English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have a 7 year old female and a 10 year old male. The female has always been demanding of our attention and kind of bossy towards the male. Lately her behavior towards him has gotten out of hand. She literally blocks him from getting to whatever part of the house we are in, like she will plant herself on the top of the stairs and chase him away when he tries to come up to bed at night. I'm at my wits end over her constant bullying of him. Any suggestions or advice would be appreciated!

2007-12-05 03:32:43 · 8 answers · asked by Lee 7 in Pets Cats

8 answers

My two year old female bullies my seven year old male. When we are petting him she pushes her way through so she can have the attention. We nicknamed her "me 2" since she always has to be center of attention. She also has to have food first. They also get into the little dominance fights where they have a stare down and pat each others head. She hates it when she loses.

I just bought a feliway diffuser. You should give that a try. I bought it two days ago and I have noticed a difference. They are calmer and more relaxed.

2007-12-05 04:25:12 · answer #1 · answered by bronzeartist00 3 · 2 0

I have four cats, all of whom are over twelve years old. They have been together since they were young. There are two possible reasons why your one cat is being aggressive towards the other. First is that your male cat may possibly be ill. Cats tend to turn on each other when one of the others is sick. I had one cat (no longer with us, had him put down) who had cancer; the others rejected him from the group, which led me to figure out that the outed cat was ill. The second possible reason is just as you said, your female is territorial and wants you guys all to herself. I do not tolerate any of this in my cats. If they spat (which is rare), I raise my voice slightly and let them know of my displeasure. They get it. The offender usually glares at me and his opponant and then swaggers away. I also make sure that if I step on a tail or paw or whatever accidentally, I apologize and fuss over the cat who has been hurt...I've taught my son to do the same...you'd be amazed at how well they/we all get along. Treating others -- including animals -- like you would like to be treated is where it's at with both animals and humans.

2007-12-05 04:07:55 · answer #2 · answered by Miss T 1 · 2 0

You can consider using some flower essences on her. Go to: http://www.spiritessence.com and read about their use with cats and other animals.

Dr. Jean Hovfe has a "Bully Remedy" there that might be appropriate for your female cat. It has many essences in (Bach, Rocky Mountain, etc) and should help her behave more charitably toward your male cat.

The bottle will cost about $20 mailed to you. You just shake the bottle well and put three to four drops on the fur between her ears. When you start with it you want to "treat" her four or five times a day for about a week or ten days. After that you can use it when she has incidences of bullying.

2007-12-05 03:58:39 · answer #3 · answered by old cat lady 7 · 1 0

She;s showing him ' her dominance so he'll have no doubt that she is the Top dog if you will I have 2cats and 1 mom they are all related as they were her kittens 2ys ago' but the one cat beans' bullys her sister daily as she chases her and even sits in front of the food bowl. THEY HAVE SPRAY THAT YOU CAN BUY AT A PETS STORE LIKE PET-CO' AND IT KEEPS THE CATS CALM' AND I WOULD TRY THAT...When you see it going on tell the female no no so she knows it's not right.

2007-12-05 03:50:57 · answer #4 · answered by willow 1 · 2 0

My cat sensed i became into 'diverse' whilst i became into pregnant, and he grew to develop into much extra affectionate (which i did no longer think of became right into a threat, he became right into a large cat)... he became into approximately 15-sixteen years previous, whilst my son became into born. He became into wondeful and honestly secure the baby, in no way harm him or something. Now, my undertaking with your cat isn't that that's sensing the version, with you and your spouse. yet, once you're saying that it assaults you, that only isn't a stable ingredient. Definately, do no longer go away the cat on my own with the baby or have the baby in a room the place the cat can income speedy get admission to on your newborn. i does no longer think of that it is going to possibly be a undertaking, by means of fact the cat turns into familiar with the sounds, smells and interest that the baby recieves. i could additionally, tend to think of by means of fact the youngster grows, the cat could develop into much less of a probability. I strongly recommend, going with your gut. you recognize your cat the main suitable, and you recognize what ought to be completed to guard your infant... that's stressful to contemplate, yet being arranged for the 'worse case senario' only in case, does no longer be a bad theory. I even have considered pets with new little ones, act only superb. I even have heard of others that weren't such superb outcomes. go with your gut. call your vet while you're uncertain. save an eye fixed on the baby. provide the cat interest, to show that no longer something has replaced with your love for him. do no longer attempt to entice close on the cat and infant on an identical time, that's a set up, no longer properly truly worth the baby getting scratched or bit and having the cat get scolded for his strikes. The cat could or would possibly no longer completely understand 'each and every thing' that is going on...yet I even have lived with my cat (until he died at approximately 17 years of age), I were with the aid of each and every thing with him, he became into my maximum suitable pal. i recognize that he had a love for me, only as I for him. So, provide him a great number of affection and interest and that i'm hoping and pray that it skill you may all stay mutually for a protracted time! :-) reward for you and infant!

2016-10-10 07:47:39 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Maybe try a pheromone spray or plug-in diffuser? These really do work for some households and may help keep everyone calmer.

2007-12-05 03:44:47 · answer #6 · answered by hello 6 · 1 0

How about spending time with each seperately? She may just need some extra tlc.

2007-12-05 06:23:29 · answer #7 · answered by quatrapiller 6 · 0 0

spry some water on her right after she bullys him she will stop after a while

2007-12-05 03:44:53 · answer #8 · answered by horselovernatty 2 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers