Cats (pets)

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Welly
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Cats (pets)

Post by Welly »

We've been having a Cat visit us for a while now and he's a smashing friendly thing - lets you pick him up, or will sit with you, follow you, whatever. Her indoors started feeding him months ago and giving him "Whiskers milk" no less :roll: we know his owner (kind of) and get the impression he's less than a model Cat owner if you know what I mean so we're kinda pleased to at least think we're helping the Cat out (unless he's just greedy) with food etc.

He did start coming into the house but we suffered a flea problem in the Summer and that put an end to that :frown: he's not allowed in now but spends a lot of time sitting on our Garden table under a Gazebo roof (getting cold now).

Anyhoo, he regularly brings us Mice and Shrews (some dead, some not so and probably over 25 of them up to now) and even part of a wild Rabbit once :shock: last night he brought a live mouse and we watched him in the Garden from the Kitchen window - he sort of tormented the mouse and kept leaving it, going back, prodding it to do something, etc. until eventually he bit the mouses head off - swallowed it - and then ate the whole body :shock: is that normal? I know the old Stories of Cats and Mice but to eat them? I didn't think they really did :?

Ref: the 'fleas' can I try a spot-on treatment? we were told he gets treated 'regularly' by the owner but I'm not sure, he used to have a flea collar but that's been changed for just a leather-looking one. If I was to treat him could it end up as an 'overdose' of treatment without knowing he's just already had it? do fleas go away in the winter months anyway?
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by scotty73 »

You might think I'm going off topic here but i do have a point, when our dog was 6 months old he had flees so knowing from past experiance i avoided the shop bought spot on and went straight to the vets £25 ish for a 3 months supply and we havn't seen a flee since the first month.

My mother has a dog and a cat i keep telling my bro to get the vets stuff and he keeps buying asda or whatever = they still have flees. :roll:

My mate has a husky and a cat but also has a disabled daughter and if he gets flees in the house they play havoc with her because with her on all fours most of the time they treat her like a dog... He tried shop bought for a while until i told him to get stuff from the vet next time the husky is due a check up... He did and the flees are gone.

Thing with cats is they get everywhere the little slags and pick flees up all the time so if you're going to adopt the cat come to an understanding with the owner because I'd imaging to many treatments cant be good.
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Welly
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by Welly »

I was shocked when we started getting bites on our legs :x our house is extremely clean with 85% laminate or tiled floors so we could see these flees openly. I spent at least £50.00 on various powders/sprays until I bought 'The mother of all treatments' (which f*cking stank btw) from Pets at Home.

I even set up a 'flea trap' using a tray of soapy water and a desk lamp (which was quite good actually).

It took us at least 5 weeks to sort it out and now there is none at all. Horrible problem and it really pissed me off that our nice home was infested in this way by what was such a nice Cat :roll:
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by steve_earwig »

Just you wait 'til it brings a tick in :shock: We use Frontline ampoules from the vet 'cos we've got 4 cats and 4 dogs, I can't remember the last time I saw a flea (although that might be something to do with the sad state of my eyes :( )

Yes they eat mice, time was when that was their job! Ours bring in mice, sometimes live ones, and guess who it is has to catch them while the bluddy cats sit on the counter waiting for their food :evil:

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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by highlander »

steve_earwig wrote:Granny Weatherwax: "If cats looked like frogs we'd realise what evil bastards they are."
:lol:

They do have a mean streak a mile wide - never piss off a cat, they have the capacity to hold a hell of a grudge, the brain power to plot serious revenge, and the built-in armaments to put the plan into action ...

If you treat a cat well, you'll have a good friend - they're not as "I don't give a sh*t about you" as every dog owner / cat hater makes them out to be, they do show affection. They can be caring, but they do have a much more independent nature than dogs (cats are solitary hunters by nature, dogs are pack animals and see their owner as the pack leader).

Cats will look after themselves, to quite an extent, whereas dogs generally are totally dependent on their owner for guidance (walkies), comfort, hunting (can opener/dropping scraps from the table), and sleeping arrangements - if you don't train your dog only to sleep in his/her own bed, he/she will try to sleep as close to you as possible (in your bed, if you let them get away with it) - they also sit on the couch because that's where they see you sitting.
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by Doggy »

Being a catophobe of some repute, I was mightily releived when our, (enormous, grumpy), specimen decided to remain the other side of the party wall when we divided the house and moved into this end. :D Anyway, fleas......

As my daughter was a vet-nurse, our menagerie were always treated regularly, (at marginally less cost), with Advantix, IIRC. 100% effective with the dogs, but the cat, (who I've been referring to as, 'the BAD cat', for so long that now everyone else does too. :lol: ), could still have the occasional, 'visitor'.
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by mjb »

Indoor cats are the way to go... never had a flea problem in 10 years of having my 3 8) In fact the only time they've needed the vets is when both boys got a UTI, and the other time when a bed frame fell on one's head :shock:
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by lozz »

Eww; ifeel all itchy and scratchy now after reading that, :o

flea sprays and all that dont work, get the tablets for em, there more efective, pets at home wouid try selling you a truck full of shite you dont need if
they had there way, iavoid that place Rip off merchants :frown:
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by steve_earwig »

Feeding tablets to cats, there's another challenge :shock:

Have first aid kit on standby, also a mop and bucket in case it gets really messy...
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by Ares »

We have a cat with us already a year,never had problems with flea.
found the cat and his brother alone in the grass,took them home and ever since they live with us,indoor.
They had 1 or two flea on them while they were really young and small,but today nothing,and they go out and comeback,no problems there.

considering eating other animals,they will eat even snakes,not whole but a portion of it so eating mices are normal hahah
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by lozz »

My cat is banned from coming into the house.
he mainly lives in the garage under the old merc. or if its realy frosty ilet him in the kitchen thats as far as he gets,
its always fighting so often comes back fully loaded,. the festering flea bag.
the tablets work for a month and its scratching again, maybe the frost will cure em :twisted:
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by steve_earwig »

Frontline, not cheap but it's effective - 3 months for fleas, 1 month for ticks and other politicians.. sorry, parasites.
Ares wrote:We have a cat with us already a year,never had problems with flea.
Are they sterilised or will you be using the traditional drowning bucket? The vet's in Croatia are very cheap, people in the UK can spend thousands of pounds if their animal is ill.

Btw I was at our vet's this morning with one of our cats, some retard shot him with an air rifle :evil: Ah well, I do live in Cvetković where the locals are famous for being a little too closely related to each other...
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by lozz »

Thats evil

carnt see what they get out of shooting cats :frown:
nob heads with ponds normaly are the ones that shoot cats, guarding there koi carp bastids
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by highlander »

steve_earwig wrote:Feeding tablets to cats, there's another challenge :shock:

1) Sit on sofa. Pick up cat and cradle it in the crook of your elbow as though you were going to give a bottle to a baby. Talk softly to it.


2) With right hand, position right forefinger and thumb on either side of cat's mouth and gently apply pressure to cheeks while holding pill in right hand. (be patient) As cat opens mouth pop pill into mouth. Allow cat to close mouth and swallow. Drop pill into mouth. Let go of cat, noticing the direction it runs.


3) Pick the pill up off the floor and go get the cat from behind sofa. Cradle cat in left arm and repeat process. Sit on floor in kitchen, wrap arm around cat as before, drop pill in mouth. Let go of cat, noticing the direction it runs.


4) Retrieve cat from bedroom, and throw soggy pill away. Scoot across floor to pick up pill, and go find the cat. Bring it back into the kitchen. Take new pill from foil wrap, cradle cat in left arm holding rear paws tightly with left hand. Force jaws open and push pill to back of mouth with right forefinger. Hold mouth shut for a count of ten. Drop pill into mouth.


5) Pry claws from back legs out of your arm. Go get the cat, pick up half-dissolved pill from floor and drop it into garbage can.


6) Retrieve pill from goldfish bowl and cat from top of closet. Call spouse from backyard. Kneel on floor with cat wedged firmly between knees, hold front and rear paws. Ignore low growls emitted by cat. Get spouse to hold head firmly with one hand while forcing wooden ruler into mouth. Drop pill down ruler and rub cat's throat vigorously.


7) Retrieve cat from curtain rod, get another pill from foil wrap. Make note to buy new ruler and repair curtains. Carefully sweep shattered Doulton figures from hearth and set to one side for gluing later.


8) Get spouse to lie on cat with head just visible from below armpit. Put pill in end of drinking straw, force mouth open with pencil and blow down drinking straw.


9) Check label to make sure pill not harmful to humans, drink glass of water to take taste away. Apply Band-Aid to spouse's forearm and remove blood from carpet with cold water and soap.


10) Retrieve cat from neighbor's shed. Get another pill. Place cat in cupboard and close door onto neck to leave head showing. Force mouth open with dessert spoon. Flick pill down throat with rubber band.


11) Fetch screwdriver from garage and put door back on hinges. Apply cold compress to cheek and check records for date of last tetanus shot. Throw T-shirt away and fetch new one from bedroom.


12) Call fire department to retrieve cat from tree across the road. Apologize to neighbor who crashed into fence while swerving to avoid cat. Take another pill from foil wrap.


13) Tie cat's front paws to rear paws with garden twine and bind tightly to leg of dining table, find heavy duty pruning gloves from shed, force cat's mouth open with small spanner. Push pill into mouth followed by large piece of fillet steak. Hold head vertically and pour one cup of water down throat to wash pill down.


14) Get spouse to drive you to the emergency room, sit quietly while doctor stitches fingers and forearm and removes pill remnants from right eye. Call at furniture shop on way home to order new table.


15) Get last pill from bottle. Go into bathroom and get a fluffy towel. Stay in the bathroom with the cat, and close the door.

16) Sit on bathroom floor, wrap towel around kitty, leaving only his head exposed. Cradle kitty in the crook of your arm, and pick up pill off of counter.


17) Retrieve cat from top of shower door (you didn't know that cats can jump 5 feet straight up in the air, did you?), and wrap towel around it a little tighter, making sure its paws can't come out this time. With fingers at either side of its jaw, pry it open and pop pill into mouth. Quickly close mouth (his, not yours).


18) Sit on floor with cat in your lap, stroking it under the chin and talking gently to it for at least a half hour, while the pill dissolves.


19) Unwrap towel, open bathroom door. Wash off scratches in warm soapy water, comb your hair, and go find something to occupy your time for 7-1/2 hours.


20) Arrange for SPCA to get cat and call local pet shop to see if they have any hamsters.
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Re: Cats (pets)

Post by paulb2004uk »

After all the great advice on how to defrea a cat I wont bother adding anything. In answer to is it normal for them to eat mice and the like.
Yes it is, I've heard it's a sign of affection to bring there catch home. Our brings home all sorts including a Koi Carp from my neighbours pond.
Hopefully he's not on here, drives a Toyota
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