tahnan: It's pretty much me, really. (Default)
[personal profile] tahnan
So everyone's been asking: how are the cats? Are they happy? What are they like? Tell us everything!* So here's the news.

Rebo is easy. She mostly lies on the couch or the chair in the corner, with brief bouts of lying around somewhere else; the lid of a cardboard box has become a favorite ever since we put a little catnip in it once. (She does love the 'nip.) She's a little skittish when let out of the living room; she tends to see someone walking and run for her life back to familiar ground. But she's also happily exploring, poking around in the bedroom even though that's Zooty Territory.

She's extremely good-natured, and is quite fond of petting, as well as lying on keyboards. She came to us declawed, which (a) is terrible, especially given that she was found as a stray, and (b) suggests that she's had a little more experience being used to humans. It also means that clawing isn't a behavior problem, and while I hate declawing and would never do it to a cat, I must admit it's kind of a relief to have one less thing to worry about with her. Generally, though, there's little to worry about. She eats well, she plays well, she sleeps a lot, she purrs. She squeals a little when picked up and cuddled in arms, but she has grown accustomed to laps. Foodwise, she's pretty easygoing; she didn't complain at all about the switch from shelter-provided kitten food to adult cat food; she didn't like the hard tuna treats, but the moist chicken and moist seafood went over well. She does have a tendency to eat from the floor instead of her bowl—that is, she'll scoop a piece of food out of the bowl and then eat it—but that's fairly endearing.

She's also a mighty huntress; more than once, she's spontaneously pounced on a toy mouse, batted it around, caught it in her mouth, and meowed triumphantly. And if my students showed half the energy on the homework that she shows in the chasing and capturing of glitterpoms, I'd cancel the final and give them all A's. Her favorite interactive game, though, is "soccer goalie". It involves either a toy mouse or a foil ball; she'll lie there and watch it, but won't get up until you toss it right in front of her, at which point she'll bat it away and wait. No chasing, just waiting for it to come and batting it away. (If only we had a dog who could fetch, the two of them would be like a perpetual motion machine of animal cuteness.)

Zooty is more of a problem case. Among the things she likes: biting, high places, more biting, dragging her water bowl around. (Michelle suspects she prefers water in motion to still water, which is why she pushes it before drinking from it. On our list of things to get: a fountain.) She's athletic; leaping and climbing are not problems. Last night, I looked up to see that she had leapt up to the shoulders of my hanging shirts, balancing herself on the hangers there while pulling herself up to the storage shelf at the top of the closet. That's since been closed, and she has to content herself with the bed, the back of the couch, and the cat tree on top of my dresser. When sleeping in bed with us, she tends to climb up on whichever of us is on our side, that being a higher point than someone's back. Shoulders of people sitting have also proved popular. Today she's discovered a new perch as well, though when she sits on them it does make it hard for Michelle to see her computer. Like Rebo, she's fond of removing food from her bowl, though in her case that means scooping out an entire pawful and then eating them one at a time. Or sometimes scooping out a pawful, eating one piece, and scooping out another pawful. And at least once, scooping out a pawful and then eating from the bowl.

There are, conversely, a lot of things she doesn't like. High on the list is being held while a dropperful of antibiotic is forceably fed to her; I've got the scratch marks to prove that one, and additional evidence can be seen in the way her face is streaked with pink medicine that escaped her mouth while she squirmed. (Related to the antibiotics, she's not fond of having her nose wiped with a tissue. It's easier to wait for her to sneeze, and then wipe everything else in a one-foot radius.) We'd like to reward her for good behavior, like holding still while we medicate her, but that's another point where finding things she likes has proved difficult. We've tried hard tuna treats, moist chicken treats, moist seafood treats, canned tuna cat food, rendered chicken fat, boiled chicken, smoked turkey, goat cheese, cream cheese...nothing. Rebo came in and ate the tuna after she abandoned it (she did paw a little of it onto the floor first). I put the piece of turkey in her bowl; she pulled it out, pushed it away, and went back to the food in her bowl. Similarly with the cream cheese, which Michelle put on a piece of her cat food—she just decided to push that piece of cat food away.

Fortunately, they've pretty much learned to coexist; there's some mistrust, but they can walk past each other civilly, and have no problem being in the same room within sight of each other. This bodes well for the future.

*Actually, no one's been asking. But even a few weeks of cat ownership have taught me Garner's First Law of Modern Cat Ownership: Blog about your cats even if no one particularly cares.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-18 10:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] 42itous.livejournal.com
Okay, so I wasn't actively hoping that you'd post more about the kitties, but I'm glad to read about them. Since there is no cat ownership in my immediate future, I like to learn vicariously about other people's cats.

More photos, please?

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-18 11:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] otherwise-nyc.livejournal.com
Yes, what is cat blogging with NO PHOTOS?

Glad to hear they are mostly settling in; if you compare it to how long it takes to feel completely comfortable when we, as humans, move into new digs, it doesn't seem so long that it's taking.

And surely I'd climb up high on things if I weighed less than ten pounds.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-19 12:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mamagotcha.livejournal.com
Are you still having to medicate her? Have someone show you how to wrap her in a towel... much less traumatic to all involved.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-20 12:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tahnan.livejournal.com
We've tried towel-wrapping, but apparently we're doing it wrong, because she escapes fairly easily. (The first digging of claws is enough to make me relax my grip, so any escape is a quick escape.) I'll hit YouTube to see if there's Kitten Origami to be found.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-19 01:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aspartaimee.livejournal.com
oh cats. everyone cares, we just try not to see too eager because it seems too stereotypically neurotic.

gus, my 22lb pile of pudding, is also the kind of eater that likes to knock things out of the bowl. he's kind of a dick that way, mostly because he leaves a mess and won't eat it even when no kibble remains in the bowl. he also screams that he's starving, and knocks shit over all the time because he has a poor concept of how big and ungainly his body really is. but he's all mine. i have no problems with him and treats, unless you count his tendency to find them and tear open the pouch or get the lid of the canister because when it comes to crack he's downright diabolical. good thing he's too lazy to kill me while i am sleeping, otherwise he would be typing here and not me.

i took this detour to me to actually say that my pal's cat is picky about treats, but loves fish flakes. i think cosmic cat has tuna flakes, which is my favorite brand of catnip because the cat is all high looking.

sounds like you have a pretty good adjustment period going on as 1) neither cat is bleeding and 2) you haven't stepped in piles of cat poo conveniently located to maximize the message IE like the place on the floor where your feet land when you swing them out in the morning or near the toilet so it's cold and squishy and poo-y when you make adjustments to your person.

huzzah! cats!

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-20 12:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tahnan.livejournal.com
Yeah, we're worried about the biting, but ultimately the cats are able to sit near each other with only minimal low growling and no extensive hissing, and no clawing at all; and Zooty's otherwise pretty good, fairly sociable, and so forth. Can't really complain.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-19 01:40 am (UTC)
cnoocy: green a-e ligature (Default)
From: [personal profile] cnoocy
We are all about the faceful of antibiotic here at chez Freak.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-19 05:10 pm (UTC)
jadelennox: Sleepy cat (c-cat)
From: [personal profile] jadelennox
And the thumbful of meat.

Speaking of which, it's time to go home and get a thumbful of meat.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-20 12:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] colorwheel.livejournal.com
hey, i didn't know crowley played KoL.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-20 12:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tahnan.livejournal.com
Hey, I didn't know you'd get KoL references. (I certainly don't.) But are you sure that Deborah was talking about cats when she said she was going home for a thumbful of meat?

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-19 08:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lemurtanis.livejournal.com
My cat Anadem is a dried shrimp treat whore. Might help. Also, I know it looks awkward as hell, but if you grab 'em by the fold of skin between their shoulderblades/over their neck, they'll be passive long enough to get them into the towel or blanket.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-19 02:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cecilmom.livejournal.com
Odd as it sounds, one of my cats loved canned pumpkin. The vet said it was fine for her (she usually ate about 1/2 t at a time as a treat). How did I find out she loved pumpkin? She would beg whenever you opened a can, assuming it was a can of tuna. I got into the habit of putting a little of whatever was in the can on my fingers and offering it to her, saying "You don't want this Yo, it's _____." Only when I did that with the canned pumpkin, I almost lost a finger she was so excited to eat the pumpkin off my index finger. :)

Tepi (our shelter kitty) only eats dry food off the floor. He knocks it out of the bowl, chases it around the room, and then eats it. Well, about half the time he eats it. The other half, he hunts it and then abandons it on the floor where we step on it later, making a big mess. Gotta love them kitties...

And yes, we definitely wanted to hear about the cats! I would have asked, but the new baby is kind of keeping me busy. :)

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-20 12:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tahnan.livejournal.com
Hey, I want to hear about the new baby! (Perhaps if I actually added your journal--well, now I know it exists, after all.) And honestly, some time when you're not exhausted, I should give you a call and talk work things with you.

We might give canned pumpkin a shot on Zooty. To be honest, I'm pretty much prepared to open everything in the kitchen that isn't actively poisonous to cats, lay it all out in a line on the floor, and set her in front of it. She's got to eat something in there.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-11-19 06:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] laurenhat.livejournal.com
Yay, cat blogging! Cat posts should include cute cat photos, though. :)