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Hubert and TED - Questions
This afternoon I took Hubert to TED; as long as we were there, he had
his second round of shots, which were due later in the week; we also re-affirmed his Giant Kitten status - 4.75 pounds! He's only 9 weeks old! TED said he's the biggest kitten he's ever seen - he's bigger than lots of six month old kittens he sees. I made the vet appointment because on Saturday and Sunday we'd noticed that Hubert's left eye droops sometimes. It's not red or watering or otherwise unusual-looking, and it doesn't seem to bother him, but there's a definite droop, quite pronounced when he's tired. TED looked at his eye and said it looked perfectly normal, and suggested that it might be a behavioral quirk. I am not entirely happy with this answer. Does anyone have any ideas about this? I am hoping the collective wisdom of this group will know just what this is and that it's nothing to worry about; certainly nothing to go whisking him off to a feline neurologist about. Right? (I am trying to talk myself out of said whisking, at least without waiting to see if it keeps happening.) Also, I mentioned in the context of Hubert's enormousness that he's still nursing, and it looks hilarious because he's so big. TED said, "Separate them." I said "Do we *need* to?" TED said "Yes." I said "For how long? I'd thought that Lula might cut him off when she was spayed, but she didn't." TED said "For two to three weeks, until she dries up." Noooooo!!! I don't want to do this! They will both be *very* distressed by this! Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. We're still feeding them both kitten formula dry food, available all the time; their canned food is adult formula for Lula and kitten formula for Hube. He doesn't nurse as much as he used to; just once or twice a day as best I can tell. Is there any harm in giving them more time for Lula to wean him herself? *sigh* Help me Obi-Wan-RPCA, you're my only hope. ;-) ------ Krista |
#2
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Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some
weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. Kitty kisses and Purrs to you all! Patti |
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On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 12:23:16 GMT, "Mishi"
yodeled: Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. Kitty kisses and Purrs to you all! Patti Personally, I believe in weaning at some point before the kitten can actually knock the mom down. This goes for people, too. Theresa Stinky Pictures: http://community.webshots.com/album/125591586JWEFwh My Blog: http://www.humanitas.blogspot.com |
#4
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LOL!
Christine "Kreisleriana" wrote in message ... On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 12:23:16 GMT, "Mishi" yodeled: Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. Kitty kisses and Purrs to you all! Patti Personally, I believe in weaning at some point before the kitten can actually knock the mom down. This goes for people, too. Theresa Stinky Pictures: http://community.webshots.com/album/125591586JWEFwh My Blog: http://www.humanitas.blogspot.com |
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LOL!
Christine "Kreisleriana" wrote in message ... On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 12:23:16 GMT, "Mishi" yodeled: Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. Kitty kisses and Purrs to you all! Patti Personally, I believe in weaning at some point before the kitten can actually knock the mom down. This goes for people, too. Theresa Stinky Pictures: http://community.webshots.com/album/125591586JWEFwh My Blog: http://www.humanitas.blogspot.com |
#6
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LOL!
Christine "Kreisleriana" wrote in message ... On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 12:23:16 GMT, "Mishi" yodeled: Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. Kitty kisses and Purrs to you all! Patti Personally, I believe in weaning at some point before the kitten can actually knock the mom down. This goes for people, too. Theresa Stinky Pictures: http://community.webshots.com/album/125591586JWEFwh My Blog: http://www.humanitas.blogspot.com |
#7
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On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 12:23:16 GMT, "Mishi"
yodeled: Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. Kitty kisses and Purrs to you all! Patti Personally, I believe in weaning at some point before the kitten can actually knock the mom down. This goes for people, too. Theresa Stinky Pictures: http://community.webshots.com/album/125591586JWEFwh My Blog: http://www.humanitas.blogspot.com |
#8
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Mishi wrote:
Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. That's what my instinct says, too. As long as they're both alright with it, let them do it. I once knew a cat who still nursed off and on when she was one year old! She only did it once a week or so. Neither mother nor 'kitten' seemed to mind. No ill effects seemed to come of it. The mother was hardly lactating at that stage any more. It continued long after they where both spayed. -- Marina, Frank and Nikki marina (dot) kurten (at) pp (dot) inet (dot) fi Pics at http://uk.pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/frankiennikki/ and http://community.webshots.com/user/frankiennikki |
#9
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Mishi wrote:
Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. That's what my instinct says, too. As long as they're both alright with it, let them do it. I once knew a cat who still nursed off and on when she was one year old! She only did it once a week or so. Neither mother nor 'kitten' seemed to mind. No ill effects seemed to come of it. The mother was hardly lactating at that stage any more. It continued long after they where both spayed. -- Marina, Frank and Nikki marina (dot) kurten (at) pp (dot) inet (dot) fi Pics at http://uk.pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/frankiennikki/ and http://community.webshots.com/user/frankiennikki |
#10
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On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 12:23:16 GMT, "Mishi"
yodeled: Is there any harm in his still nursing at 9 weeks? Lula's put on some weight, so even though he's a huge kitten she's getting plenty of nutrition for herself. Hi Krista, I have a 7 month old kitten who still nurses her (spayed) mom, and I have seen even older kits do this. As long as Lula is gaining weight and she isn't bothered by it, then I would let them do it. He will stop eventually, either on his own or Lula will stop him. Kitty kisses and Purrs to you all! Patti Personally, I believe in weaning at some point before the kitten can actually knock the mom down. This goes for people, too. Theresa Stinky Pictures: http://community.webshots.com/album/125591586JWEFwh My Blog: http://www.humanitas.blogspot.com |
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