I've had my kitten 2 1/2 months now - she's very playful and loving and healthy. I have 2 questions.
1. I currently live in Singapore and it is the most cat hating country in the world. I need her to wear a collar, she is a complete indoor cat and I keep her away from the front door at all time but I'm afraid if she runs out I will never get her back - she hasn't attempted this before but we all know cat's personalities. She absolutely HATES wearing a collar and keeps trying to eat the little bell and name tag on it - she loses her mind when I try to put it on her. I have her microchipped but I highly doubt anyone here would bother bringing her to the SPCA if she was lost - how do I get her used to the collar??
2. There is only very basic kitty litter here, is there anything safe that I can buy at the supermarket that will help with odor control. I clean solids daily and wash it out every other week but would like to add some odor control???
2006-11-17
14:47:23
·
8 answers
·
asked by
Jonela
3
in
Pets
➔ Cats
It's a safety cat collar so it will open if she gets caught on something and there's nothing at all like tidy cat crystals or anything - just regular tidy cat litter.... nothing with odor control.
2006-11-17
14:56:01 ·
update #1
for the collar, put it on, and leave it on. after a few days, she won't even notice it. when you first put it on, wrap her in a towel if you need to, and then give her some treats or catnip right after, to distract her for a few minutes. cats have a very short attention span, so if you can get her past the initial few minutes, she will probably calm down. for safety, you should use a collar made for cats, that will release if the cat gets hung by it.
and i would recommend baking soda for odor. you could use vinegar as a spray or wipe for the sides of the box sometimes. don't use bleach.
2006-11-17 14:58:42
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
2⤊
0⤋
By cleaning out solids every day do you mean just the stool? By very basic, do you mean just the plain clay litter? Leaving the urine soaked clay litter to be changed out every other week will cetainly leave a cat urine odor. If it is a clumping litter that makes the urine forms lumps, then you might try adding some baking soda. This is a good odor controller. Still, if it is just plain clay litter and not the clumping kind, you might want to consider changing the litter completely more often.
2006-11-17 16:40:59
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
it's good that she's wearing a safety collar. but if it bothers her so much, it's not worth having on her. when you open the door, kinda put her far away from the door. then by the time your out, she wont even have reached the door.
ur 2nd questions kinda tough. i'm gonna have to say that until singapore makes new kitty litter, u might have to stick with what u got, or keep searching.
2006-11-17 15:18:20
·
answer #3
·
answered by iLove 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
i might propose giving your cats a greater effective high quality nutrition if possible. Deli cat isn't formulated for kittens, so its no longer desirable. I constantly fed my cats Meow blend and different greater decrease priced nutrition, yet my tabby began getting fat! Then my new kitty might throw up the different day. I even have when you consider that switched to Iams digestive care with Lamb and Rice, and that they like it. My long haired (new) cat does not throw up in any respect anymore, and my tabby has slimmed down. nutrition makes a extensive distinction. i think of Iams, Eukanuba, and Nutra are stable meals and that they make kitten formula too. in case you extremely won't be able to have sufficient money the costly nutrition, a minimum of do 0.5 and 0.5 blending a miles less costly nutrition with a reliable nutrition. And use kitten nutrition :) in case you have hairball subject concerns, there is hairball therapy attainable (malt) which you supply the long haired cats the different day or so. they are going to lick it off your finger or maybe off a plate or something. It tastes like fish so as that they like it.
2016-10-04 02:23:27
·
answer #4
·
answered by vishvanath 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
You can take it off at bedtime. In the morning before you feed her, put it back on. It becomes a daily ritual for the cat. Taking the collar off at night rewards the cat and putting it back on in the morning teaches discipline.
Baking soda.
2006-11-17 14:53:11
·
answer #5
·
answered by ROBERT L O 4
·
1⤊
1⤋
If it's not too much trouble then move but, if it is I suggest you just take off the collar because most cats when they don't like them they try to "rub" them off so they sometimes get hooked onto something and become strangled.
2006-11-17 14:54:01
·
answer #6
·
answered by emy10120 2
·
1⤊
1⤋
get her a collar without the bell and stuff like that .. all you can really do besides that is just put it back on if she gets it off .. eventually she will be used to it. good-luck
2006-11-17 15:02:30
·
answer #7
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
take the collar off...it annoys her, my cat almost got strangled
from a collar....do they have tidy cat crystals...
2006-11-17 14:50:02
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋