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Caring For Your Cat

Choosing your Kitten
Choose a lively, happy kitten. It is best if you can see the mother to check
that she is healthy and does not have and health problems that her kittens could
have caught. Your ideal kitten should have clean ears, eyes and fur. Her fur
should be 'well groomed', healthy cats would not let themselves be caught
looking grubby!! Its nose should be damp and its eyes bright. She should be
alert, have a good appetite and a moist nose. Do not choose a cat that sneezes
she could have asthma or cat flu.
Kittens should stay with their mothers until they are 6 to 8 weeks old. You
should take your kitten to the vet as soon as possible. He will check she is
well and give you advice on worming her and having her injections.
Cat belongings
Your kitten will need a basket to sleep in, a litter tray, a saucer for her food
and a dish for her water, possibly a collar
The Litter Tray: Cats are very clean creatures and may use the litter tray
without any prompting. However if your cat is a bit daft, and uses the corner of
the living room..you could try moving the litter tray to the corner of the
living room or catching her 'at it' and putting her on the litter tray. They
don't usually take long to get the message (thankfully). Once your cat is using
the tray you can move it closer and closer to the door and eventually just
outside, then into the garden, then forget it all together.
Collar: You can get your cat a flea collar or just a normal collar. You can
attach your phone number to the tag. The collar should be elasticated, so that
if it gets caught on something while your cat is out on her adventures, it will
come off. Better a lost collar that a stuck cat.
Cat Flap: A cat flap allows your cat to come and go as and when she pleases.
Sometimes next doors cat may pay a visit via the cat flap...but it can be nice
to have a visitor. Some cat flaps lock, some don't and some have special tags
which your cat wears on her collar, that make the cat flap open, so that the cat
next door can't pop in.
Scratching Post: These can help you stop your cat from sharpening her nails on
your furniture.
Food
Kittens can be very greedy...don't let them con you with that doleful look.
Kittens should have 4 small meals a day if they are younger than 12 weeks,
gradually becoming 2 meals each day if they are over 12 weeks. You can feed your
cat tinned or dried food, dried is less smelly...
You should be sure that your cat has fresh water to drink all the time, milk is
thought to give cats diarrhoea so its not a good idea to give it to them. Cats
eat grass, it helps them digest their food and helps to prevent balls of fur
getting caught in their throats (hairballs).
Grooming
Fur: Long haired cats need to be brushed daily or their coats become matted and
untidy. This is a good chance to look for fleas. Short haired cats will look
after their own coats but its still a good idea to check regularly for fleas,
tics and bites. If you do find fleas you can get powders and sprays to get rid
of them. You have to treat the cat, the carpet, the chairs and its bedding to
get rid of them properly. You can get flea collars or drops which stop cats
getting fleas. But you cannot use these on young kittens.
Teeth: You can clean your cats teeth with a soft cloth and salty water or you
can get special cat toothpaste from pet shops. Dried food helps to keep their
teethclean too.
Poorly Cats
If your cat won't eat: Don't panic..she may just be fed up with the same old
food. Try something else.
If your cat is sick: Again don't panic...its usually because shes eaten to much.
You never can tell who else has been feeding her, or how many mice there are in
the shed!!
If your cat is sneezing: This could be due to dust or hay fever, but if it
continues take her to the vet, it could be cat flu and that can be dangerous.
Bald Patches: Bald patches can be caused because of fighting and also be caused
by your cats collar, ringworm or a vitamin deficiency. If the cause isn't
obvious take her to the vet.
A poorly cat likes to curl up somewhere warm and quiet. They often like a warm
hot water bottle. You could bring her cat litter tray in for her if she is very
poorly. A poorly cat usually likes attention provided you are quiet, gentle and
don't pick her up.
Giving your cat tablets: (Lucky spits tablets out and looks at me as if I'm
mad). If you can get the tablet to the back of her tongue, you can hold her
mouth shut until she swallows it. If you are worried about her scratching you,
it is a good idea if you can wrap her in a towel. (lolol I tried that too!,
nearly needed stitches tut)
Should she/he have a family?
If you do not want your cat to become a mother or father then you should take it
to the vet before it is 6 months old. He will operate on your cat to stop it
becoming a parent, this operation is called 'sterilization'.
"But my cats a male, so we don't have problems with unwanted kittens".....Well,
apart from expecting someone else to take all the responsiblity for the unwanted
kittens, your male cat will probably spend a lot of his time fighting with other
male cats.
An unsterilized cat will want to have kittens 3 times every year, and there will
probably be a long queue of hopeful 'daddies' following her around.
A cats pregnancy lasts about 63 days. If your cat does have kittens, you should
be very quiet when you are near them or she may move them out of your way. A
mother cat, will eat about 5 times as much as she usually does.
Kittens are born with their eyes closed and do not open them until they are
about 9 days old. At about 12 days they begin to hear. When the kittens are
about 2 weeks old, the mother cat will show them how to use a litter tray
(providing you give them one). They can start eating kitten food at about 3
weeks old.
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