Hi everyone
Whiskey is 9yo neutered male (had him for 7 years as a solo cat, we adopted him from a shelter after he was dropped off there by previous owners). He never liked other cats - always hisses and yowls at the site of other cats even if he sees them through a solid barrier.
Bunny is 6mo female cream tabby. She’s a stray kitten and is blind. I found her by the shed of the hotel we are staying at and have been feeding her since May. She was totally not used to humans and would always run away and not let be touched until 3 weeks ago she decided that it was fine to be petted. 2 weeks ago I snatched her, took her to the vet, brought her inside and have been working on getting Whiskey (the resident cat) to be ok with having Bunny in our family.
Bunny has not been spayed yet - the vet had her on oral antibiotics and eye drops to get the eye infection clear and we will schedule her spay after we see an ophthalmologist to find out if they would recommend any kind of surgical procedure to help with her sight so then she would only go under anesthesia once.
Cats have been in two separate rooms with the door closed for 2 weeks. Each has their own stuff - litter boxes, dishes, toys etc.
When we take Whiskey out for walks and have to carry him outside through the room Bunny occupies he would hiss and yowl.
Bunny doesn’t do anything - gets out of the way into a hiding spot. She doesn’t meow or hiss or growl back, just gets out of the way.
I had a couple of supervised visits of Whiskey into the room Bunny is at, he would sit under the desk, watch her, hiss and yowl. A couple times when Bunny probably didn’t realize Whiskey was in the room or where in the room he was and she gotten closer Whiskey hissed and yowled and chased after her. He didn’t injure her but he was chasing her and she just quickly ran into the hiding spot. I am able to distract Whiskey with toys or brushing not to fixate on Bunny with so-so results - it mostly works but Whiskey is still very much on guard.
i tried swapping the rooms and putting Whiskey with me and Bunny with my husband but Bunny is still very skittish when it comes to anybody else and Whiskey’s room is a little bit more challenging to navigate for her without sight. While I had the swap going it took Whiskey a whole day to stop being on guard from Bunny’s smell. Bunny was unfazed by the swap except for the new environment she had to learn.
yesterday I observed something odd. I took whiskey in my hands and brought him into Bunny’s room. I just held him and showed him Bunny. He hissed and yowled. Bunny got to her safe spot as usual. I took Whiskey back to his room.
Then I took Bunny and brought her to Whiskey’s room and showed her to him. Whiskey didn’t try to attack, didn’t run at us, didn’t make any noise.
I brought Bunny back into her room.
Then I had the door open for a little bit. Whiskey was standing about 4 feet away from the entrance and I was holding Bunny while sitting on the floor. Typically if she was by herself and Whiskey saw her that close he would have charged at her swatting and yowling. But he didn’t do any of those things while I was holding her.
I’m quite confused with Whiskey’s reactions and whether to continue to try to get them to know each other and getting along. Bunny being blind and not vocalizing is adding to the challenge. She can meow and chirp but what I figured is from her time living in the wild she learned when another cat hisses she needs to hide and makes herself invisible.
Us living at a hotel also means limited space and basically 0 ability to modify the space as well so that’s an additional challenge.
I am curious as to why Whiskey would not react to her at all while I was holding her vs her being by herself and if that could be used to my advantage in the introduction process?
And also how can I teach this blind kitten to stand her ground when Whiskey goes into “get off my lawn” grumpy mode? Or how to have her communicate in any sort of way when Whiskey is involved.
it seems that there is this huge communication barrier between them and i’m not sure how to get them to understand each other.
i could just foster Bunny, take care of her medical needs and have someone adopt her but I really like and enjoy this little cat and would love for Whiskey to accept her into our home. Its been rough few weeks with no improvements that I can notice and I want the best for both cats.
If anyone got any advice or creative suggestions, those would be most welcome.
Whiskey is 9yo neutered male (had him for 7 years as a solo cat, we adopted him from a shelter after he was dropped off there by previous owners). He never liked other cats - always hisses and yowls at the site of other cats even if he sees them through a solid barrier.
Bunny is 6mo female cream tabby. She’s a stray kitten and is blind. I found her by the shed of the hotel we are staying at and have been feeding her since May. She was totally not used to humans and would always run away and not let be touched until 3 weeks ago she decided that it was fine to be petted. 2 weeks ago I snatched her, took her to the vet, brought her inside and have been working on getting Whiskey (the resident cat) to be ok with having Bunny in our family.
Bunny has not been spayed yet - the vet had her on oral antibiotics and eye drops to get the eye infection clear and we will schedule her spay after we see an ophthalmologist to find out if they would recommend any kind of surgical procedure to help with her sight so then she would only go under anesthesia once.
Cats have been in two separate rooms with the door closed for 2 weeks. Each has their own stuff - litter boxes, dishes, toys etc.
When we take Whiskey out for walks and have to carry him outside through the room Bunny occupies he would hiss and yowl.
Bunny doesn’t do anything - gets out of the way into a hiding spot. She doesn’t meow or hiss or growl back, just gets out of the way.
I had a couple of supervised visits of Whiskey into the room Bunny is at, he would sit under the desk, watch her, hiss and yowl. A couple times when Bunny probably didn’t realize Whiskey was in the room or where in the room he was and she gotten closer Whiskey hissed and yowled and chased after her. He didn’t injure her but he was chasing her and she just quickly ran into the hiding spot. I am able to distract Whiskey with toys or brushing not to fixate on Bunny with so-so results - it mostly works but Whiskey is still very much on guard.
i tried swapping the rooms and putting Whiskey with me and Bunny with my husband but Bunny is still very skittish when it comes to anybody else and Whiskey’s room is a little bit more challenging to navigate for her without sight. While I had the swap going it took Whiskey a whole day to stop being on guard from Bunny’s smell. Bunny was unfazed by the swap except for the new environment she had to learn.
yesterday I observed something odd. I took whiskey in my hands and brought him into Bunny’s room. I just held him and showed him Bunny. He hissed and yowled. Bunny got to her safe spot as usual. I took Whiskey back to his room.
Then I took Bunny and brought her to Whiskey’s room and showed her to him. Whiskey didn’t try to attack, didn’t run at us, didn’t make any noise.
I brought Bunny back into her room.
Then I had the door open for a little bit. Whiskey was standing about 4 feet away from the entrance and I was holding Bunny while sitting on the floor. Typically if she was by herself and Whiskey saw her that close he would have charged at her swatting and yowling. But he didn’t do any of those things while I was holding her.
I’m quite confused with Whiskey’s reactions and whether to continue to try to get them to know each other and getting along. Bunny being blind and not vocalizing is adding to the challenge. She can meow and chirp but what I figured is from her time living in the wild she learned when another cat hisses she needs to hide and makes herself invisible.
Us living at a hotel also means limited space and basically 0 ability to modify the space as well so that’s an additional challenge.
I am curious as to why Whiskey would not react to her at all while I was holding her vs her being by herself and if that could be used to my advantage in the introduction process?
And also how can I teach this blind kitten to stand her ground when Whiskey goes into “get off my lawn” grumpy mode? Or how to have her communicate in any sort of way when Whiskey is involved.
it seems that there is this huge communication barrier between them and i’m not sure how to get them to understand each other.
i could just foster Bunny, take care of her medical needs and have someone adopt her but I really like and enjoy this little cat and would love for Whiskey to accept her into our home. Its been rough few weeks with no improvements that I can notice and I want the best for both cats.
If anyone got any advice or creative suggestions, those would be most welcome.
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