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Cats - How about some responsible pet ownership?
by brainrat

Cats don't have to be the pains in the asses they were represented as. I live in a household with four dogs (You got that right - four. A lab, a collie, a chow, and a daschund - four medium-large, one small). On top of that, we have a cat, two rats, and four tanks of fish.

We live in a three-bedroom, two bath house. And guess what? Two bedrooms are entirely animal-free, the house rarely smells of piss (rarely being that the puppy still has his 'oops' moments), and the worst damage are the dug-up flowerbeds. On top of which, the four dogs are in the house the majority of the time.

You know how we acomplish this?

Say it with me, people.

Responsible Pet Ownership. Or companionship, if you're the touchy-feely-sensitive type.

That means walking the dogs every day, playing with them, obedience, et cetera. But we're not talking about dogs. We're talking about cats.

Cats will not piss the entire house. Believe me, they won't. Once they learn to use the litterbox, they're set for life. THAT IS - if you do it right.

1 - Litterbox quantity and maintenence. Litterboxes have to be clean. By that, I mean scoop once, twice a day, change once a week with a decent scrub, et cetera. If you have mulitple cats, guess what? Sometimes you need multiple litterboxes. The major reason for cats not using the litterbox is it isn't clean enough.

2 - UTI - urinary tract infection or other health issues. If the litterbox is clean and the cat has been regularly using it, then suddenly doesn't, it's time to write down those symptoms and take a trip to the vet.

3 - Behavioral issues. Consult a behaviorist or research yourself. You CAN out-train bad litterbox habits - it's not easy, but it can be done.

Bonus - you can also teach your cats to go in the toilet. My previous cat always took a piss in the toilet. It was awesome and made cleaning SO much easier.

On household damage -

Before the cats hit home, they have their own scratching posts. They may have multiple scratching posts. Climbing and acrobatics is essential to cats - so big posts, safe bookcases, et cetera are a MUST.

About claw damage? Hi. There's such a thing as soft paws. Petco and Petsmart sells them. They are cheap, soft little caps that go on the cat's claws and they are changed regularly. They soften the claws so they don't do damage to skin, carpet or upholstery without the inhumane process of declawing. You want a declawed cat? There are plenty in rescues and shelters that have been through that proceedure that need homes.

Declawing requires breaking and severing of the toe BONES. It'd be like having a part of your finger broken off at the knuckle. During the healing process, it can also lead to infections due to scraping the litterbox. Declawing is inhumane, expensive and can lead to medical problems if not done correctly. Soft Paws are cheap, low-maintanence and the cat doesn't even notice a thing. Which one makes more sense?


Next - Training. This bullshit about not being able to train cats is an outright lie that people tell themselves to let their cats get away with bad behavior and justify their own laziness. Some cats are just as easy to train as your average lab. Most aren't. Most won't do the 'sit, stay, come' deal, but you CAN train them to do a variety of things.

You can train them to not jump up on places where they aren't wanted. You can train them to not scratch carpet, go into closets, or rush out of the house (if they are indoor cats, which most, if not all, should be in this day and age). You can train cats to coexist peacefully with people. Like I said, with some cats it's a piece of cake, with others it's some work, but it CAN BE DONE.

Enrichment - cats need to have fun. That means different toys, a birdfeeder they can watch by an open window, different, healthy treats, so on and so forth. Little things that make a big difference to how they behave. Playtime is a MUST - they bond with you and get tired out, so they are more content, healthier and less prone to mischief. If you don't entertain the cat, the cat will entertain himself - most likely with your socks or drapes.

Grooming - groom your cats. Take them to the groomer if you must. Trim their fur. Do this regularly and shedding won't be an issue. Or be so minor an issue that a quick roll-down with tape is all it takes and you're good to go.

If I can manage it and have a happy, healthy household of pets like I do while working 10+ hours a day and having a very active social life with plenty of hobbies, I do not see how the mom and daughter cannot manage it with two cats. It is completely unreasonable to devote an entire ROOM to an animal. Believe me - I've been there, done that, and it does no one any favors. My bedroom has my dog's crate and my rat's cage - it is not an 'animal room'. The livingroom is the hubbub of life for human and animal, as is the kitchen. Every living space is SHARED with the presumption that HUMANS are paying the rent and humans are dishing out the food, so humans come first. Naturally, we make exceptions - like sweeping more often, toweling muddy paws off, and watching where we step.

But that's us, and our household. Two cats shouldn't be a problem. There are many people who manage a very clean, very neat, very unobtrusive way of life with two cats.

Like I said, it's called responsible pet ownership. I'm sure the woman and daughter loved their cats, but I see no other reason as to why they'd ruin and run an entire room and put the dad through such hell.

I don't blame the dad. Honestly, if they can't step up to the plate, they shouldn't have cats either. It's mean to say, but them's the cards. If they can prove themselves responsible, on-top-of-it pet owners and take the time and effort to symbiotically introduce the cats and maintain them in their lives, then Dad needs to stop being such an ass and relax.

In general, he was a jerk to say such horrible things when they were grieving. But YEARS of this? I do not blame him one second. There is such a thing as compromise, and compromise sometimes requires work and bending of wills on both parts. So does pet ownership. But, like with pet ownership, it doesn't have to be a piss-smelling hell-on-earth.

Re: Cats - How about some responsible pet ownership?
by brainrat
About litterboxes - I almost forgot to mention that sometimes the 'Alpha' cat will have monopoly of a single litterbox and the other cat will be forced to do his business either frequently or infrequently elsewhere. Then the alpha cat would, predictably, mark over that too. Usually, multiple litterboxes will fix this problem.
Re: Cats - How about some responsible pet ownership?
by NightSwimmer

Some people believe that "responsible pet ownership" means not having pets sharing the human living quarters. There are very good reasons to have this attitude -- for the pet's emotional well-being as well as the human's hygenic well-being.

Some people think that cats and dogs are just funny looking little people. They are not. They will survive in a cage, on a chain, or locked in one or more rooms of a human's house. Humans will also survive in a cage. One out of one hundred and thrity-something Americans are doing that right now. You may enjoy pretending that you know the level of happiness and fulfillment that your pets enjoy. You do not -- unless you happen to be Dr. Doolittle.

Re: Cats - How about some responsible pet ownership?
by Justaguy
If I may elaborate on that hygienic thing a little bit here. Some pet owners take their pet ownership a little too far. I once stayed at an Adult Transitions complex (i.e. for better job skills, finish my GED, learn to live independently etc. NOT a rehab center by any means.) and one of the girls who worked there would regularly bring her cats by request of the housemates. One could tell that she was very responsible with her cats, but one thing she did that I did not approve of at was her method of sharing food bowls with the cats. I mean using the food bowls that she ate out of and letting he cats eat from the same bowls. Of course she would wash them, but still. Personally, as a cat owner myself, I've SEEN where that tongue goes and once I give the cat a bowl for her to eat from, it's HERS for life. I and many other people would agree that it's just not hygienic at all to eat after animals. I should hope the LW in question here never had to put up with this kind of thing.
Re: Cats - How about some responsible pet ownership?
by SusanM

This reminds me of a conversation I was having last night about eating (OMG!) fungus. You know, portabella mushrooms. To me that is pretty disgusting but I understand that there is no real heath problem there and lots of people enjoy mushrooms.

Realistically, you could spread the fecal matter directly over the bowls and so long as you did a good job with washing them, there would be no problems.

So understand that cats sharing the owner's bowls is for you, much like eating fungus for me. It hits that inner 'ick' factor but there isn't anything wrong enough with it to pass judgment upon those who do it.

Re: Cats - How about some responsible pet ownership?
by Th Paine

Hell, our cat likes to lick our lips in bed while we sleep -- we don't have any problem with that except that it sometimes wakes us up.

I doubt there are many viruses or bacteria in a cat's or dog's mouth that would cause any harm to humans -- and it there is, we just develop immunity to them.

I did see a recent Slate story suggesting that we need to eat more shit anyway LOL

Re: Cats - How about some responsible pet ownership?
by IncogNeato
I worked in an office next to a warehouse grocery. A group of dumpster divers and/or homeless folk came up and were pulling stuff from the dumpster. One guy set a gallon of half-eaten ice cream on the ground, and shared it with his dog!
Re: Cats - How about some responsible pet ownership?
by IncogNeato
Half-MELTED, not half-eaten.
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