T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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622.1 | | NETWKS::GASKELL | | Wed Sep 29 1993 07:00 | 9 |
| Looks like you have found yourself a new kitty. The ear mites etc are
a classic sign of a stray cat. The fabric sucking is a sign that she
was separated from her mother before she was totally weaned. She'll
stop growling when she feels more secure.
And you're right, they can read the word Sucker. I think some of us
have it stenciled on our backs in cat language. I have been found more
times than I can afford, but have manage it anyway.
|
622.2 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Sep 29 1993 09:03 | 39 |
| Well, I managed to get home and take the cat to the vets lunchtime.
I was slightly embarrassed, I said I thought the cat was female and
very young - well the vet showed me these two furry gobstopper size
spheres and tells me he's male, because females dont have that
equipment!! :-)
AND He has his long pointy side teeth, so the vet reckons he's 7 months,
and VERY tiny for his age.
No wonder my other two nutered toms backed off!
He has a bad case of earmites, the vet doesn't think it's roundworm,
but where the cats been scratching at his ears due to the mites.
The lamp was at the other office, if he hasn't been claimed by the
weekend I'll take him to the other office for the roundworm check, and
castration, and shots(if they can give them at the same time).
The weekend after we are away, don't know what I'll do then, my
neighbours feed my other two, and they also use their catflap. And I'm
still wary that Yoda might decamp.
I can't put him in kennels, because he dosen't have time to have his
two sets of shots.
I might phone the vet to see if they'll take him - or delay the
castration a week, and see if they take him for a "long weekend" too.
I don't think he's been to the vets before. He happily went in the
carrier, and when I put the carrier on the table, he joyfully came
out to greet the vet. My two hide at the back of the carrier, and the
vet is definately not one of their favourite people!
The vet says he's not ferrel, he's much too friendly, but he's not been
very well cared for for at least two months. But looking at his size,
it could be longer.
Ho, hum, a black cat who followed me home at "Midnight".
oh no, not a name...........
Heather
|
622.3 | | MAGEE::MERRITT | Kitty City | Wed Sep 29 1993 09:17 | 21 |
| Heather....my guess is your new friend is really undernourished
and probably has been on his own for awhile. When we took Dewey
in (from a junkyard) I thought he was this 2 months old kitten...but
come to find out he was a 9 months old boy!!!! With love, patients,
and good food...Dewey is now a big hefty boy at 15 pounds!!!!!
I once had a total black stray cat appear in my house on Halloween
night!! (talk about being spooked!!!) We felt it was an omen...and
we had to keep him!!! (ha ha!!)
Ask your vet to time his neutering so that can be done while your
away and he can keep the kitty a few extra days!!!! One suggestion
you might consider is putting a "found ad" in your local paper. With
everyone of my strays I do this...and have had the luck in
finding two of the original owners. (2 out of 18 isn't good...but
that was 2 I didn't have to keep!!)
Good luck.....
Sandy
|
622.4 | | ELWOOD::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Wed Sep 29 1993 09:24 | 4 |
| Our little black stray we named Midnight ;^) ... and she's the
most adorable, loveable little girl ...
- Andrea
|
622.5 | Could you please keep him...? | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Thu Sep 30 1993 02:46 | 12 |
| As for you first thought he was female, I would suggest the name Minnie
for him.
To make it solemn, if you can only afford it, I would heavily wish that
you keep him.
Who knows who lead his steps after you - perhaps as a last chance?
(As Smokey came to me, I never thought I can afford to keep a cat...
Now I cannot imagine what I would do without her.)
Nat
|
622.6 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Sep 30 1993 03:19 | 38 |
| Dave doesn't like the name Midnight......doesn't like the thought of
having to call out for him. He wanted to call him Robert.
I ask you, Cider, Yoda and Robert......nope.
So, I suggested Slick.........he was a very slick cat to pick on us
when our defences were lowered due to alcohol consumption. :-)
Also, oil slicks are black.
And those ears, just like an oil slick at the moment with the ear-mite
drops. I'd forgotten how yucky clearing up a bad case of earmites was -
it was 4 years ago that I got Yoda as a stray, and 7 since I had Cider.
I suppose it was time for another one anyway.
Well, no luck from the housecalls.
He's now drinking like a normal cat, a couple of laps, and a distainful
look at me as if to say......where's the milk?
He's eating like a normal cat. He's decided the dry food just isn't
tasty enough, and only eats the canned. Pah, getting picky after just
a day and a half!
I'll call the vet this morning to see when he can be "done", I don't
want him to start to learn how to spray, which he might with two other
cats trying to tunnel through the door to him.
I'll also phone up a few catteries to see if they'll take him after one
set of jabs, I think it's the first ones that are most important.
Or to see if they may have an "isolation" area.
I'm not worried about the cost of another cat, I'm just worried that
Yoda - my scaredy cat - might decide to leave for pastures new.
Thanks for the responses,
Heather
|
622.7 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Sep 30 1993 04:49 | 30 |
| Well, they only Neuter Monday-Friday, and they can't do him "till
next week (tomorrow is full).
So, he will go to the vets Thursday 7th in the evening, and I will
pick him up Monday 11th in the evening (I am away mid Fri to Mid Mon,
so this solves my problem about how to look after him then).
Vet examination plus earmite stuff 11.00
Boarding for 4 evenings 20.00
Neuter 22.00
Flu and Enteritis jab 20.00
F.Leuk jab 19.00
Worming jab 10.00
VAT (tax, 17.5%) 17.85
-------------
119.85
120 quid, thats about 180 dollars.
Maybe I should name him "Bankrupt" :-)
My garden needs digging, I think I'll make him work for his keep :-)
Sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
I just hope Yoda doesn't mind too much!
............and he doesn't learn to spray before next weekend.
Heather
|
622.8 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Oct 01 1993 03:26 | 33 |
|
Well, the little bloke still thinks he needs to suckle.
Even when he eats the wet canned food from the bowl, he kneeds the
floor with his two front paws.
And when he sits on my lap, I have to hold my hand over his face to stop
my jumpers becomming like wet dishrags. He does seem to like the
comfort feeling of his head burried in something, and if he can't
suck at my clothes, he will settle for my hand cupped over his face.
Yoda had the habit of "burying" his food when I got him, I was told he
would grow out iof this when he realised he wasn't a stray, and there
would always be food for him..........wrong, he still does this.
Maybe I will have to pick out a "Slick" towell, and have it ready for
when he dicides to sit on me!
Has nayone had a 7-month-old cat do this, and did they stop?
And, I made an error, I gace him a ball with a bell in it. He thinks
it's wonderful, but I forgot to take it away last night.
3 am this morning I thought I had burgalars, very loud baning noises
from along the hall.
It was Slick, hitting the ball so hard it was banging against the door
about 2 foot off the ground.......whew, a relief, but I must remeber
to give himn a catnip mouse or something, rather than a hard ball
at night!
Yoda still decamps when he sees him, but he actually stayed in last
night....although it was downstairs in the kitchen, he usually sleeps
in the hall upstairs - maybe the noise was too much for him too!
Heather
|
622.9 | | ELWOOD::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Fri Oct 01 1993 05:57 | 10 |
| Brings back neat memories ...
When Midnight was little she used to suckle everything, even the
wet food! We'd take some kitten chow and mix it with water, so it
would be the consistency of wet food; she stick her face into this and
*nurse* it. Gosh, what a awful sound, but it was so cute too!
She's since grown out of this; in a (small) way, I miss it ...
- Andrea
|
622.10 | | MAGEE::MERRITT | Kitty City | Fri Oct 01 1993 06:44 | 7 |
| My Dewey who is almost 4....still sucks a special afghan which
he considers his!!! He's in heaven when he can sit on my lap
with his afghan and he does pushy paws and sucks and drools!!!
Dewey was born in a junkyard so it is very possible that he
was taken away from his mom to early.
Your kitty might never get over it......
|
622.11 | even at 2 1/2 | NRSTA2::BACHELDER | | Fri Oct 01 1993 07:26 | 5 |
| Boo Boo still suckles on my arm when I wake up in the morning....
he is 2 1/2 years old and has done it since day 1.
- Lauri
|
622.12 | another suckler | BRAT::GODDARD | | Fri Oct 01 1993 07:54 | 4 |
| Mario still suckles at the age of 2, on his adopted mother.. Bailey,
my black Lab who loves him dearly.
What a site..
|
622.13 | | GOOEY::JUDY | That's Ms. Bitch to you! | Fri Oct 01 1993 11:18 | 6 |
|
re: -1
giggle..... =)
|
622.14 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Sun Oct 03 1993 07:48 | 16 |
|
Oh well, looks like I'm stuck with it, I'll root out a sloppy jumper.
I kept thinking his eyes were a little strange, I've just clicked why.
They are green in the middle, and yellow on the outside, is is not
a gradual change of colour, but a noticeable line, it give a really
odd effect.
I've had 3 calls from people looking for their lost cats, all of them
asked about varing mixes of white paws, so Slick was out of the frame.
When I take him to the vets on Thursday, I'll remove the notices, and
call the others to remove the ones there.
Heather
|
622.15 | | LMOPST::BEASTY::WIKOFF_T | It is the Adventurers who accomplish great things. | Wed Oct 06 1993 08:59 | 9 |
| Having recently gone thru nursing a baby, and having a cat that drools
during lap time, I have accouterments at the couch, too...
You could keep a soft towl or washcloth on the couch for him to nuzzle
and drool on.
Which reminds me, could you imagine a kitty pacifyer?
(Yes, I agree, cuddling up to Mom is _much_ better, I just thought it
would be a funny sight.)
|
622.16 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Oct 12 1993 03:54 | 61 |
|
Well,
Slick is back from the vets, minus bits of his anatomy, and has had his
first shots, and wormed, and eye-dropped, and ears syringed......
....and anything else they could thing of.
He's doing fine, Cider's doing fine - Yoda is very unhappy.
Cider just turns around and bops or hisses at Slick if he gets too
close (too close is usually Slick tring to play with his tail, or
sitting in between Cider and the fire). Slick then backs off and
finds something more interesting to pay with, or snuggles under the
radiator.
If Slick really annoys him, he belts him harder, and sometimes he will
also go find Yoda and give him a bop.
Sometimes he just can't even be bothered to acknowledge Slick is even
there, he's obviously boss cat.
Yoda is another matter.
He has this rumble, a sort of growl, that he emits non-stop if Slick
is within 4 feet, even if Slick is asleep (I've never heard him do
this before). Unfortunaltey Yoda is too much of a scaredy cat to bop
Slick, and eventually runs and hides, or just goes out of the house
into the garden - even in the pouring rain - and I can't even tempt
him back with chicken.
I had the cat-flap blocked off last evening, so none of them could
decamp.
Slick and Cider were fine, Yoda is very upset, on tenterhooks, and
just keeps trying to hide.
I'm keeping slick in the spare room during the day, and overnight, so
the other two can come and go with no hastle, but I don't want to have
to do this much longer.
I think Yoda wants to be no2 cat, but knows he's not up to it. He's
very unhappy.
Yoda hasn't had a collar because he itches and scratches all his fur
away, however, I put one on him last night, as I was afraid he might
run off.
He HATES it. He tries to bite it off. He managed to get his chin down,
and paw the collar over his bottom jaw, so it was pinned there. I only
had a 2-finger gap, so it was on the tighter side. I loosened it to a
3 finger gap, and he managed to get ot off! (he has quite a skinny
head)
Any ideas on.........
. How I can get Yoda used to the idea that he can be happy and stay with
2 other cats in the house
and in the meantime
. being able to get Slick out-and-about like the other
two (He seems to have no problems with the collar after the first hour).
. and getting a collar on Yoda
Heather
|
622.17 | | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | | Tue Oct 12 1993 06:14 | 16 |
| The first thing that comes to mind is to give Yoda as much attention
and fuss as you can manage. I'm doing that with Rosie at the moment as
she was less than happy about our new addition - especially one that
had the nerve to look like her! She's stopped growling now, and is more
curious - I caught her sniffing at him whilst he was asleep yesterday.
I'm sure I've read somewhere that the effects of neutering a male
sometimes take a while for the cat to drop down the hierarchy. Slick
might still smell like an entire male to Yoda and that's why he's
unhappy.
As for the collar - no cat I've ever had has liked them either. I don't
know if you knew Tuija Veale when she worked here, but she told me one
of her cats got both front paws stuck in the collar trying to get it
off. Tuija found her collapsed on the front lawn and thought she was
dying! I'm sure he'll soon get used to it.
|
622.18 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Oct 14 1993 02:40 | 27 |
|
Well, Slick has gotten used to his collar really quickly, or maybe the
scare put him off playing with it. Whatever it is, he's fine now.
I let him out in the back garden yesterday - Cider doesn't like that
at all, obviously he's used to fighting the back garden as his territory
but not the house.
Anyway, Slick retaliates by playing with his tail. There's no fur
flying, and Cider knows he's top cat.
I'm giving Yoda all the attention I can, but he's still wary of Slick
and growls, and Cider still goes for him - much more aggresively
than he goes for Slick.
Ho hum.
Slick might be renamed to Chalky - After trying to call him in the
garden, a one-sylable name doesn't seem to fit with Cider and Yoda, so
a bloke down the pub, whose nickname is Chalky, suggested we call the
cat after him.
I hope Yoda setles soon, I won't let Chalky out of the spare room over
night until he does - which means litter tray, and wrecked carpet by
the door.
Heather
|
622.19 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Nov 11 1993 08:02 | 39 |
| Good news, although nuerotic cat Yoda still thinks that having another
cat in the house is ***the worst*** thing that has ever happened, he's
decided to, just about, put up with it.
He comes in when it's cold or raining, or feeding time. He is out a bit
more than before, but he hasn't gone AWOL.
Cider has decided the new cat is deranged, because he insists in playing
with Ciders tail, and doesn't stop until he's bopped - he then goes
on to chase his own tail. He goes faster and faster in circles until
he falls over.....and is so fat he just rolls!
Well Chalkie is close to another name change. He eats so much he
permanently walks along with his belly wobbling from side to side.
We thought "Piggy" would be a good name, "cause he eats so much, and
black pot-bellie pigs look similar around the tummy!
Chalkie also LOVES.........water - yup. He was playing with the cold
water running in the sink, and put all his paw under, tring to "catch"
it. Then his mouth...followed by his head. Then he rolled on his back
in the sink, trying to catch the water from under the tap........
he was drenched, and still trying to play. He wasn't even worried when
I took him out and towell dried him - he just played with the towell.
Well, I've found a way of washing him if I need to, pour on the shampoo,
turn the tap on, and he'll wash and dry himself.
That's it, Chalkie doesn't seem to be bothered at all, he's fine with
the catflap, so I don't need the litter out any more.
Cider doesn't care, he wouldn't lower himself to pass judgement, as
long as he has the warm spot by the radiator, he's fine.
And Yoda, well, he's sticking in there, maybe not quite the same - he
hides under the chair, and stays out a bit more, but he's still here.
Heather
|
622.20 | Chalkie has been "found" | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Nov 19 1993 02:29 | 45 |
| Chalkie's ear mites are at last cleared up, they were clean Wednesday
morning.
Wednesday evening I had a knock at the door, his previous owner claimed
"fluffy" back.
She had two kittens at 3 weeks old, as the people who had them were
going to get rid of them by dropping them off somewhere in a plastic
bag.
He is 11 months old. His bother has started spraying the house, she
cannot afford to have him nutered. It sounds like he has ear mites too.
The cats are currently living with her father, about 10 doors away from
hers (and about 30 from where I live), until the child she is
expecting is due (about 4 weeks).
She doesn't really know anything about keeping cats, doesn't have any
money, but her heart is in the right place.
So, I gave her the ear-mite medication, told her how to use it, and
how to check for earmites etc. I gave her my flea comb.
She said her mum might be able to come up with a bit of money to help
with the costs I had incurred, but nothing like the full amount.
I explained to her the nessecity of nutering the cat she had, especially
now "fluffy" is nutered, and the importance of vaccinations, and told
her that any money her mum gave her, to put towards the costs of having
her other cat done.
I gave her the number of the cats protection league, in case she had
problems with affording the nuter.
I also said that if she found Chalkie too much to handle once the
child was born, could she let me know, "cause I'd have him back.
I will walk past where the cats will be about every other day, so will
keep my eyes open and check they are OK.
It's funny, I would have been really pleased if I'd found the owner
in the first two weeks, but now I really didn't like giving him back.
On the plus side, Yoda is VERY happy, he even sat next to me and
purred last night, something he only does about twice a year (he's a
cat that "wants to be alone" most of the time).
Heather
|
622.21 | Mixed Blessings | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | | Fri Nov 19 1993 13:15 | 5 |
| I felt the same when our black stray turned out to have an owner: he
was a "Fluffy" too. I'm trying hard not to get attached to the
longhaired stray I've got at the moment. If it were up to me, I'd keep
him: he's so affectionate, but Huw was really ill last weekend so I
can't. :-(
|
622.22 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Nov 23 1993 05:04 | 7 |
|
Chalkie looks Okay, I saw him outside yeasterday evening, but went
back to the pub for a while, so he wouldn't see me and follow.
Ho hum, definately mixed blessings
Heather
|
622.23 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Nov 25 1993 01:37 | 7 |
| Well, I had a "thankyou" card through the door yesterday, saying she
didn't know how to thank me enough for everything I did for her cat.
It brightened my day.
Heather
|
622.24 | Back for good this time | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Jan 17 1994 01:38 | 22 |
|
Well, Chalkie came in to visit twice since November.
The last time was New Years day I got out of bed, and had quite a shock
to see him sat at the top of the stairs. (He's good at using cat-flaps!)
I took him back, and repeated my offer of having him if she found a
new baby and two cats too much to handle.
Friday she turned up on my door, complete with Chalkie, and said that
he was too much to handle, and did I still want him.
Sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo he's back.
Yoda still has his nose out of joint, but as it's so cold outside at the
moment, he's managed to overcome some of his grumpyness, and sit on the
pouffe next to the radiator, looking down on Chalkie.
Happy New Year!
Heather
|
622.25 | | SUBURB::ODONNELLJ | Julie O'Donnell | Mon Jan 17 1994 01:49 | 1 |
| That's great news! Chalkie obviously knew where HE wanted to live.
|