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2006-08-08 05:15:39 · 27 answers · asked by meshan 3 in Pets Cats

27 answers

How to Teach your Cat To Fetch

1. The number one rule in teaching a cat anything is, don't try to teach it. This will always result in disappointment. Try to encourage your cat. Play on your cat's natural playfulness and encourage it with fuss and treats and soft expressions of 'Good widdul kittypuff!'.

2. Don't go to any expense. Invariably, your cat will be so much more interested in a passing leaf than the Super-Sparkled Jingle-Studded Fetch Ball you spent 25 minutes choosing at the pet shop. For the sake of feline fetch, a scrunched-up ball of white envelope, wrapping paper or newspaper will suffice.

It is also worth noting that playing fetch works less well if you're using a catnip-scented/filled ball - many cats will be far more interested in getting high on the catnip than they will be in getting it back to you.

3. Get the cat interested in the paper. Choose a moment when it seems to have nothing better to do than stare at a shoe or clean its undercarriage on your favourite cushion. Rustle the paper, whip it around in circles. Get your cat's attention, then...

4. Throw the paper! This part is self-working and entertaining for both parties; just sit back and grin at your cat's inability to grip kitchen floor tiles.

If your cat is interested, it will proceed to bat the ball of paper around playfully. If it's not interested, it'll probably go back to perfecting its shoe-staring technique.

5. You have hopefully achieved the most crucial step in the whole construct of feline fetch - getting the animal interested. After this, it's downhill all the way home.

6. Let the cat have its way with the ball for a while, then retrieve it and encourage the cat to follow you back to your original position by rustling the paper, making squeaky noises and saying 'C'mere pudpudpudpudpud!'.

If all else fails, you may like to try tempting your cat back with the offer of some treats. However, it is worth noting that training cats is a little different from training dogs. With dogs it is something like this: trick-treat-trick-treat-trick-treat... but cats will become bored much more quickly.

7. Once the cat has returned, fuss it, tickle it kindly behind the ears, then repeat from step three.

It may take some time, but after a while - probably when you stop trying - the cat will gleefully return to you with the ball of paper in its mouth and stare at you expectantly. You may find it takes a few days of short practice sessions for both of you to perfect the technique but, once achieved, never again will you be able to throw away a cheap envelope in the company of friends.

Experimentation suggests that a cat will be happy with any size of scrunched-up ball, so long as it isn't bigger than the cat, and not shaped like a bulldog.

2006-08-08 06:26:15 · answer #1 · answered by tempteq 2 · 8 1

Definately, but it is really up to your cat. I used a piece of fish roll with my first cat here and she would bring it back to me no matter where I threw it. The next cat I had ate it. The one after that ignored it. Since then, two other cats play "fetch" with it. They are wonderful when are into the game. Jenda, who was the second one to like the game, used to go out at night searching for pieces of fish roll she had missed and was so proud of retrieving them after such a long time, that her happy yowls would wake me up from my deep sleep. Pippin is not a retriever but loves hunting them anyway! She has feline aids, poor thing, so eating food is often painful for her, but when I make her chase the fish roll, she eats every piece.
Jenda died a month ago, but she played "fetch" for 14 years ... so it isn't about being a kitten.
Another fun game is one-on-one football. The cat is goal-keeper and you are the penalty striker. Cats love that! Then you can take turns.
I live in Japan and by fish roll, I mean "chikua" which is like a fish sausage. I think to train your cat to play fetch, you need something that smells tasty ... I know some will do it with a bit of foil or a paper ball, but usually the incentive is edible. So if no "chikua" is edible, try a bit of cooked pork sausage!
Enjoy!

2006-08-08 05:30:47 · answer #2 · answered by kiteeze 5 · 0 0

Cats can be taught to play fetch. Actually, trained to fetch is a better way of saying it. However, they tire easily and can't fetch long.

2006-08-08 05:21:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Some cats naturally like to fetch. I have one who does. She's very smart and playful and just started bringing us her toys. We'd throw them for her and she'd bring them back and drop them at our feet. She can do it 20 times in a row sometimes.
Her favorite fetch toys are mylar crinkle balls, a rabbit's foot and just crumpled pieces of paper.

You could try tossing some of those things and seeing what happens, maybe rewarding the cat with a treat.

2006-08-08 05:51:33 · answer #4 · answered by Lee 7 · 0 0

Yes is the short answer.

My 2 year old cat has played fetch ever since she was a kitten. Just recently she has gone off it, so maybe its a kitten thing?

2006-08-08 05:22:50 · answer #5 · answered by Lily 4 · 0 0

Yes! My aunt has a kitten and she knows how to play fetch. Get a toy mouse and see if your cat does anything.

2006-08-08 05:20:54 · answer #6 · answered by goofykid 2 · 0 0

ya u can, but it takes a lot of time, i'm trying to train my 4 kittens to play fetch, 2 of them fetch but the other 2 kind of get annoyed with me, the other 2 love it, i'm going to keep working with the other 2 and she if i can train them to fetch...
~kitty girl~

2006-08-08 06:31:34 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes you can. my cat Missy plays fetch although i didnt really teach her to do it. I dropped a drink bottle lid on the kitchen floor by accident and she spinted accross the floor after it. She then picked it up in her mouth and dropped it near me. I then picked it up and threw it, which she chased after and proptly put it back in the place she dropped it last time. then she looked at me as if to say do it again then......so i did. I havent known any other cat to do it but im sure if one does, other can.

2006-08-08 05:29:06 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A well-trained dog makes everyone happy, including his owner. Take a little time training him, and you'll never regret it; you'll always have an obedient dog by your side. Find more https://tr.im/feKir

By their nature, dogs are pack animals with a well-defined social order. Through basic training, you need to consistently make sure your puppy understands that you are the leader, not him. So in teaching him the basic rules, you take on the role of pack leader.

To fit into the family circle, your dog must be taught to recognize his name and such commands as come, heel, lie down and sit.

2016-02-14 23:09:16 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Im uncertain approximately fetching yet I even have heard which you will coach cats to leap with the aid of hoops basically using utilising putting the ring on the floor positioned the cat on one side and a handle on the different. get the cat to stroll for the duration of the ring to the handle. shop instruction that and daily you progression the ring up somewhat. if the cat tries to circulate around or circulate under the ring take the handle away until eventually at last he jumps for the duration of the ring. its somewhat cool, i observed a cat do i as quickly as. solid success!!!

2016-09-29 01:16:47 · answer #10 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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