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#1
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Lounge furniture
We have had our two adorable cats now for about 8 years (RB 8yrs, Kitty 6
yrs), and now we have a little maltese terrier to compliment our family. Unfortunatley it has meant our furniture has taken the toll from scratching. I have tried a couple of Cat Posts but with no success. We have also tried rubbing in pepper powder, lavender, and chilli powder into the soft furniture but somehow they all seem to like just scratching it. I am now looking at replacing our three peice lounge cloth suite, and I'm thinking of perhaps a leather suite rather than a cloth suite. Would this solve the problem? Has anyone had any success choosing a leather suite over a new clothe suite? Additionally, is there a better way of making a scrathing post? Our two cats live inside all the time, I do trim their claws about once a month, however they do seem to want to continue to scratch on our furniture. We love them dearly by the way, and they are family to us. Kulander. |
#2
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On Mon, 24 May 2004 09:41:40 GMT, "KC"
wrote: Would this solve the problem? Has anyone had any success choosing a leather suite over a new clothe suite? I have a leather suite; it is ripped to shreds ;o) And it's harder to disguise the claw marks than on a cloth one! One thing I have noticed though is that they never sit or sleep on the leather one. Additionally, is there a better way of making a scrathing post? Our two cats live inside all the time, I do trim their claws about once a month, however they do seem to want to continue to scratch on our furniture. I think even if you had 20 perfect scratch posts, they'd still like to claw at the furniture. They don't know the difference between 'expensive furniture' and 'kitty-only post'. To them a large soft sofa is just begging to be clawed! I guess the only thing you can do is when the new sofa arrives, squirt the cats with a spray-trigger gun filled with water each time they stretch up on it. You have to be consistent though, and lock them out of the room when you're not there. They will stop, I've tried this to stop one of mine always runnign up the curtains - but! In my own case I'm too soft. When I got the leather suite I felt guilty locking them out of the living room when I wasn't there so my sofa soon got ruined. |
#3
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On Mon, 24 May 2004 09:41:40 GMT, "KC"
wrote: Would this solve the problem? Has anyone had any success choosing a leather suite over a new clothe suite? I have a leather suite; it is ripped to shreds ;o) And it's harder to disguise the claw marks than on a cloth one! One thing I have noticed though is that they never sit or sleep on the leather one. Additionally, is there a better way of making a scrathing post? Our two cats live inside all the time, I do trim their claws about once a month, however they do seem to want to continue to scratch on our furniture. I think even if you had 20 perfect scratch posts, they'd still like to claw at the furniture. They don't know the difference between 'expensive furniture' and 'kitty-only post'. To them a large soft sofa is just begging to be clawed! I guess the only thing you can do is when the new sofa arrives, squirt the cats with a spray-trigger gun filled with water each time they stretch up on it. You have to be consistent though, and lock them out of the room when you're not there. They will stop, I've tried this to stop one of mine always runnign up the curtains - but! In my own case I'm too soft. When I got the leather suite I felt guilty locking them out of the living room when I wasn't there so my sofa soon got ruined. |
#4
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"KC" wrote in message s.com... We have had our two adorable cats now for about 8 years (RB 8yrs, Kitty 6 yrs), and now we have a little maltese terrier to compliment our family. Unfortunatley it has meant our furniture has taken the toll from scratching. I have tried a couple of Cat Posts but with no success. We have also tried rubbing in pepper powder, lavender, and chilli powder into the soft furniture but somehow they all seem to like just scratching it. I am now looking at replacing our three peice lounge cloth suite, and I'm thinking of perhaps a leather suite rather than a cloth suite. Would this solve the problem? Has anyone had any success choosing a leather suite over a new clothe suite? Additionally, is there a better way of making a scrathing post? Our two cats live inside all the time, I do trim their claws about once a month, however they do seem to want to continue to scratch on our furniture. We love them dearly by the way, and they are family to us. Kulander. Trim the claws twice a month and consider using Soft Paws. Use double sticky tape (tape that has adhesive on both sides) on the corners of your new furniture, and place a scratching post at EACH corner. That may sound like excess, but it's NOT. Spray the scratching posts with Feliway and the furniture with a CAT NO products. After about 2 weeks, you can remove the double sticky tape. After about 2 more weeks, you can start to move a few of the scratching posts to a less obtrusive spot, but you need at least one post close to each piece of furniture. Keep a water pistol close at hand for any backsliding and be prepared to do the tape thing again if something in the house changes and upsets them. With cats, sometimes just the change of season upsets their equilibrium, so this is never a once and you're done type of training. You've got to always think like a cat, and sometimes cat thinking means that cause and effect aren't always linked, or else they're totally linked in a way you'd never expect. Like when you go to put canned food in the dish and the cat sticks his head in there first and you dump the food on his head. Some cats think that they always need the food dumped on their head before they can eat, so they'll repeat the behavior. Some cats think they need to claw "forbidden" objects and get squirted with the water pistol before they claw "approved" objects because that's the way their internal reward system has worked the problem out. You've got to be able to shape their behavior even when you're not present, and that's why the double sticky tape works so well. |
#5
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"KC" wrote in message s.com... We have had our two adorable cats now for about 8 years (RB 8yrs, Kitty 6 yrs), and now we have a little maltese terrier to compliment our family. Unfortunatley it has meant our furniture has taken the toll from scratching. I have tried a couple of Cat Posts but with no success. We have also tried rubbing in pepper powder, lavender, and chilli powder into the soft furniture but somehow they all seem to like just scratching it. I am now looking at replacing our three peice lounge cloth suite, and I'm thinking of perhaps a leather suite rather than a cloth suite. Would this solve the problem? Has anyone had any success choosing a leather suite over a new clothe suite? Additionally, is there a better way of making a scrathing post? Our two cats live inside all the time, I do trim their claws about once a month, however they do seem to want to continue to scratch on our furniture. We love them dearly by the way, and they are family to us. Kulander. Trim the claws twice a month and consider using Soft Paws. Use double sticky tape (tape that has adhesive on both sides) on the corners of your new furniture, and place a scratching post at EACH corner. That may sound like excess, but it's NOT. Spray the scratching posts with Feliway and the furniture with a CAT NO products. After about 2 weeks, you can remove the double sticky tape. After about 2 more weeks, you can start to move a few of the scratching posts to a less obtrusive spot, but you need at least one post close to each piece of furniture. Keep a water pistol close at hand for any backsliding and be prepared to do the tape thing again if something in the house changes and upsets them. With cats, sometimes just the change of season upsets their equilibrium, so this is never a once and you're done type of training. You've got to always think like a cat, and sometimes cat thinking means that cause and effect aren't always linked, or else they're totally linked in a way you'd never expect. Like when you go to put canned food in the dish and the cat sticks his head in there first and you dump the food on his head. Some cats think that they always need the food dumped on their head before they can eat, so they'll repeat the behavior. Some cats think they need to claw "forbidden" objects and get squirted with the water pistol before they claw "approved" objects because that's the way their internal reward system has worked the problem out. You've got to be able to shape their behavior even when you're not present, and that's why the double sticky tape works so well. |
#6
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I have several sisal scratching posts- one is four feet tall and some of
the horizontal cardboard scratchers. I don't trim my cat's claws at all. Once in a while I see Amber clawing at the carpet but Tiger always uses the scratching posts. I have never seen them use the furniture. Maybe I'm just lucky! -MIKE |
#7
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I have several sisal scratching posts- one is four feet tall and some of
the horizontal cardboard scratchers. I don't trim my cat's claws at all. Once in a while I see Amber clawing at the carpet but Tiger always uses the scratching posts. I have never seen them use the furniture. Maybe I'm just lucky! -MIKE |
#8
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I remember seeing an advert once for a little cap that you can stick onto
the cats claw. Very small and unobtrusive. Have you had any experience in using these BTW I do appreciate your responses. Kulander. "MIKE" wrote in message ... I have several sisal scratching posts- one is four feet tall and some of the horizontal cardboard scratchers. I don't trim my cat's claws at all. Once in a while I see Amber clawing at the carpet but Tiger always uses the scratching posts. I have never seen them use the furniture. Maybe I'm just lucky! -MIKE |
#9
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I remember seeing an advert once for a little cap that you can stick onto
the cats claw. Very small and unobtrusive. Have you had any experience in using these BTW I do appreciate your responses. Kulander. "MIKE" wrote in message ... I have several sisal scratching posts- one is four feet tall and some of the horizontal cardboard scratchers. I don't trim my cat's claws at all. Once in a while I see Amber clawing at the carpet but Tiger always uses the scratching posts. I have never seen them use the furniture. Maybe I'm just lucky! -MIKE |
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