T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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798.1 | Just place some on their paw... | SALEM::SHAW | | Fri Sep 02 1994 07:33 | 6 |
|
What we do with our cats is dap a little of the hairball medication
on their paw. They will lick it clean. If your cat still doesn't
like to lick it off, do the same thing with butter.
Shaw
|
798.2 | Vaseline | PCBUOA::FALLON | Moonsta Cattery | Fri Sep 02 1994 08:10 | 12 |
| I have written this elsewhere, but obviously cannot point it out!
I am not the greatest when it comes to "working" notes.
Anyway, the simplest thing is to take vaseline and wipe it into the
roof of their mouth. Sounds gross, but works like magic. A persian
breeder I know told me how to do this. She said, "why waste money on
the hairball stuff, it still is vaseline!" Just flavored!
You need to use about a good size teaspoon to do the trick. This can
also be very useful in case of an emergency and the cat has eaten
something it needs to pass, but you might need to give more.
Karen
|
798.3 | Thanks for the ideas | DELNI::MCCOMBS | | Fri Sep 02 1994 10:51 | 6 |
| Thanks for the ideas. I will give it a try.
Vaseline does sound gross, but if it works, I will try it.
I will keep in touch.
Renee
|
798.4 | | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Four Tigers on my Couch | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:22 | 10 |
| Where did I read that someone just put a stick of butter out and let
the cats lick off that when they got the urge? Hmmm, maybe I heard
it from one of my breeder-type friends. Anyway, it was always
available and that person didn't have to dose everyone for furballs.
Sounds like an interesting idea. Wonder if it would cause any
problems. Wouldn't the butter go bad after a while. Would the piggy
cats that were constantly at the butter lick have health problems
related to consuming all that fat? Inquiring minds want to know.
Jan
|
798.5 | Fussy Cats | DELNI::MCCOMBS | | Fri Sep 02 1994 12:39 | 10 |
| Jan,
My cat is so...... fussy, the butter could sit on the floor for a year
and he wouldn't touch it. I have a cat that is finiky (sp?). One of
the cats IS a piggy and she would probably eat the whole thing in 1
minute flat. But my male cat hates everything. I swear, it's just
like having kids around. I still prefer cats though. Thanks for the
message....
Renee
|
798.6 | apaws for the foot-to-mouth method | ASABET::HAROUTIAN | | Fri Sep 02 1994 12:56 | 6 |
| I've had very good results with the put-it-on-their-paws method of
hairball remedy application. Some of mine have preferred the malt
flavored stuff, others wouldn't touch anything except butter. Putting
it on their paws seems to inspire them to clean said paws.
Lynn
|
798.7 | | AYRPLN::VENTURA | Make the world your playground. | Fri Sep 02 1994 13:42 | 15 |
| In my house, I only have two problems with the "put it on their paw"
method:
1) If I put it on the bottom of their paw, I get little "femalt
footprints" all over the place after they've run from me.
2) If I put it on the top of their paw, they somehow manage to "flick"
it off, and I get a femalt GOB somewhere in the house (I never seem to
find where they've "flicked" it unless I've stepped on it or, worse,
sat on it).
Ugh .. I think I'm going to try the butter... this isn't worth it.
Holly
|
798.8 | almost as messy as the hairballs | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Sep 02 1994 14:49 | 10 |
| Nebula used to manage to fling most of the vaseline off of her foot and
onto some piece or other of furniture. Poor little beast - I miss that
kitty even though it has been nearly a year since she died. JFCL gets
more hairballs than she used to when she was a youngster, but I haven't
been dosing her for them yet - she is nearly 17 and I have enough
trouble getting her to even eat enough to keep her weight up especially
when it is cold out. Her new companion, the Maine coon kitten (Melody)
hasn't had a hairball yet.
/Charlotte
|
798.9 | | USCTR1::MERRITT_S | Kitty City | Fri Sep 02 1994 14:51 | 6 |
| You need to really "squish" the hairball stuff into the fur
on top of their paw....so even if they fling it...it stays on!!!
Works wonders for my cats who won't eat the stuff off my finger!!
Sandy
|
798.10 | they are as different as we are... | ROMEOS::BALZERMA | | Fri Sep 02 1994 15:40 | 8 |
|
Callie will not eat the Laxatone unless I just squeeze it into her
mouth. She'd eat the whole thing if she had her druthers. Ms. Kisa,
on the hand, will not touch it in any way, shape or form. I tried
the "on the paw" thing and she acted like I had tried to cut it off...
|
798.11 | | JULIET::CORDES_JA | Four Tigers on my Couch | Fri Sep 02 1994 17:05 | 22 |
| I have distinct memories of the first time I put that stuff on a
kitty paw. Kitty got this disgusted look on her face. I swear
she was saying "what's this icky stuff on my paw" and proceeded to
shake (not lick) the stuff off her paw and all over the surrounding
walls/furniture. Haven't done that since.
My cats get their petromalt (haven't been able to find Cat-A-Lax or
Laxatone lately) straight from the tube. They're very good about
taking it that way. I usually just line them up 4 across and dose
the whole bunch. Sometimes they're a little sloppy with the licking
and get some down the side of the tube but I just reposition it until
they lick the sides clean. Works great.
I probably have 3 cats that would really enjoy the butter thing.
Carrie, on the other hand, will not touch anthing remotely related to
people food. Can't stand milk, will tolerate cheese if in just the
right mood, can be convinced to eat a tiny bit of chicken but she's
got to look like she doesn't like it for 10 minutes first.
Carrie is one of my better Petromalt tube cleaneruppers. :^)
Jan
|
798.12 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Win. NT | Mon Sep 05 1994 19:01 | 5 |
| For those who have problems with their felines shaking the
stuff off their paw, why bother with the paw. I spread the
stuff out on the fur on the side of their bodies. Of course
I have all short-haired felines so I don't know if that will
work for longer haired ones.
|
798.13 | | AYRPLN::VENTURA | Make the world your playground. | Tue Sep 06 1994 07:55 | 18 |
| RE: .11
Jan,
MY Kyra is like that. She'll look at you in disgust if you offer her
any people food. Except butter and tuna fish. I've put a quarter of a
stick of butter in a small dish next to their food bowl and about half
of it's gone (3 cats eating it). I've also put a pat of butter into
Mondo's room and about half is gone. Let's see how it works for
hairballs.
Oh, and Kyra does the FUNNIEST thing when she doesn't like something
that I put down for her. She'll smell it, and then shake her foot at
it and run away. If it really smells disgusting, she'll shake her
foot, squint her eyes at me, and then RUN! (-:
Holly
|
798.14 | THE NOSE WORKS FOR ME | CSLALL::MHOLMES | | Tue Sep 06 1994 09:19 | 5 |
| I smear the stuff on the top of the kitty's nose. They look at me as
if they think I've really gone off the deep end, but they do clean it
off and get most, if not all, of it into their little bods.
Marilyn
|
798.15 | question about hairballs... | PCBUOA::BOWERS | | Tue Sep 27 1994 13:04 | 32 |
| Sorry to have to ask this, since everyone seems to know already but...
about hairballs... I have a Maine Coon cat named Houdini, who now and
then gets a horrible huge hairball, which I only know about because
he vomits his food and the hair ball, and it's nearly always been on
something of white fabric! He seems to do this about once every six
weeks. Is all this talk about butter, and hairball medicine so that
they can pass the hairball rather than vomit it?
What a subject! But it is a problem. The last time it was 2:00 in the
morning, on our bed, which has a white comforter. I don't mind his
sleeping there (those masking tape lint rollers are the best thing for
hair removal), but this was a horrible experience. We woke to "that
sound", and just as we got the light on, he got sick everywhere!
What a mess, and in the middle of the night too. I cleaned it right
away and the spots came out. But would like to know more about
hairballs.
BTW, we got him from a shelter January 94, he is now about two years
old. He was abused severely, and it's taken all these months for him
to mellow and really flourish. We think he must have been either hit
with the brush, or brushed violently because it's taken me months to be
able to brush him. The only way I could train him to not mind brushing
was to give him his favorite food (9 Lives Tuna), and brush him while
he eats. Same with Bonkers. I make a trail of Bonkers across the
kitchen, and brush as he "hunts" for them. He now associates brushing
with goodness, but prior to that brushing was more trauma. So now the
hairballs are fewer and smaller, but still a problem because he has
VERY long hair.
Thanks all... love reading your notes.
Nancy
|
798.16 | hairballs are a pain! | EARRTH::GALVIN | | Thu Oct 27 1994 11:30 | 6 |
| hi
I have 2 Maine Coon cats and one has a hairball problem. we put
vaseline on the top of her paw and that seems to work pretty good. She
dosen't like it but she'll eat it to clean off her paw. The other
kitten loves it,she'll eat anything. good luck
Kathy
|
798.17 | the more I comb, the more she hurls | WMOENG::NEUVONEN | | Tue Jul 02 1996 10:40 | 15 |
| I'm noticing a pattern. Pumpkin, my Maine Coon lookalike, will gak
(for lack of a better term *:) a hairball within a day of when I combed
her last. If I comb her every day she throws up every day. If I comb
her twice a week, she will throw up twice a week.
I comb her with a zoom groom and then use a flea comb to get the loose hair
off. She also gets a laxatone "treat" twice a week (I call it a treat because
she loves it). This cat has a LOT of fur and needs to be combed at least
every other day.
Does anyone else notice this pattern? I feel bad because I'm down to
combing her only twice a week and she loves to be brushed/combed more than
anything.
Sharon
|
798.18 | for in between groomings ... | CATMAX::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Jul 02 1996 11:32 | 6 |
| one of the tricks I use with my cats when I can't get to them real
often during the shedding season I try to rub them down a few ties a
day with a towel; it picks up all the loose hairs and the cats seem to
love it!
Deb
|
798.19 | | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Mon Jul 08 1996 01:50 | 1 |
| is it a wet or a dry towel?
|
798.20 | 3 hairballs in a week - is it normal?? | POWDML::KNELSON | | Fri May 16 1997 11:34 | 8 |
| Misty, our little cat, keeps ralphing hairballs. I am trying to keep
her well-groomed, but she isn't big for human contact, if you know
what I mean. She's brought up 3 hairballs in about a week. Is this
normal? She seems to be her usual disdainful kitty self.
Thanks,
Kate
|
798.21 | Aftermat of grooming | ALFSS1::NEWSHAM | James Newsham @ALF | Fri May 16 1997 12:06 | 24 |
| <<< Note 798.20 by POWDML::KNELSON >>>
-< 3 hairballs in a week - is it normal?? >-
Misty, our little cat, keeps ralphing hairballs. I am trying to keep
her well-groomed, but she isn't big for human contact, if you know
what I mean. She's brought up 3 hairballs in about a week. Is this
normal? She seems to be her usual disdainful kitty self.
Thanks,
Kate
If Misty grooms herself alot or more than normal, I would
assume that the outcome would be thoses wonderful disgusting
looking things called hairballs.
Snoozer is a perpetual groomer, but seeing she spends 70 %
of her time outdoors, in the year we've had here, I've yet
to encounter a HB. She must upchuck 'em outside. I count
my blessings. I just could not imagine stepping on one
of those in the dark in the middle of the night...Squishing
between my toes....ech.....
Red
|
798.22 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Fri May 16 1997 12:08 | 6 |
| It's a little frequent. She might just have been wedged, so to
speak. If they are really hairballs, and she is eating and
using her litter box and seems otherwise fine, I would just keep
an eye on her. If it continues at this rate, I would probably
take her into the vet next week just to be safe.
|
798.23 | | USCTR1::MERRITT_S | Kitty City | Fri May 16 1997 13:13 | 8 |
| I find in the spring and fall...my guys have the hardest time
with hairballs and that is because there coats are changing
for the warmer/colder weather.
With allt he fur flying around..My house looks like one
big fur ball....
Sandy
|
798.24 | | REFER1::REILLY | | Sat May 17 1997 08:02 | 7 |
| Regular brushing can really help cut down on the amount of hair that's
ingested. Comb the kitties once or twice daily during the big shedding
times, and use a laxatone product everyday. This should help cut down
on the hairballs.
Regards,
liz
|
798.25 | | DEVO::JUDY | That's *Ms. Bitch* to you! | Mon May 19 1997 09:09 | 20 |
|
Has anyone had a cat eat part of a sponge? ie: the type you
use to clean your dishes, counters etc. Gilligan has this
fetish with the sponges and dishrags I use in the kitchen.
Usually he just drags them out of the sink and sometimes up
under our bed. Well this last time, it appears he actually
ATE part of the sponge and he's been throwing it up periodically.
We were gone on Saturday and our kitty sitter said there was
a strange colored hairball on the kitchen floor. We found the
same thing downstairs by the litterboxes. And he did it again
yesterday. He still eats like a pig, and is as active and
stubborn as ever, so there's no change there. The line is busy
at the vets, so I thought in the interim, I'd post here and see
if anyone has had a similar experience.
Thanks
JJ
|
798.26 | | KERNEL::COFFEYJ | La Feline Flooz - a unix cat | Mon May 19 1997 10:25 | 20 |
| >He still eats like a pig, and is as active and
> stubborn as ever,
So long as it's getting out the other end too I
expect he's ok, though of course don't let that
slow your attempts to speak to someone who
knows about it.
Sponges don't have sharp edges to do internal
damage, like fur balls - if he's icking them
up then better out than in. Maybe some
furball treatment liquid'd do the trick and
flush the lot through (visions of pastel
coloured fluffy lumps in the litter tray).
My guys don't go for sponges in particular
but do like the blotting paper fish comes on
if I don't get it out of their way in time
will eat it, but seem ok 'til now.
|
798.27 | | PADC::KOLLING | Karen | Mon May 19 1997 11:49 | 3 |
| I think the sponge type things could impact the intestines, tho,
so do check with your vet and lock up the sponges :-)
|