The litter container isn't really the problem. It's if the cat decides to do its business outside the box -- I don't want the floor/wall to be damaged as it was in the past.
We're going to be getting another cat this fall, after sadly saying goodbye to our previous cat a few months ago. This question is a practical one. With cat #1, the litter boxes were in a spare room with a carpet. Well, over the years, cat #1 wasn't always very good at using the boxes, and as...
Honestly, it's not necessary. We let our cat go two years without a trim. She used scratching posts. And, every so often, the outer shell of a claw falls off, with a new nail underneath. The vet can always do it when you visit. As the previous poster said, a nail can start curving back into...
Our last cat, who we sadly had to put down recently, was one year old when we adopted her. In a couple of months, we will probably be ready to get a new cat. We're thinking about bonded siblings so that they can keep each other company. From what I can see, these pairs are usually available...
Easiest test is to not give the dry food and see what happens.
I've read that dry food can be problematic because it absorbs liquid in the stomach and expands. This is going to sound crazy, but a cat's stomach is around the size of a ping-pong ball.
When one adopts a cat, the cat often has a pretty siily name. I have to laugh at some of the names that are used. Anyway, did you rename your adopted cat? How did you get the cat used to it? Always call it by that name, and eventually the cat associates the name with itself?
Maggie was our first pet and we couldn't have done any better. She didn't scratch furniture (or us), or pee on someone's bed, or get into "trouble." She was extraordinarily friendly. She'd walk up to any stranger in our house and wait to be petted. Her entire life was deciding which bed or sofa...
We just went through this the other day, so I am dealing with the same feelings. What is hard to accept is that a cat has a limited lifespan. If a cat makes it to 20, that is a miracle. It doesn't happen often. If your cat was 15, she was already blessed to have lived a long life as far as...
A few days ago, we put our Maggie down. She was nearly ten, an FIV+ rescue cat who lived almost all her life in good health. A few months ago, she started throwing up food. Once 11-12 pounds, she was down to 8. We went to one vet, then another, and just got medications to help with nausea...