T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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800.1 | Probably the same mice | KAHALA::JOHNSON_L | Leslie Ann Johnson | Thu Sep 08 1994 09:37 | 9 |
| When you release mice outdoors, they more than likely find their
way right back into the house again. Especially now that it is
beginning to get cooler and they are looking for cozy warm places
to hole up for the winter. Although its horrid to think of killing
the little critters, you might want to use traps and get rid of
them permanently as they do not make the best or very sanitary
housepets.
Leslie
|
800.2 | I hate those meeses to pieces | MKOTS1::COOPER | | Thu Sep 08 1994 11:09 | 22 |
| I hope you thanked your kitten for the presents she brought you. It is
their way of thanking you for loving them and being their pet.
As for the traps the best thing to use is peanut butter and word of
caution the traps get them right at the neck. Not a pretty sight, and
the other reason you would want to rid your home of them asap is the
kitten and older cat more than likely will get worms. If you never saw
worms well I can explain that later. But the vet told me that is what
they get after providing you with a pest free home and giving you their
gifts.
This goes for any gift they bring you, the worms they get from these
creatures.
RE:-1 they are right more than likely those meeses found a place to
enter your home and ran right back in. And it bears no reflection on
your housekeeping it is just nature indicating that winter is heading
our way.
Good luck
Elise
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800.3 | bite they little heads off, nibble on the toes | PCBUOA::FALLON | Moonsta Cattery | Thu Sep 08 1994 11:09 | 3 |
| Yes, and don't forget the disease that was caused on the Indian
reservations by mouse droppings! I don't think it is out here, but.
Karen
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800.4 | just in fun! | PCBUOA::FALLON | Moonsta Cattery | Thu Sep 08 1994 11:10 | 3 |
| Just in case you all thought I had lost it from the heading to my last
reply! That is sort of a take off on Klibans cat song.
K
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800.5 | JFCL | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, PATHWORKS for Win. NT | Thu Sep 08 1994 11:20 | 3 |
| > .... and JFCL ...
You named your cat after an instruction in the KL10 instruction set!?
|
800.6 | mousies redux | MIMS::MCFARLAND_D | m o o n...that spells turbo 3 | Thu Sep 08 1994 12:01 | 13 |
| "loves to eat them mousies,
mousies what i loves to eat.
bite they little heads off,
nibble on they tiny feet."
-b. kliban
i have this on a checkbook cover, mug, beach towel, etc.
diane w/stanley (kliban's drawing of "good ol' cat" is applicable for
him) and stella (not a kliban kitty, since she doesn't believe in
stripes ;-)
|
800.7 | maybe she caught all of them? | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Sep 09 1994 08:39 | 23 |
| Good guessing on how JFCL got her name - as I said, she is now an OLD
kitty: she is 17. She had worms once years ago - treatment was very
messy, too. I used to let her and her companion Nebula out if I was
working in the garden, and I assume that is how they got them. I don't
let the cats out anymore. JFCL is not interested much in toys these
days, and to the kitten, the baby mice were a new toy that the human
slaves did not have to wind up - she didn't damage any of them, just
carried them around in her mouth like she does with her windup toys.
I don't really have the heart to kill the little critters, though I
suppose you're right that some of them will move right back into the
garage, and from there into the basement, if the woods out back doesn't
appeal to them. I don't care much if they are in the garage - would be
hard to evict all of them from there anyhow. I actually havent' seen
or heard any more of them, so maybe three were all there were. It had
been several years since the last mouse, anyhow. We definitely did
tell the kitten what a clever cat she is, etc. She was just as pleased
to play with her windup "spider" and carry that around instead after we
released the live toys outdoors. Only trouble is, the "spider" gets
much less interesting after its spring winds down and she needs to
locate a human slave to wind it up again...
/Charlotte
|
800.8 | Not a pretty sight in the a.m. | USOPS::LEE | | Mon Sep 26 1994 09:09 | 35 |
| This is the only mouse topic I could find...
I awoke this morning to find part of a mouse head in my
apartment!! yuk yuk
A few questions come to mind:
1. Where is the rest of it?
2. Are there more?
3. Will it get worse when it gets cold out?
I don't know if I am over-reacting, but I think I want to move
out of my apartment. I have had several problems with it in the
past few months (not the least of which being an influx of carpenter
ants).
Is it wrong to expect that an apartment in a nice complex should be
insect/rodent free? ALSO: I have two indoor cats who did not ever
have fleas up til about three weeks ago; now they (and my apartment)
are INFESTED in a seemingly short amount of time! Now I think I know
where they came from!
It was a pretty grisly sight this morning, and now I am worried
about finding worms in my kitties and the rest of the carcass in
my apartment!
Please tell me if I am over-reacting--I would appreciate your input!
(I think that this could be a bigger problem later as my floorboards
don't exactly meet my floor and the wall outside of my unit doesn't
meet the ground--I don't want a whole colony!)
Thanks,
Alicia
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800.9 | haven't seen any more live cat toys | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Sep 26 1994 09:34 | 14 |
| Well, so far I have not found (and the cat and kitten have not found
either) any more mice - live or not. Maybe the kitten caught all of
them? They don't seem to have come back inside either - they may have
moved into the abandoned house next door, if the woods out back didn't
appeal to them. But there don't seem to be any more of them in my
house!
I'm lucky that my cats aren't used to killing their own dinners and
think of these critters as live toys. Haven't found any worms, or
fleas, either.
Good luck!
/Charlotte
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800.10 | Keeping A Granary? | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Mon Sep 26 1994 14:53 | 7 |
|
I think rodents and insects in an apartment warrant a complaint to the
landlord backed up by a threat to call the board of health. Assuming
of course your cat(s) are allowed by your lease...
len.
|
800.11 | Apt. 801--wild kingdom | USOPS::LEE | | Tue Sep 27 1994 06:59 | 17 |
| They are allowed...I went to speak to the rental manager
last night. At first she said, "this is VERY unusual" as if
she didn't believe me. I offered to bring her the head, but
she said that it wasn't necessary. She also made the comment
that noone has ever complained about mice before. Maybe I should
make her stay in my apartment for a week to watch the wild life!
She said she was going to send someone over to check on it
"right away" but noone came last night. I don't think that
they will ever let me out of my lease without a fight--so
I'm hoping that they will remedy the problem quickly. I checked
my whole place for droppings, but found none. Perhaps an unlucky
lone field mouse?? (I'm being wishful, I'm sure :-))
Can't wait for the lease to run out!
Alicia
|
800.12 | Ugh mice again | MKOTS1::COOPER | | Thu Sep 29 1994 12:38 | 29 |
| I live in a complex along the river and never had we had mice or rats,
not that the field isn't filled with them, but with all the other
wildlife around I am sure the cats have little to pick up. Though the
moles are popular items, but again not in the house.
As for the fleas well it has been getting colder and if you are in a
complex with carpeting and other people have pets you are bound to have
them jumping in to stay warm and get some food.
I know people who've have the same problem and the vet says that you
can bring the fleas in on your own clothing or what ever. It happens
and if you are on the ground floor there is a chance you may get some
mice coming in. If you are further up well there could be ways for the
meeses to get up there.
They should at least do something about fumigating (sp) for mice in the
future, if there is such a thing, and just hope your cats aren't
storing the bodies someplace.......
Check your rental agreement to see what these people are liable for, as
the fleas that is a problem they will more than likely place on you.
Depending where you live you just might want to place a call with the
health dept. if the rental mgr. is unwilling to rememdy your situation.
Glad to hear that the mice in the house are gone for now and nothing is
happening to the kitten and big cat.
|
800.13 | kitten's new toy: paper cups! | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Sep 29 1994 12:52 | 35 |
| The kitten has discovered PAPER CUPS. There is a dispenser of them
next to the kitchen sink, mounted on the side of a cabinet in what is
supposed to be a kitten-free zone: the kitchen counter (that and the
kitchen table are supposed to be off-limits since food is prepared
there - the old cat knows this but the kitten sometimes forgets!). If
you pull one out of there and drop it on the floor, you can then play
kitty soccer with it, and it will roll in circles on the linoleum, plus
it is light enough that you can really bat it around! Great fun!
Especially when your human servants are trying to sleep! I do love
kittens... She's almost a year old now, but being a coon cat, she is
still growing (she's bigger than the old cat already) and still acts
like a kitten. She'll probably keep groowing for another couple of
years - she's going to be a big, big cat. Her "mane" is growing in so
she is getting to be a real pretty cat. She looked like a grey cotton
ball with white feet when she was little - a real fuzzball.
As for the cat, she is going in to the vet on Tuesday, I'm afraid. I
discovered a lump on her tummy when I was brushing her over ther
weekend. She needed dental work anyhow, but this one has me worried.
She is acting fine, eating, using the litter box, running around
arthriticly (dodging the kitten and her paper cups), purring, and
generally acting like herself, so hopefully it is nothing dangerous.
She has had several hairballs in last couple of weeks, but that is
often true in the spring and fall when she is shedding. I'm keeping my
fingers crossed. She hates going to the vet, and has quite a
reputation there: I'm supposed to make sure her claws are trimmed short
before she goes in. She has a tendency to lash out at innocent nurses
and the critter in the next cage if she can reach. I hesitate to have
surgery done on a cat as old as she is (17) anyhow.
Neither one of them seems to miss the "live cat toys". I do hope there
aren't any more of them around, though.
/Charlotte
|
800.14 | | MSGAXP::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Thu Sep 29 1994 13:18 | 7 |
| If it's any encouragment, Bigfoot (who just turned 16 at least -
he may be older) had surgery twice last year for cancer, and made it
through with flying colors (and cancer-free for 9 months now). With a
careful vet, a "senior" cat in good health can make it through surgery
just fine.
- Andrea
|
800.15 | I hope you're right! | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Sep 29 1994 13:25 | 16 |
| (I'm back - doing a BIG compilation again!)
I hope you are right, since I assume that is what the lump is. It's
BIG, too, since I don't brush her very often - she never needed to be
brushed when she was younger anyhow, but now that she isn't as flexible
as she was, she can't keep the back of her head and neck sleek, and I
think it is bad for her skin if the fur gets all clumpy there. So as
long as I am brushing her, I figure it will also help keep down the
number of hairballs I have to clean up after during her shedding
seasons if I brush her all over. Anyhow, she likes being brushed. But
the lump is about 3/4" in diameter! It pretty obviously isn't
bothering her, though. I bet I am going to be glad my vet takes credit
cards, too... the last bout of dental surgery alone was real
expensive. So far, it's only cost something like $6.30 for the
pre-dental-work antibiotics I picked up yesterday. Poor kitty...
/Charlotte
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800.16 | the kitten's companion is OK after all | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Oct 04 1994 14:04 | 13 |
| Well, the vet called back with good news: the old kitty had a hernia,
not a tumor. And they did not need to take out any teeth, just scaled
the tartar off them. I'll have to leave early today to go get her and
bring her home. So I guess the cat will be with us a while longer
after all. I'll have to take her stitches out in ten days, also - she
gets so traumatized going to the vet that it is easier if I do it, and
easier on the cat as well (not to mention much quicker). I had them
check her thyroid function while they had her, since she has lost a lot
of weight in the past year for no obvious reason, so I may have to feed
her thyroid pills too - results aren't back yet. I hope I can persuade
the kitten to not pester her this evening, anyhow.
/Charlotte (feeling relieved!)
|
800.17 | Yeah! | AIMHI::SPINGLER | | Wed Oct 05 1994 10:32 | 8 |
|
Oh Charlotte, what good news! Paw Pats and Kitty Kuddles for a speedy
recovery. I Guess Mom will have to entertain the Kitten tonite so as
not to annoy the recovering friend. :-)
Feline glad for good news.
Sue & Crew
|
800.18 | the old cat is going well | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Oct 05 1994 11:50 | 15 |
| The vet called back this morning and said that the blood work shows
that the old cat does not have thyroid problems but is starting to have
kidney trouble. I will have to switch both her and the kitten to
low-protein food after the kitten is a year old (next month). Other
than that, she seems fine, though she looks kind of funny with her
shaved tummy and ugly stitches. If she gets too interested in taking
them out herself, I'll have to put her "Elizabethan collar" on her, but
she hates that thing so I'd rather avoid it. But she is eating,
drinking, and using her box just fine, and the kitten seemed to be
content to play with the human slaves instead. I think the kitten
thinks the cat smells funny still - she smells like disinfectant even
to ME. Neither one of them has found any more "live toys". They're a
couple of good girls (most of the time...).
/Charlotte
|
800.19 | Good to hear | MKOTS1::COOPER | | Thu Oct 06 1994 09:27 | 24 |
| I am so glad that the "old" cat is doing better and that it wasn't as
bad as you may have thought. It isn't easy to have our babies going
through things like this. Especially since they cannot communicate if
they are in pain.
Glad to hear that the meeces have scooted out and that the kitten is
having fun with paper cups instead. That is better than the bag of
acorns mine dropped on the floor last night. The NHL maybe out of
service for awhile, but Chez Cooper certainly had a hockey game last
night. The only problem was they all had their own acorn pucks and the
last kitten didn't know what was going on.
As for your kitten and not finding the "old" cats hospital smell
desirable, when Ana came home from her spaying her babies went right
back and fed from her, but the older cats woudln't go near her right
away. The probably had dreams of their own stay at the vets for the
same surgery. That is when the vet made big bucks and we took up most
of the sleeping quarters those nights.
Congrats from Timothy William, Christopher Robin, Rocky Buttercup,
Tatiana, Clarrise,Thumbelina,Georgiana and Anastacia and baby no name
kitten.
Hope the recovery period is short
|