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#1
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Beware of cat
Mr.Bonkers is a watch cat. When the doorbell rings, he is right there to
hiss, scratch, bite any stranger that comes into the house. He defends his property with a vigor. Every other cat I have ever know has prefered to run and hide when a stranger approaches. Not this guy. Lord help any kid that ever chases him. When we have a visitor sleep overnight, Mr.Bonkers sits in a chair all night long and stares at them. Its rather upsetting. IS there any way to teach a cat to be less agressive? He is an indoor, neutered cat with access to a screened in outside room. HE gets along well with the other cats in the neighborhood that roam free (thru the screen that is) .It's just he has an active dislike for other humans. With his human family he's a perfect gentleman. He never raises a claw or bites (for blood). He's a perfect kitty except for this reaction to strangers. |
#2
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Beware of cat
on Thu, 25 Jan 2007 16:08:01 GMT, "jmagerl"
wrote: Mr.Bonkers is a watch cat. When the doorbell rings, he is right there to hiss, scratch, bite any stranger that comes into the house. He defends his property with a vigor. Every other cat I have ever know has prefered to run and hide when a stranger approaches. Not this guy. Lord help any kid that ever chases him. When we have a visitor sleep overnight, Mr.Bonkers sits in a chair all night long and stares at them. Its rather upsetting. IS there any way to teach a cat to be less agressive? He is an indoor, neutered cat with access to a screened in outside room. HE gets along well with the other cats in the neighborhood that roam free (thru the screen that is) .It's just he has an active dislike for other humans. With his human family he's a perfect gentleman. He never raises a claw or bites (for blood). He's a perfect kitty except for this reaction to strangers. I don't have any suggestions, I just want to say this is funny as hell. (Sorry!) My adult cat, Rudy, LOVES visitors. He's right there at the door with my insane dog. My kitten, Levi, is starting to do the same thing. I don't know how we lucked out this way, but it probably has to do with their socialization experiences when they are young. -- Lynne |
#3
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Beware of cat
Hmmm..
Cats can be territorial. Could be yours doesn't differentiate between species and defends against all that dare enter. Congratulations on being a member of his pride. You do know he probably expects you to back him up if he gets in over his head. Alan "jmagerl" wrote in message ... Mr.Bonkers is a watch cat. When the doorbell rings, he is right there to hiss, scratch, bite any stranger that comes into the house. He defends his property with a vigor. Every other cat I have ever know has prefered to run and hide when a stranger approaches. Not this guy. Lord help any kid that ever chases him. When we have a visitor sleep overnight, Mr.Bonkers sits in a chair all night long and stares at them. Its rather upsetting. IS there any way to teach a cat to be less agressive? He is an indoor, neutered cat with access to a screened in outside room. HE gets along well with the other cats in the neighborhood that roam free (thru the screen that is) .It's just he has an active dislike for other humans. With his human family he's a perfect gentleman. He never raises a claw or bites (for blood). He's a perfect kitty except for this reaction to strangers. |
#4
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Beware of cat
"jmagerl" wrote:
Mr.Bonkers is a watch cat. When the doorbell rings, he is right there to hiss, scratch, bite any stranger that comes into the house. He defends his property with a vigor. Every other cat I have ever know has prefered to run and hide when a stranger approaches. Not this guy. Lord help any kid that ever chases him. I have one sitting next to me at this moment who was like that, even worse. I was fostering him for a rescue group and he was so fierce we had to keep him locked in a room and push food in with a broom handle. Both a vet and an animal behaviorist said he'd have to be put down. It took me several months just to let him out of the room safely, and a couple of years of constant contact (he lived in my home office) before he truly settled down. He went from being fiercely aggressive, to simply not letting me touch him, to being OK, even downright loving, with me but not letting anyone into the office. My poor tech support guy was terrified of him. The cat would follow him from the door to the computer, and when the poor guy sat down the cat would climb on his chest and hiss in his face. I had to lock the cat up to get my computer fixed. He finally reaching a truce with strangers on his own turf. Instead of stalking them, he simply gives them a perfunctory hiss just to let them know he's watching them then goes about his business. Unfortunately, he reverts to his savage self with strangers outside the home. I have to tranquilize him for the vet to examine him. That's whiy I ended up adopting him, because he never made nice with potential adopters. Anyway, that's a long story just to say it can be done. When strangers come to call, have them feed him something he really likes. |
#5
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Beware of cat
On Thu, 25 Jan 2007 10:08:01 -0600, "jmagerl"
wrote: Mr.Bonkers is a watch cat. When the doorbell rings, he is right there to hiss, scratch, bite any stranger that comes into the house. He defends his property with a vigor. Every other cat I have ever know has prefered to run and hide when a stranger approaches. Not this guy. Lord help any kid that ever chases him. When we have a visitor sleep overnight, Mr.Bonkers sits in a chair all night long and stares at them. Its rather upsetting. IS there any way to teach a cat to be less agressive? He is an indoor, neutered cat with access to a screened in outside room. HE gets along well with the other cats in the neighborhood that roam free (thru the screen that is) .It's just he has an active dislike for other humans. With his human family he's a perfect gentleman. He never raises a claw or bites (for blood). He's a perfect kitty except for this reaction to strangers. Good one. Feliway diffuser perhaps? |
#6
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Beware of cat
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#7
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Beware of cat
LOL. Well, you need a solution. Try this. Teach him with a signal when
it's okay to trust a visitor. The signal can be a pat on the head and a couple bites of Temptations. A cat like this can work for you if someone comes and breaks into your house. I had a Siamese when my son was born and the first time he was left with a young babysitter the Siamese growled and spat when she tried to go into the baby's room. This girl's family actually had several Siamese of their own! -- Barb Of course I don't look busy, I did it right the first time. |
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