|
There are plenty of places meeting these
requirements admirably, even in a four-room apartment --
bookshelves, the floor in front of the hot-air vent, the master's
bed -- but most folks feel better if they have provided their pet
with a box of some sort. And most cats enjoy the cozy confinement of
a box well enough to use it. Beyond this, whether the box or its
lining is plain or fancy is a matter of individual taste -- your
taste, because the cat won't care.
The only
other article of furniture an indoor cat needs is
a pan. There are cats who, by some stroke of fate, have learned to
use the human toilet, but yours probably isn't one of them. Buy a
pan. Enameled metal is best and easiest to keep clean. It should be
large enough for the cat to maneuver in comfortably, but the sides
should be low. It should be kept in one location, and it may be
filled with sand, shredded newspaper or sawdust.
A house-trained mother cat will teach her kittens to
use the pan, but if you should by chance acquire one that never got
the word, it is easy enough to set the kitten straight. First, show
it the pan. Second, after each meal
traipse the kitten over to the pan and keep it there -- without
using undue force, of course -- until it performs. You will feel
that you are devoting an awful lot of time to this chore, and so you
are. But very shortly you will be able to gauge when (it's usually
under a half hour after the kitten has eaten) and for how long your
assistance will be needed.
Don't clean the pan until it has been used two or
three times; eventually, a bright little cat will get the idea and
trot to the pan of its own accord.
Cats are tidy creatures. When they have the
opportunity to deal with matters in their own way, out-of-doors,
they select a spot that offers some privacy, dig a small hole with
their forepaws, eliminate and then neatly refill the hole. Indoors,
a cat will feel much better about using a pan if the sand or paper
in it is ample for her to paw around and approximate her normal
procedure.
In cleaning the pan use warm water and soap. Steer
clear of powerful disinfectants. They are unpleasant and very often
harmful to cats, and almost surely will persuade them never to use
the pan again.
Bathing a cat is an experience to be avoided.
Ordinarily, she is quite capable of bath herself. The rough pink
tongue does most of the job directly, and moistens the forepaw for
cleaning the face and hard-to-reach spots behind the ears.
Occasionally, however, owing to a skin irritation or other emergency
problem, a bath may be prescribed. The water should be lukewarm and
shallow, the soap mild and unmedicated (unless the vet says
otherwise). Theoretically, the cat is placed in the water,
thoroughly soaped (careful around the eyes!), spray-rinsed, wrapped
in a towel and briskly rubbed until dry.
This is all easier said than done. Keep tincture of
merthiolate handy -- you will very likely end up with some long, red
skin irritations of your own.
For all practical purposes, brushing a cat is the
best way to assist her own efforts. Use a stiff-bristle brush -- not
wire -- on her coat a few minutes each day. It will remove loose
hair and dried skin, which not only makes kitty feel fine but keeps
her from swallowing too much hair as she cleans herself. A good way
to help short-haired cats get rid of loose hair is to wet the palm
of your hand and stroke the cat about 50 times. The moisture will
pick up the loose hairs. And cats won't object to it as they might a
brush.
Most cats are playful and enjoy toys, which need not be numerous
or elaborate. A catnip mouse or
catnip-impregnated rubber ball are fun. Otherwise, a spool, or even
a string with a twist of paper tied to one end, is enough to start a
cat leaping, dancing and chasing.
City cats probably should have a scratching post.
This is an 18-inch upright, about three or four inches in diameter,
attached to a base and covered with a piece of old carpeting. It
offers kitty a chance to hone her claws a bit, which periodically
she will want to do, without ruining -the couch. Make the base large
enough so the contraption won't tip over, and put some catnip under
the carpeting.
If, even with a scratching post, your cat insists
upon clawing the furniture, slap the palm of your hand sharply with
a rolled-up newspaper. The noise will frighten her, and she should
stop after a few repeat per-formances. But you must catch her in the
process each time.
cats and other
pets
Despite their reputation for
unfriendliness, cats can and often do become friendly with other
animals. Cats who through some mischance have lost their kittens are
es pecially prone, perhaps
through a hormonal impulse, to adopt and mother the most unlikely
small fry. Little chicks, ducklings, rats, mice, squirrels, rabbits,
puppies -- the list may well be endless -- have all at one time or
another lived in harmony with cats.
Somewhat more difficult, because it has not been
arranged by the cat, is keeping alien pets together under the same
roof. Usually this involves dog and cat, and the results are
unpredictable, though successful often enough to be worth
trying.
It's easiest, of course, to raise puppies and kittens together, as
they have been on countless farms. Puppies, whatever problems they
may have, are the soul of good fellowship, open, trusting,
everybody's friend -- which means that half the battle is won.
Kittens, if not mauled or frightened out of their wits, will spit
their protests for a few days and then learn to live and let
live.
The same pattern generally is followed when a kitten is introduced to a
family's adult dog, although care must be taken that the canine, in
a transport of joy, does not break his little playfellow's
neck.
A much rougher situation arises when a defenseless
puppy joins a household in which an adult cat is well entrenched and
reigns supreme. It can be worked out, but you have to want a dog an
awful lot. In this ca se, or in the even more
hopeless one of adult dog and adult cat, start by having your vet
trim the cat's claws. This is trickier than it seems and should be
professionally done.
Don't confront the pets with each other immediately.
Keep them in the house but separated -- if possible -- for several
days. This will inform each that there's a stranger in the house but
that, since the new smell lingers, he, she or it must belong.
Familiarity, normality and habit all serve to break down the basic
and traditional fears, hostilities and insecurities felt between
species.
Let the first meeting be casual and brief. Stick
around to see that a fight doesn't develop, but don't interfere any
more than you have to. It figures that any show of favoritism will
be deeply resented by the one left out, especially the cat. And a
scolding of one in front of the other will be most mortifying,
especially for the cat.
If all goes well, cat and dog will begin eventually
to exchange a friendly lick. When they nestle together for a snooze,
play together and eat together (from separate dishes), love has
triumphed.
Be prepared to be a good loser, though, if your pets
just don't take a shine to each other. It will be a fairly miserable
existence for the smaller, the weaker, the more fearful one,
whichever it is.
neutering
In every cat owner's
life comes the time when the decision to interfere, or not, with the
pet's sexual functions must be faced.
This is called "neutering," or "altering," or, more
directly, castration in the case of the male and spaying in the
female. Castration is surgical removal of the testicles. Spaying is
an abdominal operation for removal of uterus and ovaries.
Both operations can be performed by a veterinarian
with almost certain success, although spaying is more serious and
the outcome will depend to some extent on the general good health of
the cat. Recovery in either case usually takes about five days. And
insist on an anesthetic. It's a lot easier on everyone, and will not
add materially to the bill.
The arguments about neutering, pro and con, boil
down essentially to two considerations: Do feline sexual habits
bother you? Do you want kittens? These are yours to answer.
Obviously cats aren't bothered, and apparently they want kittens.
From a human standpoint, male cats are definitely milder if
castrated and pretty obstreperous if they're not. In full possession
of their powers, they fight and yowl and spray the premises with
urine.
The real problem comes with the female. As noted
elsewhere her sexual behavior is mostly embarrassing; her
productivity, however, can be overwhelming. It often seems simpler
to deprive her of the ability to have kittens than to go through the
misery of disposing of her many litters. If neutering is to be done,
it's best done between six and eight months, although if you want
your female to have a litter or two, it can be done
later.
Cats are such wonderful mothers, that it seems a
shame to rob them of the opportunity to bear and raise kittens -- at
least once. Don't worry about your cat's becoming slack or fat. This
is still a matter of diet more than anything else. Nor
will your cat lose the impulse or ability to hunt mice. There just
won't be any tomcatting, or any kittens.
Go to: Chapter
2 Part 2: The Daily Routine Part 2
|