T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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531.1 | | GOOEY::JUDY | slept with romance, danced with lust | Thu Apr 22 1993 09:21 | 14 |
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It will take time for her to get acclimated to her new
surroundings. I've moved three times and my furfaces have
adapted to the new apartments fairly easily. If you have
a scratching post or a kitty bed or something she likes to
sleep on, make sure to bring them with you and don't wash
them or anything. They will have her scent on them and that
will make her more comfortable. She'll have something of "hers"
in the new place that she can go to.
JJ
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531.2 | | FUTURS::ELLIOT | Here today, gone tomorrow | Thu Apr 22 1993 10:00 | 7 |
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I have moved twice with my 2 cats. Both times they went off their food
for a few days, and tended to hide away somewhere quiet, but they
settled down fairly soon. Just give them lots of cuddles, and be patient.
June
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531.3 | | BAHTAT::CARTER_A | Andy Carter..Morph the Borg | Thu Apr 22 1993 10:18 | 15 |
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We put ours in a cattery as we were going on holiday shortly after the
move. By the time the kitties got to the new house, I think they were
so fed up of the cattery, they were glad to be anywhere different. Both
thoroughly explored every room, I pointed them to the litter tray and
their food, then they went to sleep on the bed!
After a week we let them out thru' the catflap, and they didn't wander
much from the door, but after a month or two they had shouldered their
way into the local feline community.
I think its basically a case of food, bed, litter and a few
recognisable smells.
Andy
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531.4 | Don't worry! Love does it! | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Fri Apr 23 1993 01:16 | 20 |
| I don't think the cattery is a good idea... just to make her not good
to accept gladly the new flat...
Move her with droping her the meantime at your parents' as you said.
Moving into the new flat she will perhaps hide and refuse food the
first time (as mentioned). But the advices given are good, with 'her'
bed etc. And your idea with the old vet who is known to her is also
good. As you said, she is familiar with your parents and their flat, I
think she'll get easy used to the new circumstances.
As I moved, I took Smokey to my mom's flat (same situ as you) and as I
was ready with the move, I brought her home into the new home. It took
her half an hour to accomodate! Main thing is you are near, so if you
move the cat in, be with her the whole day if she needs it, that means
do the 'catmove' from your parents to the new flat on a weekend.
Keep posted!
Nat&Smokey
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531.5 | | AKOCOA::JBOURQUE | | Fri Apr 23 1993 09:37 | 25 |
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I have moved with Nilla 3 times! I also left her with
my parents during the moves. (I leave her with them when
I go on vacation too so she "knows" the place well)
Nilla hates her carrier, so she usually bolts right out
when I open the door. When in a new place she bolts out
and stops short...then starts sniffing around, as said
before, point out the litterbox and food..I also usually
try and move her in around feeding time...and put food down
for her right after I let her out on every occasion, she has
spotted her food eaten it..gone exploring then settles in
on her favorite corner of the bed.
I have moved her from a small apartment to a larger apartment
into a 4 level townhouse...the townhouse move had her shook
up for a little while but after she located everything she
was fine. But she did crave attention from us for a long time
and follow me from room to room to room but once she found
where the bed was...she left me alone.
Like others have said, point out the important things, then
let her explore....
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531.6 | they are very adaptable | GRANMA::JBOBB | Janet Bobb dtn:339-5755 | Fri Apr 23 1993 10:14 | 34 |
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We've moved our kitties once, not including the times they "moved in"
with us.
They adjusted to "our" move (from one house to another) ok, but not
without some mild trauma. Between the moves they had a 4 hr. car ride,
stayed at my parents for a week (a strange house they didn't know with
unknown people feeding them) and then another 4 hr. car ride. After all
that they adjusted to the new house quickly. The first day they spent
sniffing out the place and checking out the new ledges/corners/etc. The
furniture was in but most of everything else was in boxes. They seemed to
accept the new house ok until the workmen came. For that whole first
week we had workmen coming in every day (very early in the morning and
making lots of noise).
We kept the cats confined to the master bedroom so they would be out of
the way and couldn't get out the open doors. But, they pretty much
stayed under the bed for most of that time, while people were in
the house. Once the workmen left, it took another day or so for them to
get situated. They liked climbing over/around/into the boxes.
I think without the workmen noise/trauma they would have been just fine
(they still don't like the doorbell).
As long as you have their food,litter,bed,toys around and you to talk
and re-assure, and not a lot of other confusion the transition should
be okay. It does sound like you are going to need more toys - old house
sounds like kitty heaven!
Good luck - and don't worry, they are very adaptable.
janetb.
owned by Merlin and Rascal
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531.7 | What we did..... | STRATA::STOOKER | | Fri Apr 23 1993 10:38 | 30 |
| When we moved from our previous house to this one, we kept the cats at
our old house until we had all the boxes and furniture moved out and
over at the new house. That way, even though all the movement scared
them and they hid, they were in a familiar place up until the very last
minute. Once we had all the boxes and stuff unloaded (not unpacked)
at the new house then we looked for the cats (they were hidden real
well) and put them in the carrier and took them to the new house.
Then when we got to the new house, we let them out of the cage and let
them roam. Since all the boxes were already in the house, the doors
were no longer opening and closing, so they couldn't run if they tried.
(Although they found some pretty good hiding places as well in the new
house.) They both got out of the carrier and snooped there way all
over the house.
As to how they dealt with it, both cats reacted differently. Buddy,
who was an extremely nervous kitty promptly came down with an UT
infection. Shadow had no problems with the move at all.
Since all cats have different personalities, it is really difficult to
say how they will react to moving. We knew that we would probably
have problems with Buddy, just because we knew that he was a nervous
kitty and was prone to UT infections. We were relatively positive
that Shadow would be no problem, because we moved her from Colorado to
Mass when she was just 4 months old with no problems whatsoever. So
what we did was try to lessen the stress of the move as much as
possible by keeping them in their familiar home until the last possible
moment. Of course we weren't moving such a far distance that this was
possible.
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