Thanks for all the great replies. It's a her, we've already came up with a name Gaia, pronounced Guy-ah. We picked up some dry and wet food. We picked up Iams for kittens, it had Chicken and then Chicken by products before the fillers.. most the other stuff had brewers rice or corn at the top of the list. We also got a bunch of toys. We also got her a bed, and this toy box thing that she can go into and it has a scratch post on it too(with that rope stuff). We also picked up a cardboard scratch thingy that has a ball that rolls around. Hopefully her and Loki will get along fine, I'm sure he'll do fine with her.. he's a sweet dog. Thanks again and I'll see if I can get pictures posted sometime this weekend.
On Dec 19, 2007 9:53 PM, Bruce <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I did not see if anyone mentioned it (skimmed over the responses), but > spay/neuter your cat if it has not been done already. Typically when you get > an animal from a shelter that has been done and is incorporated into the > adoption cost. The female that lived under my house was spayed since she > started going into heat (then the damn thing escaped from the house and > disappeared. $100.00 down the drain). Fred is getting neutered soon. > > Mary Jo, I did not know about the sisal rope. I have a carpet scratching > post, and Fred likes to scratch everything BUT the post. I will go out this > weekend and get a different one. What are your thoughts on the large ones > that the cat can climb up on and sit on a perch? I notice that Fred likes to > sit on top of the couch and the bed and stare out the window. Seems he likes > high places where he can survey his domain, so I am sure that he would use > it, but I wonder if it would promote him using it to scratch rather than my > couch, Queen Ann chair and carpet. > > Oh, and it will be fun to see what the cat does when the sheltie grows up. > LOL. > > Thanks, > > Bruce > > -----Original Message----- > From: Mary Jo Sminkey > Sent: Wednesday, December 19, 2007 7:32 PM > To: CF-Community > > Subject: Re: getting a cat for the first time! > > >Okay, so I've 'owned' a cat as a kid but the wife and I saw a > >beautiful little kitten at the vet (it was a stray). > > How nice of you to adopt it! Here's some tips in addition to the others: > > 1. PLEASE don't declaw your cat without seriously trying everything else > first. It's cruel and inhumane and often leads to various behavior issues. > You didn't mention anything about this, but so many people do it without > even trying other options, thought I'd mention it. Particularly if you > intend to let the cat out (I don't recommend this either but of course many > people do). > > 2. So to keep your cat from clawing the furniture, provide LOTS of other > places to scratch. Best are near where you/kitty sleep and near where they > eat. The most good scratching surfaces you provide the better. The cardboard > things are definitely popular, but you should have at least two good, tall > scratching posts. Make sure they are tall enough to allow the cat to stretch > to full length, and get ones that use sisal rope, NOT carpet. Most cats > prefer sisal over carpet, and you can find many nice posts/cat furniture > these days that provide a combination. > > 3. You definitely need to feed somewhere the dog can't reach. I personally > prefer a mixture of dry/wet. It's hard to get a good dry food that has the > right nutrition that a carnivore like a cat does best on, so I mix some wet > into it at least once a day. This is particularly true for male cats, they > tend to have less urinary issues on wet food than dry. > > 4. If you can, check out the cat shows in your area. Not only are they a lot > of fun and a great place to talk to other cat owners, they are a wonderful > place to shop for your cat! They often have all kinds of great toys and > scratching posts that you can't find in stores. I found this really great > case for the litter box that makes the cat jump up onto a grate before > leaving the box (reducing the litter that gets tracked out) and is totally > dog-proof as well. They also have a household cat division if you want to > participate with your own cat. ;-) > > Enjoy your kitty! And don't fret too much if the dog doesn't get along with > him (her?) Sometimes they can be the best of friends, other times they just > learn to tolerate each other. My younger dog and the cat fight constantly, > there are times my cat looks like a lion on the hunt, because he'll lie > there waiting for the dog to come by and then pounce on him, grabbing him > around the neck, pull him over and bite and kick at him. Luckily all his > front teeth had to be removed or I'd probably have a pretty beat-up dog at > this point! > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to date Get the Free Trial http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;160198600;22374440;w Archive: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Community/message.cfm/messageid:248679 Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Community/subscribe.cfm Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.5
