T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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963.1 | A little wet food won't hurt. | USCTR1::MERRITT_S | Kitty City | Thu Dec 28 1995 07:21 | 9 |
| Carol...I would recommend giving the kitty a little bit of wet
food before you go to bed at night. That way her belly will be
full and she should be able to wait until morning for her next
feeding.
Don't start getting up and feeding her at 3:00AM...because she will
then start to expect her feeding at that time...all the time!!
Sandy
|
963.2 | | TOOK::GASKELL | | Fri Dec 29 1995 09:49 | 3 |
| Just a thought, could the cat be having problems with her teeth which
makes it painful to eat dry cat food? If her gums are red around the
tooth area, that could be the problem.
|
963.3 | Doctor - this hurts! | SMURF::SHIDERLY | | Mon Jan 01 1996 16:35 | 24 |
| You: "Doctor - it hurts when I do this."
Doctor: "Don't do that anymore."
Sounds like you have a pretty smart cat there - you have been well
trained. Sorry to be so glib. Actually I have no experience with this.
Up until about six weeks ago I had the worlds best cat. But he is gone
now (after 18 years) and I have been reading a lot in preparation for
getting a couple of kittens. The book "Good Owners, Great Cats" by
Brian Kilcommons and Sarah Wilson has some advice on this problem.
From page 63: "Feline blackmail is rampant worldwide. Early morning
yowling, the cat version of a gun to your head, has trained millions of
owners...to get up to feed that kitty!...All this can be
avoided...Don't feed your cat first thing in the morning. Instead, make
it a ritual to feed him just before you leave for work. Let him
associate your getting your keys with being fed. Not only will
this prevent early morning blackmail but it will give your cat a
pleasant association with your leaving..."
Also see pages 70-71, 182, and 209.
Good luck,
Roy
|
963.4 | mommy--let me out before the sun rises... | RHETT::LACORTI | | Tue Jan 02 1996 07:51 | 6 |
| What is even worse is if you have an indoor/outdoor cat that starts
up anytime between 5am forward. You lock him out of the bedroom
and the chattering that goes on! He wants to be let out. I have
been locking him out, but I feel like that is so mean since he
used to sleep with me. I just cant take the early morning rising.
Hopefully the meowing will stop soon
|
963.5 | don't get up! | GRANPA::JBOBB | Janet Bobb dtn:339-5755 | Wed Jan 03 1996 10:18 | 34 |
| Rascal has a version of this. He wakes up when the sun comes up and
wants everyone else up too! It's not bad in the winter, in fact he
sleeps later than we do.... but in the spring it can get tiring.
Whatever you do, don't give in and feed him. It only makes things
worse!
We've tried to make a point of never getting up out of bed when they
cry for something like food, so that they don't get us "trained". In
our previous house, we realized we had been trained to let them outside
whenever they scratched at the sofa/chair. We found they would reach a
paw up, tug a little at the furniture (watching us the whole time) and
then run to the door.... sly little bugs that they are!
anyway - for Rascal's early morning wakeups - yelling doesn't work. He
knows you can't possibly be yelling to him :^) Ignoring him just makes
him cry more frequently and/or loudly. I found a variety of methods
that do work, but "your milage may vary". If I'm awake enough and in a
good mood, I get out of bed, pick him up and bring him back to bed with
me and make him lie there. He purrs, I sleep and it works out ok.
However since most of the time I am less then thrilled at being
awakened and don't want to get out of bed.... I have a few other ways.
At this point in our lives, for some reason if I glare and point my
index finger at him and say "no" he stops (must be the morning
hair/face that shuts him up). When he was younger a rolled up sock
lobbed his way or sliding a magazine at him (in case a sock wasn't
available) did the trick. Nothing hard and not hitting him (my aims not
good when I'm awake, when sleepy I'd be lucky to hit a wall).
After 7 years, he's still not completely broken of the habit, but it's
at a point where we can all sleep/live through it. Good luck!
janetb.
owned by one early rising kitty and another sleep-in kitty
|
963.6 | | CHEFS::PERKINSP | Don't stop believing | Thu Jan 04 1996 00:45 | 14 |
|
My two Burmese play the same game with me every morning...I've found
that pleading helps. 8^)
At 5am I'm awakened by Monty's chirping and Blue's yowling. This I can
usually stop with a single word like 'no' or 'shhhhh'. All is silent
for the time it takes for them to leap from whatever vantage point in
the bedroom to the bed. Here they affectionately roll themselves
around my head and PURR VERY LOUDLY. At this point I plead for one
more hour, wrap an arm around them, pull them under the covers and fall
back to sleep.
Flip
|
963.7 | She is getting better. | ICS::MACNEILL | | Mon Jan 15 1996 06:55 | 22 |
| Well, I haven't really done much about Shadows rude awakenings in the
morning. I can't really yell at her, because she is deaf (has been
since she was a baby, now 2 yrs. old). She has gotten a little
better, though. I have tried ignoring her in the morning and she just
gets mad and makes a little voice at me. She seems to do this all the
time now. She has this thing she does every morning after my
boyfriend and I ignore her she jumps up on top of my boyfriends bureau
and starts throwing things off of it, one by one until finally one of
us gets out of bed. It is cute, I can laugh about it. It just proves
that she is smarter than I give her credit for.
I did change her hard food to tender vittles she seems to like it,
alot. I also did start feeding her canned, wet food in the morning and
at night when we are getting ready to eat supper. But, everytime I
open up the refrigerator now she is right there, then runs to her dish,
with her little voice screaming at me.
Got to love 'em.
Thanks for the replies!!
Carol
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