My boys loved the Lily’s Christmas Dinners!I had a week try of tails ( the cat version can’t remember the name sorry) it was stews, pate etc and Nala couldn’t get enough of it! Could t afford to keep it up! So back to her normal food but I have been gettin her the little tins of weekends lol she had the Lilly’s Xmas dinners!
They had them reduced in sainsburys yesterday! I’ve bought a mixture of mini tins for her to tryMy boys loved the Lily’s Christmas Dinners!
Can you show the bowls please I need a new one for Madam.My furry babies seem to love their new feeding bowls. They are designed to prevent whisker fatigue which I'd never heard of until my son (a very dedicated pet owner) told me about it. They do genuinely seem much happier eating from a dish like this than the narrower metal ones they had before and it's so cute seeing them lined up eating together.
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I got them from amazon last week so they should still be available. They come as a set of three with the little circular silicone mats. The grey mat was from amazon as well, it was about £15. There is one that's twice the price of that for what seemed like the same product so I'm glad I found the cheaper one!Can you show the bowls please I need a new one for Madam.
What beautiful cats
Yes please would be interested also, wonder if we could get them as raised bowls it seems to be better for their digestive system tia. Thank you will go and lookCan you show the bowls please I need a new one for Madam.
What beautiful cats
I did see similar singular bowls on raised platforms when I was looking on amazon so they definitely are available.Yes please would be interested also, wonder if we could get them as raised bowls it seems to be better for their digestive system tia.
This is why I will never ever leave tattle.I have had cats all my life and had not heard of whisker fatigue until I read it here. Apologies I can’t remember who originally posted it to credit them. My big cat has been a bit weird with his eating and after Googling whisker fatigue I immediately started feeding him on a wider plate and he’s perked up instantly. And yes apparently whisker fatigue causes sensory issues , stress and pain.Ive read once that a plate is better because a bowl hurts their whiskers dont know how true that is
So I have two boys, got the kitten when my other cat was a bit over 1 year old. The initial plan was to do the proper introduction with keeping the kitten in one room, then introducing through glass door first etc but that went out the window immediately since my cat was too curious and clawing at the door where the kitten was. We actually ended up just letting them meet each other immediately. There wasn't any hissing but my older cat was freaked out, scared at first, then attacking the kitten. Then for the next few weeks/months (can't remember) it was the same as with yours, he was playing so rough with the kitten! He was also grooming him sometimes but mostly attacking him at every opportunity. We were only really intervening when the kitten was meowing when being attacked or it was just getting extremely rough.Hiya, I’m sorry to trouble you all but I was wondering if it was okay to ask a question for some advice/reassurance from an experienced cat owners.
The backstory is that I have a two year old boy Orion. A real cuddly boy and a proper lap cat. Well 2 weeks ago I picked up my new baby an 8 week old Ragdoll girl who i have named Toast She is the most lovable kitten ever, and is just wonderful too.
I wanted to find out what you all thought about when I should intervene when they are playing.
The breeder of the ragdoll brought her over to ensere he was going to a good home and opened the carrier in my living room and let the kitten out. Orion hissed and grumbled but watched curiously so i was told it was a good sign. I know this is not the norm and I’m worried this has caused harm as it’s not what is advised for introductions.
Toast goes to a separate room to sleep and Orion gets full roam of the flat at night and when she’s sleeping during the day but separated by a baby gate. And now that it’s week 2 I’ve removed the gate and now i’m letting them spend supervised time with each other when im in my flat. There is never any hissing or growling whatsoever between the two of them now, but sometimes Orion follows Toast around, watching her, then pounces on her and it all looks so rough!! Orion sort of pins Toast down and bites her (not hard, he’s never hurt her or sent fur flying), normally on the neck or tummy area and kicks at her with his back legs (as they do!) and then tries his best to lick her, especially her bum. She squeals and yells something awful.
I think Orion is being a bully and trying to tell her who’s boss but Toast is still a bit weary of him. I’ve been trying to distract them by creating a loud noise and sepating Toast for a few minutes to let them both cool off. But I’m still terrified Orion will hurt Toast! So I just wanted your advice on what you think I should do. It's hard to tell the difference between playing and fighting and my fear is that I'm mistaking playing for fighting, and vice versa! I dont get the feeling that Orion is being aggressive, he is being very dominant though in my opinion!
1. Should I just let them get on with it and not intervene?
2. Is this completely normal and will it settle down over time?
3. Will it get better?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!! I know it's only been two weeks but I live alone and I'm finding it all so overwhelming and think I've made the wrong decision. Most nights my mental health declines to a low because of all my emotions.
Thanks!
Totally agree with this, what would be weird for us (without clawsSo I have two boys, got the kitten when my other cat was a bit over 1 year old. The initial plan was to do the proper introduction with keeping the kitten in one room, then introducing through glass door first etc but that went out the window immediately since my cat was too curious and clawing at the door where the kitten was. We actually ended up just letting them meet each other immediately. There wasn't any hissing but my older cat was freaked out, scared at first, then attacking the kitten. Then for the next few weeks/months (can't remember) it was the same as with yours, he was playing so rough with the kitten! He was also grooming him sometimes but mostly attacking him at every opportunity. We were only really intervening when the kitten was meowing when being attacked or it was just getting extremely rough.
After a while, the kitten got slightly bigger and they are good friends now. They both attack and chase each other. The kitten is still much smaller than the big boy tbh but they play together. So it definitely gets better. It doesn't sound like there's anything to worry about with your cats.
It's only week 2 for you and it sounds like they are just playing so try to supervise them as much as you can and maybe intervene if it's getting very aggressive. If they're playing,cats usually tend to stop every so often to take a breather. If it was a proper fight, they wouldn't be stopping and it would be escalating, i think.
Some of my friends cats didn't get on for about 6 months and were fighting to the extreme and now are great friends, so I think you're safe with yours if they're already not too bad after a couple weeks. Your boy is probably just trying to show who's the boss
Mine eats Aldi. I’ve got him all sorts but he either licks all the jelly off (he won’t have food in gravy) or he ignores it completely. At least it’s cheap !God I love cats.
I’m interested though, what food do you all feed yours? I have a 16 year old, 3 and 1 year old. All snipped boys and house cats.
Can anyone offer me an insight on this? I tried Lily’s Kitchen but holy hell it’s expensive.
My oldest cat is a female and the two ginger toms absolutely love body slamming her. She's tiny but they know to only do it onceHiya, I’m sorry to trouble you all but I was wondering if it was okay to ask a question for some advice/reassurance from an experienced cat owners.
The backstory is that I have a two year old boy Orion. A real cuddly boy and a proper lap cat. Well 2 weeks ago I picked up my new baby an 8 week old Ragdoll girl who i have named Toast She is the most lovable kitten ever, and is just wonderful too.
I wanted to find out what you all thought about when I should intervene when they are playing.
The breeder of the ragdoll brought her over to ensere he was going to a good home and opened the carrier in my living room and let the kitten out. Orion hissed and grumbled but watched curiously so i was told it was a good sign. I know this is not the norm and I’m worried this has caused harm as it’s not what is advised for introductions.
Toast goes to a separate room to sleep and Orion gets full roam of the flat at night and when she’s sleeping during the day but separated by a baby gate. And now that it’s week 2 I’ve removed the gate and now i’m letting them spend supervised time with each other when im in my flat. There is never any hissing or growling whatsoever between the two of them now, but sometimes Orion follows Toast around, watching her, then pounces on her and it all looks so rough!! Orion sort of pins Toast down and bites her (not hard, he’s never hurt her or sent fur flying), normally on the neck or tummy area and kicks at her with his back legs (as they do!) and then tries his best to lick her, especially her bum. She squeals and yells something awful.
I think Orion is being a bully and trying to tell her who’s boss but Toast is still a bit weary of him. I’ve been trying to distract them by creating a loud noise and sepating Toast for a few minutes to let them both cool off. But I’m still terrified Orion will hurt Toast! So I just wanted your advice on what you think I should do. It's hard to tell the difference between playing and fighting and my fear is that I'm mistaking playing for fighting, and vice versa! I dont get the feeling that Orion is being aggressive, he is being very dominant though in my opinion!
1. Should I just let them get on with it and not intervene?
2. Is this completely normal and will it settle down over time?
3. Will it get better?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!! I know it's only been two weeks but I live alone and I'm finding it all so overwhelming and think I've made the wrong decision. Most nights my mental health declines to a low because of all my emotions.
Thanks!
Someone else here definitely had this issue before, sorry I cannot remember who. I haven't but have you tried just keeping the cat away from the dog walkers totallly? even maybe not letting them inside if that would be possible?I’ve also come here for adviceI have done so much research and currently working with my vet but the progress is slow
Has anyone’s cat has stress related urinary issues? My boy has been put on anxiety medication (and very expensive food to avoid any blocking) and it seems to be working but at times needs to be increased temporarily as it stops working. I assume it’s because he gets more stressed and I’m planning on asking the vet about it too
Im starting to think the increased stress is caused by our dog walkers as he was fairly good until they showed up after Christmas again. He’s not keen on meeting new people unless it’s on his terms so introductions probably aren’t going to work. I’m planning to get one of those pet cameras to see if there’s anything they do that he particularly doesn’t like, but does anyone have any thoughts or experiences with these sort of issues?
Unfortunately they have to come into the house to get the dogs as one of them isn’t totally keen on walking with “strangers” (even though she sees them frequently)Someone else here definitely had this issue before, sorry I cannot remember who. I haven't but have you tried just keeping the cat away from the dog walkers totallly? even maybe not letting them inside if that would be possible?
have you tried feliway plug ins ? they can reduce anxiety (doesn't work in all cats though)Unfortunately they have to come into the house to get the dogs as one of them isn’t totally keen on walking with “strangers” (even though she sees them frequently)it means they walk past my room where the cat normally hangs out
I’ll move the dog leashes down by the door and see if that at least reduces the amount of traffic on the days the dogs are feeling a bit more cooperative and come to the doors themselves though. Haven’t thought of that so thank you!
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