into place around it. On top of that is a
red plastic thing that fits over the top of the box (had to add this
as water was making the top of the box collapse), then there is a
blue nylon jacket with flannel inside on top of that. Inside the
box is an old plastic litter box filled with a fuzzy round cat bed
(Michelle Cantoni made it for Dusty), a couple of flannel squares
and a towel. All are arranged for maximum box coverage and warmth.
(It has been really cold and wet here lately.) There is also a
ruler like piece of wood taped into place to give the cardboard roof
some support. His food and water dishes are placed right outside the
box. Quite a set up.
Anyway, I try to distract Onyx when I seem him pacing at the glass
door. If he gets too nuts I isolate him in the bedroom. I spray
him with the water bottle, hiss at him (am I the only one that
does this?) and say NO! when he gets too aggressive at the door or
with the other cats. He hasn't stopped all the behaviors completely
but he seems to respond much quicker to the NOs and he backs off of
whatever (or whoever) he is after.
Good luck. I hope some of this helps.
Jan
|
347.23 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Jan 07 1993 12:29 | 4 |
| Re: Dusty's house
Sounds to me like he already has an owner :-)
|
347.24 | block the view with a cheap alternative | SPEZKO::RAWDEN | Go ahead, make my dinner! | Thu Jan 07 1993 12:36 | 15 |
| One way of making a temporary curtain for the glass door (is this a
sliding glass door?) is to take one of those stretchy type clothes
lines and attach it to both sides of the door. Do this around waist
height. Take a sheet and fold it in half then hang it over the
clothesline. This way here, the bottom half of the glass door will be
blocked but the top half will still allow light in. If you block the
view from the cat's level, it may make a difference. Another
suggestion would be to get some type of blind so you can completely
close off the view but there may be reasons you don't want to do
that... Or you could go all out and make something nice out of fabric
but if all you need is to basically block the viewing/hissing, a
temporary curtain might do wonders.
Cheryl
(ps - Holly, a 15 pound cat is HUGE? What does that make my Chubs? :^)
|
347.25 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Jan 07 1993 12:44 | 3 |
| A lot of that hugeness might be fur, thickened up as a result
of the cold.
|
347.26 | | MAYES::MERRITT | Kitty City | Thu Jan 07 1993 13:01 | 6 |
| Believe me I have rescued many many many fat strays!!!! I have
been trying to work with one that is living under my porch...and
it is amazing how big he/she is!!!! But like Karen said...if they
live outside it is unbelievable the coat of fur they get!!!
Sandy
|
347.27 | But you made then that way! ;-) | STUDIO::COLAIANNI | | Fri Jan 08 1993 06:17 | 11 |
| But Sandy, aren't YOU the one that fattened them up so they would LET
you rescue them? ;-) 8-)
But seriously, I may have a stray outside my house now, (I still am not
100% sure he doesn't have a home) and he looks fat and sleek, but he
totally freaked the day he got stuck on my enclosed porch. He climbed
the walls (literally) trying to get out. This leads me to believe he's
not a people cat. I can't get close enough to him to see if he's a
whole male or not yet.
Yonee
|
347.28 | | CHEEKO::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Fri Jan 08 1993 09:31 | 9 |
|
I'll put some tape on the door. (I already have some verticle blinds
and the cats just go behind them to look out the window.) I haven't
seen the cat in a few days now but I'll start with the food this
weekend. Thanks!
Rachael
|
347.29 | | MAYES::MERRITT | Kitty City | Fri Jan 08 1993 10:03 | 11 |
| Yonee...your right!! My stray kitties are fed very well!!!!!
Rachael...if you do start with food for the kitty...he will probably
stick around even more. This is great if your intention is to rescue
him, neuter him and find him a new home....but once you start with
the food...they always hang around!! But...I'm sure he is probably
starving too!!
Good luck...
Sandy
|
347.30 | | SPEZKO::RAWDEN | Go ahead, make my dinner! | Fri Jan 08 1993 11:38 | 2 |
| Feed him, but leave the food out on your neighbor's porch, not your
own. Hehheh! (sorry, it's Friday!)
|
347.31 | Update | CHEEKO::BARLOW | i THINK i can, i THINK i can... | Mon Jan 11 1993 10:31 | 15 |
|
Well, no sign of the cat. I didn't put food out yet cause I haven't
seen him. (I really don't want to fee cats who already have homes.)
My intention in feeding him is indeed to catch him and get a look -
see if he's fixed, see if he's healthy and see if anybody knows him.
The problem in my neighborhood is that there are many many yellow cats,
about 9 that I personally know.
Thought I'd update you all. Since the cat hasn't returned, I'm not
finding any new scratch marks on my cats and they aren't banging into
the door.
Rachael
|
347.32 | Aggressive Cat towards new cat | POWDML::CORMIER | | Thu Mar 04 1993 11:23 | 20 |
| Not sure if this is a dominance thing, or if I need to intervene.
The scenario - Spike is a neutered male, large. Brutus is a new
addition, recently neutered. Spike has been with us for 2 years, and
was a stray for several years before that. Brutus has been a stray for
about 9 months, recently neutered and added to the household (3 weeks
ago).
Two nights in a row, I was been awakened by a rukus on the
bed. I found Spike with his teeth around Brutus' throat (not neck,
but under the chin, right by the throat!). Brutus is laying on his
back, not even defending himself. For the last two nights, I've heard
Spike coming (he chirps, and I heard him chirping on his merry way from
one end of the house into the bedroom), he hopped up on the bed where
Brutus was SOUND ASLEEP, and grabbed him by the throat again! I don't
know that much about cats...are they doing the "pecking order" thing,
or is Spike getting wierd? When I turn on the light and scold him, he
jumps down, Brutus usually jumps down, and they go off to sleep in
another room of the house without any further incidents. What's going
on here? Any ideas?
Sarah
|
347.33 | | DELNI::MANDILE | with an e | Thu Mar 04 1993 12:40 | 2 |
| My 4 neutered males do that to each other all the time.
Especially this time of year....it's spring! (8
|
347.34 | What's the deal? | SAHQ::SINATRA | | Thu Mar 18 1993 14:41 | 33 |
| Shadow is a neutered male, probably around four years old. Sammi is a
spayed female, just about a year old. Shadow is twice the size of
Sammi. Sammi just delights in tormenting Shadow. For instance, on
Sunday I was sick in bed and Shadow came in and curled up in the crook
behind my knees. A few minutes later, Sammi came in, walked down my
other side, looked over, and prepared to whap Shadow over the head. I
told her no, so she turned around, walked around my head and went under
the covers along my back. When Shadow saw the covers moving, he jumped
up with big eyes staring at this lump. Sammi slid right into his spot
in the crook behind my knees, only under the covers. Shadow sat there a
minute with his head cocked, then his eyes focused in and he attacked
the lump, scratching and kicking and rolling around. I, not wanting my
new comforter torn to shreds, told him to stop. Well, that made him
really mad, and he rolled over on his side and started kicking that
back foot at me. (It's not FAIR Mom, Make her Moooove!) I lifted the
covers and told Sammi to come out. She did, and jumped off the other
end of the bed. Shadow moved to the left corner of the bed and curled
up to sleep. Thirty seconds later, Sammi leaped into the air and put
Shadow in a headlock. He of course put her in a headlock. I fell back
on my pillow, shaking my head, only to look up to see Shadow with an
absolutely murderous look on his face backing Sammi to the other side
of the bed. I spoke to him and he went back and laid down on the left
corner, and Sammi laid down at my feet on the right corner.
There never seems to be serious claws or teeth involved, but Sammi has
spent a good portion of her young life running, hissing and shrieking
at the top of her lungs with Shadow hot on her trail - usually she's
provoked him. Is she addicted to the adrenalin rush? Is it a dominance
thing? I would like nothing better than to see these two bathing each
other and cuddling together - do you think it will ever happen? Maybe
when she gets older?
Rebecca
|
347.35 | | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Three Tigers on my Couch | Thu Mar 18 1993 17:01 | 12 |
| Sounds like a dominance thing to me. This happens regularly at
my house between Onyx and Carrie. Poor Carrie spends half her
life running from Onyx and the other half with his mouth attached
to her neck. Onyx gets scolded, squirted and grabbed by the scruff
and physically removed from Carrie on a regular basis and still
it continues. I haven't been able to break him off it. There is
a good side though. At night, when it's really dark and quite I
can sometimes peak over on the corner of the bed or on the floor
by the bed and see Carrie grooming Onyx or see them curled up
asleep together. There is hope.
Jan
|
347.36 | Open Season on Sammi | SAHQ::SINATRA | | Fri Dec 17 1993 16:18 | 18 |
| Please help! I continue to be concerned about Shadow's aggressive
treatment of Sammi and it seems to be getting worse rather than better.
He doesn't hurt her, but he really hammers on her, the ruckus is tremendous
and she spends a good portion of her life running from him and trying to
get away from him. (And destroying our furniture in the process, which my
husband is none too happy about.) We've lately taken to locking Shadow in
the carrier when it gets too bad. The other day I locked him up and went to
pick her up and she flung her little paws around my neck and clung to me
trembling all over. Either she's a very good dramatic actress or she's
really scared. But am I being unfair to lock him up all the time (he seems
to care not-at-all), am I showing favoritism, am I tampering with a natural
process (i.e., the top cat thing)? I don't really know what to do, or
if there's anything that can be done?
Thanks for any help you might be able to give us.
Rebecca, Vince, Shadow and Sammi in the war zone
|
347.37 | | SAHQ::SINATRA | | Tue Dec 21 1993 08:58 | 10 |
| Well, my husband may have found the solution to our problem, and I'll
go ahead and put it in here in case anyone else is suffering through
the same thing. I went shopping this weekend, and apparently Vincent
got fed up with all the fighting, so he took Shadow and Sammi and
shut them in the carrier for an hour. I'm glad I wasn't there, because I
would never have had the heart to put Sammi, shrieking at the top of
her lungs, into the carrier with Shadow. But he did and they didn't fight
and there's been a truce ever since.
Rebecca
|
347.38 | Neutering and aggression | STAR::MDNITE::RIVERS | Even better than the real thing | Mon Aug 15 1994 09:30 | 53 |
| Just a quick question:
There's a tom cat hanging around my house. He's very sweet natured to
me, and is "in love" with my cats (all spayed/neutered). This tom
doesn't seem to have a problem fighting with the neutered male that
hangs around outside, or any of the five cats who reside in the house
that come outside periodically (my landlords spayed/neutered female and
male, or my two spayed females or my neutered male). He follows my
cats around and chirps amorously at them. I'm not sure if he's just a
softy for girls (and neutered boys, who I guess registered as "girls"
:), but he sure likes to follow them around.
So, he gets along fine. Never a problem with the various cats of the
house. Seems to accept immediately that They belong. And to me, he's
quite a sweetheart.
However, he is the most aggressively territorial tom cat I've seen.
There are a few other toms which are strays -- if he catches sight of
them, he immediately rushes over. He is very much top cat around here,
he will fight viciously and even spraying the combatants with water
doesn't help. Doesn't back down AT ALL, even when the other cat runs.
Yesterday, I tried to pry him and another cat apart with a stick (so
the poor other cat, who definitely wanted to get away, could run).
You'd think I was trying to break up two pit bulls. (Yes, I know not
to get scratched -- that's why I was using a broken shovel handle. I
did not strike the cats, I was using it to pry them off each other.)
Even though he "wins" he's always quite beat up -- bites, scratches,
etc. This is all well and good as an example of cat behavior, but a)
he makes a lot of noise b) I feel a bit sorry for the other cats and c)
when I finally get the warhorse into the vet, I don't want to be paying
$$$$ extra to drain absesses, etc.
When I get the $ and the certificate back from Friends of Animals, I
plan on taking "Big Head" (his name of hte moment. He has a very big
head and neck, but a thin body...) in for shots, and neutering. I'm
going to hazard a guess that Big Head is about 2-3 years old. I know
that neutering doesn't necessarily eliminate fighting, but I'm
guessing that it will help tone down the aggression.
To make a long story shorter -- does anyone have an idea of how long it
takes for the lack of hormones to tone things down? How about
spraying? Big Head does spray. I'd like to let him in my house when
he's fixes and such but not if he's going to be squirting on everything
-- I don't need the trigger reaction that might start in my cats.
And although he doesn't fight with my guys, I'd like to eliminate
fighting with other cats as much as I can -- I've sort of donned the
mantle of "Cat Savior" and I *know* how much war wounds can cost at the
vets since cats seem so prone to abscessing. (bleh)
kim
|
347.39 | | USCTR1::MERRITT_S | | Mon Aug 15 1994 10:44 | 20 |
| DE ja vu....It sounds like we are taking care of the same Stray!!!
My stray, Capone is a very similar tom. He won't touch my cats...
but let another stray walk in the yard and he turns into Mighty
Warrior!!! He also sprays everything in site...and loves to follow
my females around chirping at them!!!
I also plan on capturing Capone before winter...and my guess is
he'll probably stop fighting...but I'm not sure we'll ever break
him of his nasty spraying habit!! Only time will tell. My plan
is once he goes to the vets he can spend the next few nights in
my cellar. We'll see if he continues to spray down there...because I
sure don't need him triggering a spraying contest in my house with
all my other cats!!!!
My worse fear with him fighting is not only absesses...but also the
spreading of diseases such as Feluk and FIV.
Let me know how you make out....
Sandy
|
347.40 | | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | Julie O'Donnell | Tue Aug 16 1994 01:26 | 22 |
| Ditto. Napoleon is EXACTLY the same!
Shy, almost scared of my own cats (Rosie is so timid, it's quite a
novelty for her!), but the most vicious spitfire with anyone else who
dares to come into HIS territory. I did have a bad problem with him
spraying, but finally caught him a few weeks ago and took him, loudly
protesting, to the vet.
It didn't work at first - a week later a poor little manx cat was
foolish to turn up in the garden near feeding time. Napoleon was
lurking...! I sprayed them with water from the hose-pipe to split them
up (works instantaneously!).
However, he has suddenly started to look better cared for. I have found
him cleaning himself (he never did it before) and the fights are much
less frequent. He looks like a cat now. Jimmy even attacked him the
other day (new kitten, bad mood) and he backed off.
I don't think it completely stops them fighting, though. My friend has
a neutered tom (another stray that he took in) and he fights all the
time - I think it might be that he lives in an area where most of the
cats are female and/or neutered and he's the biggest cat, therefore Top
cat.
Incidently, if you're planning on catching him, make sure that you're
well protected! I still have the scars from my battle with Napoleon.
|
347.41 | Thanks for the input | STAR::MDNITE::RIVERS | Even better than the real thing | Tue Aug 16 1994 08:54 | 23 |
| Oh, my peeping tom (he really does peep into my windows. Climbs on the
roof and peers in. It's kinda cute, until he starts his yowling for
attention.) is quite easy to catch. He's quite friendly to me and
doesn't mind if I pick him up (he squalls a bit). He was very shy when
I first saw him, but sheer determination ("I will pet this cat! I will
pet this cat!") eventually got him to let me pet him. He growled at
first, but never, never, NEVER swiped (unlike the other outdoor cat,
Sam, who'll let you pet him, then suddenly swipe at you, claws out.
I've been raked by Sam a couple times). Anyway, I'm really not worried
about catching him, I just need to send in the $ for the neuter
certificate and convince the vet to let me pay in increments for his
shots and stuff. I'm almost certain that he'll need some wound
treatment.
Back to the subject, I was just wondering if anybody has ever seen a
really aggressive cat calm down after neutering. I don't mind taking
care of this warhorse, I just don't want him spraying in my house (he
*really* wants to come in, that he has made clear) and/or fighting the
other cats in the neighborhood quite so gung-ho-ishly.
Cheers,
kim
|
347.42 | Spike never learned | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Tue Aug 16 1994 10:03 | 16 |
| My former stray Spike is still a fighter. He's about 9-10 years old,
has been neutered (he was already neutered when I picked him up as a
stray 5 years ago). I just dropped him off yet again for abscess
surgery! I guess some cats just don't understand about hormones and
aggressive tendencies : )
However, he will tolerate a young cat in his territory - he even
invited two kittens into his house! But if an adult cat, male or
female, neutered or intact, dares to wander into his territory (which
could be the yard, the street in front, the front lawns across the
street, depending on his mood), watch out! If I keep him in at night,
he doesn't run into any of the 'interlopers'. He managed to sneak out
last week - hence the need for surgery today : (
Good luck with that tom. If he's young enough, maybe he hasn't learned
that fighting is "the thing to do"? I wish Spike had skipped that
lessson...
Sarah
|
347.43 | | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Four Tigers on my Couch | Tue Aug 16 1994 10:22 | 10 |
| Re: .41
Mac was really aggressive before neutering and he has calmed down
quite a bit. Of course, he's now an indoor only cat and he gets
scolded when he gets too out of hand. Onyx likes to start squabbles
with him just to get in him into hot water I think. He still has a
lot of aggressive tendencies so if he were still out there on his own
(but neutered) I expect he might still be very aggressive.
Jan
|
347.44 | Unprovoked aggression question | STAR::MDNITE::RIVERS | Even better than the real thing | Thu Sep 08 1994 12:20 | 55 |
| Have you folks who've taken in strays or had whole toms around before
neutering them noticed anything that would equate to bursts of
aggression (unprovoked) towards people that is *not* rabies?
Bob Cat (the tom I've mentioned earlier in this notes) bit me (detailed
in another note), was quarantined for rabies, did not have them and got
his rabies and distemper shots. He chomped me while I was petting him
-- he was being quite loving at the time. I figured maybe I touched a
sore spot.
However, having been home for a few days, twice he's scratched at me
with his claws out -- one again while I was petting him (he swatted and
missed) and then attacked my leg while I was walking past him (he was
being friendly and following me around). I did not trip over him, kick
him or brush him, he just turned around raked my leg. Smarts. Of
course, I yelled at him and disciplined him and he did the appropriate
cat who knows he oughtn't have done that things. He immediately
started following me around again and being friendly.
My mom suggested it was a tom cat thing -- sudden little bursts of
agression, triggered by God knows what. Since I'm totally unsure of
Bob Cat ever had a real home prior to becoming friendly with me (he
used to be quite shy and would flee at people's approach, but gradually
let me approach closer and closer, and then, a couple months ago,
decided he wanted to act like a "real" cat and be quite friendly), he
"claws out/Bite" actions might also be the result of being relatively
unsocialized and therefore, not having learned what people will
tolerate and what they won't. Another cat who had since sort of become
my landlord's third cat is quite friendly to a point and then will swat
at you with claws out (for which he is not encouraged to continue).
This cat is neutered and lives outdoors most of the time. He seems
less inclined to swat since I made it quite clear that I wasn't going
to take that from him. Bob, though, has now attacked me when I wasn't
even touching him.
(it should be noted that I've had a cat do that to me before, but it
was a singular incident. Having been bitten by Bob and clawed at
twice, for no apparant reason, it makes this seem like something to
watch out for.)
I'm just wondering if this "burst of aggression" is a documented bit of
undesirable but not unusal cat behavior, or if I have some work ahead
of me in convincing Bob that he shouldn't bite the hand, or claw the
legs, of somebody who's prepared to give him a nice home. My landlord
doesn't like him very much and would ahve preferred that I not bring
him back from the vets when he was quarantined, and *I* would prefer to
be able to trust Bob enough to pet him without wondering "Will I get
scratched"?
The other option is to ignore Bob completely, but that strikes me as
not doing anything to improve the behavior.
Any input?
kim
|
347.45 | | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Four Tigers on my Couch | Thu Sep 08 1994 14:26 | 11 |
| I had that problem with Mac about the the time that he was neutered.
The vet decided that he was just one of those cats that was easily
over stimulated. She said that neutering would calm him down
somewhat but that he may always be easily overstimulated and that
I need to watch for signs that it was happening and quit petting
him before it went too far.
So far she's been right on about his behavior. And, I've learned
when to quit and get my hand out of range.
Jan
|
347.46 | | USCTR1::MERRITT_S | Kitty City | Fri Sep 09 1994 06:02 | 32 |
| One of my latest strays (Rio) that I rescued has the same type
of behaviour. He will come up to you and want to cuddle and
the next thing you know he is in "attack mode" biting any part
of your body. I have just sat there and Rio has come up and bit
me on the shoulder, he also attacks feet if you walk by, but then
he comes up to you purring and rubbing all over you!!
I do know a little history on Rio and he was an outdoor kitty for
about one year. He also was either badly abused by a human or
got hit by a car because there was a time he had a VERY bad leg
and limped. I know he wasn't treated well by humans...and I personally
feel he just reacts that way because he is always on guard or he
does it for attention. I doubt he'll ever change....
So, like Jan...I have learned to "pick-up" on Rio's moods and
normally can tell when I'm going to get attacked so I just walk
away. He just gets this "look"....eyes wide, ears semi-back, and
his body starts to have weird moves!! (it's hard to explain!!)
If I walk away....he usually comes running up to me and begs to
be petted. I do notice that if I pat his backside...that can easily
turn him into his attack mode, much more then if I was patting his
head! We have had his backside checked by a vet...and then could
find nothing wrong. BUT..it makes me wonder if there is some pain
and that might be causing his moods.
So...I would just start watching your cats behaviour and see if you can
determine if anything in particular gets him going and then learn
to know when the attackes are coming on...before he gets you!!
Keep us posted...
Sandy
|
347.47 | | AYRPLN::VENTURA | Make the world your playground. | Fri Sep 09 1994 09:13 | 21 |
| However, it's not ALWAYS the up-bringing that provokes this type of
behavior. MONDO is a good example. He was born at my house, was NEVER
abused, and never was outside. I've got scars on my arms like you
wouldn't believe from him biting me. Bites where I should have had
stitches, but the doctor refused to stitch a cat bite.
MONDO is a little over a year old now and was neutered 3 months ago.
He hasn't bitten me since then (I'm also very leary of him), however I
still have to keep him in a separate room from my other cats because
he'll still attack Tabitha or PITA whenever he sees them. I'm going to
talk to the vet to see what else we can do to get him calmed down a bit
more. Who knows.
If your cat isn't neutered, do it right away. It may change his
disposition a bit and at least he MAY not bite you for no reason. Jan
is right, though .. some cats just get overstimulated and will bite
then. I'm VERY cautious of Mondo when I pet him and at the first sign
of him being over stimulated, I stop.
Holly
|
347.48 | | STAR::MDNITE::RIVERS | Even better than the real thing | Fri Sep 09 1994 12:10 | 19 |
| Thanks for the input.
Since Bob attacked my legs when I was walking around the backyard (did
not even touch him), it's a bit tricky to determine when his mood
strikes. He's quite fast about changing, I've been able to perceive no
warning signs in the three ocassions this has happened so far. I'm
certainly not going to avoid walking around in the back yard for fear
of upsetting him.
Anyway:
He'll be getting neutered "soon", which is when I have the money to
send off to Friends of Animals. It's only $25.00 yes, but $$ is tight
at the moment and the $136.00 I just spend on his kinda bumped out the
extra $25.00. :) Hopefully, that will remedy the behavior.
Cheers,
kim
|
347.49 | | ODIXIE::SINATRA | | Fri Sep 09 1994 12:52 | 26 |
| Kim,
My cat Shadow used to do something similar - he was a stray between two
and three years old when he came to live with us - had been abandoned
and on his own for at least a year. He was already neutered and litter
box trained - he had definitely belonged to someone. He was very
friendly, rubbing against the legs, etc., but also very wary and
aggressive, smacking us and snapping at us (I began to think I knew
why no one had adopted him yet). His most startling habit was that he
would run and attack our legs - me mostly, once or twice on my husband
convinced him that wasn't a good idea. I might be walking past or even
innocently standing putting my makeup on in the morning and all of a
sudden he'd attack my leg, with claws and teeth and ears back. I finally
reached my level of tolerance for this and we had "words" but I also think
that time helped. He still is not a love bug unless it's his idea.
Otherwise, if we pet him it turns into a biting, kicking "play" session,
which can get painful for us if we don't pay attention to see what his
mood is. I don't think BobCat's behavior is necessarily unusual, and it may
improve with time and certainly as suggested, as you become more and
more familiar with his ways. I would be inclined to discourage those
flash (or is that slash?) "attacks" though - if they're anything akin
to what I experienced with Shadow (who I've decided, is just an
aggressive kind of guy).
Rebecca
|
347.50 | kitty attacks | GRANMA::JBOBB | Janet Bobb dtn:339-5755 | Tue Sep 13 1994 12:55 | 58 |
| We have/had 2 neutered males that would both "attack" as part of their
behavior, not due to illness.
One of the cats we have now, Merlin, will go into attack mode every
once in a while. We've had him since he was a little kitten (probably
younger than 6 weeks), but he was a "rescue" so don't know if those
first few weeks of his life still overshadow 9 years of pampered
living. Most of the time he loves to cuddle and will sit on your lap
for hours, purring away. He sleeps with us, follows us from room to
room, very loving. Then he has his "devil" moods where he "attacks" at
random. He will hiss and hit at non-family members, even ones he knows
very well, except those that feed him.
If he's had enough petting, he'll let you know by grabbing your hand or
arm in his teeth, but not biting. If you still don't get the message,
then he may grab you with his paws (without claws or just a little
claw). By then, we've gotten the message.
If he thinks he should be fed more before we go upstairs to bed, he
will actually run ahead of you, lay on the stairs and when your legs
come in range, will become a "kitty anklet" - sometimes using claws. If
you try to walk by and ignore him, you usually end up getting
scratched. If you stop of the stairs and talk to him, usually a "don't
even think about it" he will let you go by. My feeling is he just wants
to make sure you notice he's upset.
He will also get into moods where he must have pent up energy or
something because he either attacks us or the other cat. Last night was
one of those times - his eyes dilate, he crouches in the "pre-strike"
position - these signs mean we need to watch ourselves. He can be
diffused by giving him something to chase, such as a ribbon (long
ribbon so you're out of range!) or something else that drags. If you
watch him, you can usually get some clue about what's going to happen,
but every once in a while we getting out the first aid creme to repair
something.
The first cat we owned was a neutered male about 3 years old. He came
from a situation where the female humans didn't like cats and didn't
treat him well. So, he was fine with guys, but would attack the legs of
any/all females that might be around, including me, without
provocation. You'd be sitting there and all of a sudden have a cat
biting or clawing your leg. It was not a fun summer!It took about a
year to convince him not to do that - with lots of attention and some
stern words. And he did mellow out to anyone who fed him. Never
bothered any of the guys.
So - yes, cats without being sick can be aggressive. I read that
flighty or aggressive behavior can be a sign of poor nutrition. Any one
else read that and have any suggestions? Mine get fed Iams/Science Diet
type crackers (with some Friskies/Nine Lives mixed in) and Friskie
Buffet. They've always had good checkups and have maintained their
weight for past 8 years. But, as I've been changing my diet away from
processed food, I'm wondering if I should do that for them.
Anyway- Johnson's First Aid Creme works very well in keeping cat
scratches from getting infected.
janetb.
|