If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
Suddenly, without warning, Cat Protector exclaimed (12/29/2007 12:52 AM):
Cats should be kept indoors all the time. By letting them roam outside they can get hit by cars, encounter people who might harm and abuse them, become a target for predators, and get in fights with other cats. All 3 of my cats are indoor cats and I'm a lot happier knowing they're safe. I was waiting for you to say that jmc |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
Suddenly, without warning, RPSinha exclaimed (12/29/2007 9:02 AM):
jmc wrote: : When we leave our cat alone for one or two days (no more!), we leave two : litterboxes (one in the tub, one her normal one), her day's supply of : wet food (she likes it a little old anyway, dunno why), and enough dry : to get her through one more day than I expect to be gone. Also make : sure she has twice as much water as I expect her to need. Minimal : lights, and as for the shades: If she wants to look out the windows she : will, whether the shades are open or closed (unless you have external : wood shutters!). Personally, I'd make it easy for her to look out. : It'll give her something to do. : : Leave a couple of safe toys out for her to play with as well. Thanks, just the sort of advice I was looking for. Would you scatter the food and water at a few places leave it all in her usual eating place? Usual eating place. Not sure why you'd want to scatter it around, unless she's a couch-potato cat that needs the exercise. : If you don't think she'll behave well... She has never misbehaved---other than waking me up at 4AM. I am only trying to make it comfortable for her. She'll be fine, but may take a while to forgive you once you get back jmc |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
"jmc" wrote in message She'll be fine, but may take a while to forgive you once you get back I remember about 18 months ago when without much warning on a Monday, I went into the hospital for four days. I had a friend go over to my apartment that evening and fill up her gravity feed water dish and kibble in her gravity feed food dishes that held over a weeks worth of both. I came home on the Friday and my one year old Deetoo was about three pounds heavier and looked like she was four inches longer. It was like she went from still a little big kitten size to full grown, big cat. I came in the door, she came up and sniffed me once and then walked away, ignoring me completely. I knew I'd have to put in considerable effort to get in her good graces again. |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
Keeping cats indoors for their own safety ( Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time)
Fri, 28 Dec 2007 08:28:44 -0800 from William Graham weg9
@comcast.net: This is an old argument, and I have come to the conclusion that what you do has to be tailored to the circumstances.....If you live in an apartment in the city, and you get a cat as a kitten, then sure.....You should keep an "indoor cat". but if you live out in the sticks, and you get cats (as I do) that are strays, feral, or were already outside cats, then you should keep them as they were, or as they are accustomed to living, which is outdoors. There's something to that, but I would question even that rule of thumb. Dexter the Wonder Cat was an indoor/outdoor cat for his first five or six years. (I got him as a kitten, from a country farm.) I lived in a one-family house in a fairly dense inner suburb of Cleveland. When I was speaking with the animal warden on an unrelated matter, she strongly advised keeping Dexter indoors, not only because of cars and diseases and possible fights with other cats, but because of the skunks in the area. "I bring in at least one dead cat a shift, that has tangled with a skunk." This tipped the balance for me, since the vet had also advised keeping Dexter indoors. It took a few weeks of being *very* careful whenever I opened a door, but Dexter did adjust to being an indoor kitty. He loved sitting in the windowsill and watching the goings-on outdoors, and would run from one window to another to follow the progress of people or animals. It certainly helped that I spent a lot of time playing with him, but my experience is evidence that an indoor-outdoor cat can become a happy indoor-only cat. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ "If there's one thing I know, it's men. I ought to: it's been my life work." -- Marie Dressler, in /Dinner at Eight/ |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
Fri, 28 Dec 2007 00:06:59 -0600 from RPSinha :
Should we leave the windows shades open or closed? I can't decide if looking outside will be fun for her or torture?! Definitely open. Cats get bored easily. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ "If there's one thing I know, it's men. I ought to: it's been my life work." -- Marie Dressler, in /Dinner at Eight/ |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
Fri, 28 Dec 2007 17:32:51 -0600 from RPSinha :
Would you scatter the food and water at a few places leave it all in her usual eating place? Cats are creatures of habit. She'll expect to find food in the usual place. Contrariwise, why would you want her to start looking all over the hose for food? -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ "If there's one thing I know, it's men. I ought to: it's been my life work." -- Marie Dressler, in /Dinner at Eight/ |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
Per William Graham:
Careful with the TV....I used to investigate fires and other accidents for a living. TV's frequently start fires in homes.....Also, don't leave torchier halogen lamps and other high energy sources energized while you are gone. Now, I will leave these small screw-in fluorescents on, but seldom anything else.... When I was about 15 years old, my mom expressed anxiety that the hi-fi was always left plugged in - was afraid it might explode. Knowing all there was to know about everything at the time, I pedanticated on her for about five minutes about how electronic things can't explode. While I was going on and on... "Wham!!!" loud noise, smoke, strong smell. A power supply capacitor in the hi-fi's amplifier had exploded - right on cue. -- PeteCresswell |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
Leave them opened. Otherwise you may find the shades clawed up or torn down
when you get home. When I went on vacation one time, I left the miniblinds in one room closed. When I got home, I found the miniblinds pulled out of the window and on the floor. I had a petsitter coming to my home twice a day during that time and the cat still tried to go through the blinds. S. -- **Visit me and my cats at http://www.island-cats.com/ ** --- "Stan Brown" wrote in message t... Fri, 28 Dec 2007 00:06:59 -0600 from RPSinha : Should we leave the windows shades open or closed? I can't decide if looking outside will be fun for her or torture?! Definitely open. Cats get bored easily. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ "If there's one thing I know, it's men. I ought to: it's been my life work." -- Marie Dressler, in /Dinner at Eight/ |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
"blkcatgal" wrote in message
Leave them opened. Otherwise you may find the shades clawed up or torn down when you get home. My biggest problem was my new kitty climbing up the shower curtain. I'd come in and take a shower and realize that the curtain had been turned into a sieve with water all over the bathroom. After the first couple of times, I learned to toss the shower curtains up over the rod a few times so she couldn't reach them. |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
Leaving a cat alone for 24 hours, first time
Alright, perhaps this story will help support the reason why cats should be
kept indoors. Last year I had the chance to write a story about the EAMT (Emergency Animal Medical Technician) unit here in Phoenix. One of the calls we went out on was about a mother cat and her kittens which were thrown in the trash dumpster by one of the residents of an apartment complex in west Phoenix. When we got there, another resident had pulled them from the dumpster and thus we were able to save them and transport them to the shelter. The thing that was sickening was the fact that the person who was suspected to have thrown them in the trash like beer cans walked right past us and didn't bat an eye. So, I think the question is this. If you let your own cat run free would you feel ok if someone picked up your cat, threw them in the trash and then didn't tell you about it? How also would you feel if your cat was found dead after it sufficated because more trash was piled on top of them as they meowed and cried for help but nobody did anything to stop it. The mother cat and her kittens were lucky but this could;ve been the scenario that played out if another resident hadn't heard there cries and crawled into the dumpster to get them out. This also happened in a bad part of town but still scenarios like this can happen even in the best of neighborhoods as animal abuse knows no bounds. You can argue how it's ok to let them out all you want but that means you also give permission to someone to possibly abuse or kill them. Would you feel ok if that happens? "David" wrote in message . .. I'm sure the newgroup is sick of the argument but for anyone who does feel like joining in... My cat is an indoor cat. The thought of him ever making it outside makes me sick. That being said, my position is that if a cat is not raised as an indoors cat and has its claws, then I see no problem with allowing it to roam outdoors. Cats are animals. They live outdoors in the wild. In the past I may have said that cats should not be allowed out doors in big cities but I live in an apartment in a metropolitan area and there has been a cat I catch jumping out of our dumpster on a regular basis. It is a healthy looking at so I am not sure if it has a home that it goes to but it manages to survive the time it does spend outside. I've thought about trying to catch it and calling animal control but it is alive, it looks healthy, and it will not stay that way if it gets euthinized. I think arguing that cats should be kept indoors all the time because of the reasons you mention, Cat Protector, is made for good reasons but is unrealistic. An indoors cat could die in more than one ways from being trapped indoors. I doubt an unbiased party has attempted to generate statistics for the chances of an indoor cat living vs. an outdoor cat but even if it is well know, the point is that you can not protect a cat from everything. A person can get in a fight with a bear camping, but (some of us) still go camping. A person can get hit by a car but we still go outside. As much as we want to provide for and keep our cats safe the simple fact of the matter is that they are vulnerable living beings, just like us. My two cents. David "William Graham" wrote in message . .. "RPSinha" wrote in message ... As I have mentioned previously, I am caring for a cat who is about 1 year old. During the warmer days she was outdoors all day, but came inside to sleep. Then she met her first Midwestern winter and didn't know what hit her. But she has adjusted, sort of, goes out many times each day and returns in 1/2 hr to 2 hrs depending on the weather and her mood. Now we are facing a sudden development I need your expert advice with. We must leave her alone for something like 24-30 hours. I realize that this is no big deal for many cats but this one is simply not used to being locked in for so long. The maximum she has been locked in alone is like 5-6 hours, so this will be a big jump. We'll of course feed her just before leaving, leave some of her favorite canned food for a little later and kibble for after that, fresh water and fresh litter (I know this will be a torture for her, she like to "go" outside unless the weather is truly dreadful). Any other advice you can give from experience? Should we leave the windows shades open or closed? I can't decide if looking outside will be fun for her or torture?! What about lights: lot of lights on or just a few? TIA! (The temperature on that day is predicted to have a *high* of 34, so probably too cold for what *she* would want as we leave: to be left outdoors! She often has those moments but always comes running back a little later.) I use cat doors....They are small rectangular openings that you put in doors that have a leather or vinyl flap with a magnet at the bottom that kind of holds them closed to keep the cold air out. but the cat or small dog can push against them and they will open so it can go out. If you install them as far away from the door handle/lock as possible than thieves won't be able to reach the latch and get in, so they will be relatively safe. but they do require you to saw a rectangle in your door in order to install them.....They usually come with instructions and a template for doing this.....They also have a panel which will block them so your cat (or any other animal) won't be able to use them. They also make them in long aluminum sections for installation in sliding glass doors that lead to patios and the like....We have one of those, and two of the regular kind that lead from the kitchen to the garage, and thru the garage door to the outside so our cats can come and go day or night to either the front or the back yard. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
48 hours later | Victor Martinez | Cat anecdotes | 17 | December 14th 07 11:24 PM |
He hasn't pee for 20 hours | Cheryl | Cat health & behaviour | 4 | November 19th 05 02:59 PM |
Knows when we are leaving | Toni&Nate | Cat health & behaviour | 2 | January 2nd 05 11:08 PM |
Cat barfs every time she eats after 3-4 hours w/o food. | ron barry | Cat health & behaviour | 18 | February 25th 04 03:59 AM |
Leaving the cat while I am away for a long time | Lipgor | Cat health & behaviour | 10 | December 10th 03 04:08 PM |