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Posted by Tia Mary on October 2, 2009, 10:25 pm
I am really in a quandary with these pussycats! Cassie (Old Lady
Cat) has turned into as 24 Kt. witch with a capital "B". She has been
terrorizing poor Ivy Jane who is the world's most wimpy cat. Ever since
Cassie and I returned from Lizard Land things have gone from bad to
worse. It's gotten Ivy Jane so traumatized that she is afraid to come
upstairs for any length of time. Upstairs is where the litter boxes are
so Ivy Jane will come up long enough to take a leak but NOT long enough
to go poop. She has taken to going poop on the oriental carpet in the
dining room and it is ALWAYS almost liquid. Cleaning that up every day
is NOT fun.
So, we have -- for the second time in the last three weeks --
isolated Cassie from the rest of the cats. The first time she was kept
in the guest bathroom for three days. During that time, there was no
poop in the dining room and Ivy Jane was running around playing with
Bunnie Sue & Cheeto. We let Cassie out and the next day the poop in the
dining room started again :-(. We will be gone on a cruise for the next
week and have decided to isolate Cassie again but will give her the run
of the guest bedroom, bathroom and the computer room. She started a
horrible fight last night about midnight and ended up in the bathroom
but today I opened the doors to the other rooms and have spent several
hours with her while on the 'puter. Ivy Jane has again been playing and
hanging out upstairs and in the kitchen.
Unfortunately, Ivy Jane pooped in the dining room again this evening
and I'm not sure what is going on. I really don't look forward to
coming home in seven days to at least seven piles of dried poop stuck to
the wool carpet! I'm starting to wonder if she might have something
physically wrong so if we come home to lots of poop, I'll be taking her
to the Baby Dr. If the Dr. finds nothing physically wrong with her and
she continues to use the dining room as her litter box, then I'll try
putting a litter box downstairs. If she *still* poops in the dining
room, then she will likely be the one to end up being isolated!
Ivy Jane was already traumatized when we adopted her and I hate to
think of having to put her back into some sort of cage. If that is the
case, I'm going to see about getting a very large dog kennel so that she
has room to move around and be a bit active. I've already decided that
we will have to make room for the kennel in the 'puter room so that she
gets to have some safe interaction with the rest of the family.
I know that if cats aren't well and have very loose stool, they will
often avoid using the litter box (just when they *should* be using the
box, too)! If Ivy Jane keeps pooping in the dining room and it's very
loose stool, I need to find out if it's a physical problem or just
emotional. If she quits then we know for sure that it's an emotional
thing that was eliminated once Cassie was removed from the equation.
After spending the previous 4 years or so in a smallish cage, I'm not
sure but that Ivy Jane might prefer spending her time in a much larger
cage so that she feels safer. She's still not letting us get close to
her and only allows a little scratching on top of her head while she
waits for her canned food. I'm fine with that as I never expected her
to get really friendly. I'm just concerned that, after being with us
since early January and using the cat box properly from the very first,
she has started having such loose bowels AND making her deposits in the
dining room.
VBS -- seems like I am going to feel like a not so good cat mom no
matter what I do. I'll be saying prayers to St. Frank and want to ask
again for everyone to send "good stuff" our way in the hopes that we can
show/hide quoted text
find a happy solution to this very vexing problem. Thanks & CiaoMeow >^;;^<
show/hide quoted text
PAX, Tia Mary >^;;^< (RCTQ Queen of Kitties)
Angels can't show their wings on earth but nothing was ever said about
their whiskers!
Visit my Photo albums at http://community.webshots.com/user/tiamary
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Posted by Taria on October 2, 2009, 10:40 pm
I am learning about cats all the time. I don't know why you
just don't go ahead and put another litter box in the dining
room and see if that helps. Lily cat has a tendency to get
constipated when she is upset so we have the opposite
problem. Since it happens related to getting upset I would
think that the opposite could too. Cats are just so darned
odd to me. Hope you are able to get things straightened
out and things ease up in the cat dept. there.
Taria
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Posted by M Enneking on October 2, 2009, 11:43 pm
I'm not quite sure how this relates to quilting. I don't share your love for
cats, having been raised on a farm, where people are inside and animals are
outside. I would not have patience to clean up these messes.
Good luck to you.
show/hide quoted text
> I am really in a quandary with these pussycats! Cassie (Old Lady Cat)
> has turned into as 24 Kt. witch with a capital "B". She has been
> terrorizing poor Ivy Jane who is the world's most wimpy cat. Ever since
> Cassie and I returned from Lizard Land things have gone from bad to worse.
> It's gotten Ivy Jane so traumatized that she is afraid to come upstairs
> for any length of time. Upstairs is where the litter boxes are so Ivy
> Jane will come up long enough to take a leak but NOT long enough to go
> poop. She has taken to going poop on the oriental carpet in the dining
> room and it is ALWAYS almost liquid. Cleaning that up every day is NOT
> fun.
> So, we have -- for the second time in the last three weeks --
> isolated Cassie from the rest of the cats. The first time she was kept in
> the guest bathroom for three days. During that time, there was no poop in
> the dining room and Ivy Jane was running around playing with Bunnie Sue &
> Cheeto. We let Cassie out and the next day the poop in the dining room
> started again :-(. We will be gone on a cruise for the next week and have
> decided to isolate Cassie again but will give her the run of the guest
> bedroom, bathroom and the computer room. She started a horrible fight
> last night about midnight and ended up in the bathroom but today I opened
> the doors to the other rooms and have spent several hours with her while
> on the 'puter. Ivy Jane has again been playing and hanging out upstairs
> and in the kitchen.
> Unfortunately, Ivy Jane pooped in the dining room again this evening and
> I'm not sure what is going on. I really don't look forward to coming home
> in seven days to at least seven piles of dried poop stuck to the wool
> carpet! I'm starting to wonder if she might have something physically
> wrong so if we come home to lots of poop, I'll be taking her to the Baby
> Dr. If the Dr. finds nothing physically wrong with her and she continues
> to use the dining room as her litter box, then I'll try putting a litter
> box downstairs. If she *still* poops in the dining room, then she will
> likely be the one to end up being isolated!
> Ivy Jane was already traumatized when we adopted her and I hate to
> think of having to put her back into some sort of cage. If that is the
> case, I'm going to see about getting a very large dog kennel so that she
> has room to move around and be a bit active. I've already decided that we
> will have to make room for the kennel in the 'puter room so that she gets
> to have some safe interaction with the rest of the family.
> I know that if cats aren't well and have very loose stool, they will
> often avoid using the litter box (just when they *should* be using the
> box, too)! If Ivy Jane keeps pooping in the dining room and it's very
> loose stool, I need to find out if it's a physical problem or just
> emotional. If she quits then we know for sure that it's an emotional
> thing that was eliminated once Cassie was removed from the equation. After
> spending the previous 4 years or so in a smallish cage, I'm not sure but
> that Ivy Jane might prefer spending her time in a much larger cage so that
> she feels safer. She's still not letting us get close to her and only
> allows a little scratching on top of her head while she waits for her
> canned food. I'm fine with that as I never expected her to get really
> friendly. I'm just concerned that, after being with us since early
> January and using the cat box properly from the very first, she has
> started having such loose bowels AND making her deposits in the dining
> room.
> VBS -- seems like I am going to feel like a not so good cat mom no
> matter what I do. I'll be saying prayers to St. Frank and want to ask
> again for everyone to send "good stuff" our way in the hopes that we can
> find a happy solution to this very vexing problem. Thanks & CiaoMeow
> >^;;^<
> PAX, Tia Mary >^;;^< (RCTQ Queen of Kitties)
> Angels can't show their wings on earth but nothing was ever said about
> their whiskers!
> Visit my Photo albums at http://community.webshots.com/user/tiamary
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Posted by J* on October 2, 2009, 11:48 pm
nope, it doesnt relate to quilting other than lots of us who quilt also have
cats who are pretty good QIs. a job someone has to do and they are so good
at it.
...and with all that poop to clean up i'd forget to put OT as well.
no worrys from me tho.
glad it aint me who has to do all that depooping.
down to only one cat now. she is 18 1/2 yrs old.
only sleeps inside during the coldest part of winter.
otherwise sleeps out on the grass if dry or under the BBQ if its raining.
comes in to eat and occasionally to sit on someones lap for ten minutes or
so.
she gets weirder as she gets older.
much like we humans i think.
j.
"M Enneking" wrote ...
I'm not quite sure how this relates to quilting. I don't share your love for
cats, having been raised on a farm, where people are inside and animals are
outside. I would not have patience to clean up these messes.
Good luck to you.
"Tia Mary" wrote ...
show/hide quoted text
> I am really in a quandary with these pussycats! Cassie (Old Lady Cat)
> has turned into as 24 Kt. witch with a capital "B". She has been
> terrorizing poor Ivy Jane who is the world's most wimpy cat. Ever since
> Cassie and I returned from Lizard Land things have gone from bad to worse.
> It's gotten Ivy Jane so traumatized that she is afraid to come upstairs
> for any length of time. Upstairs is where the litter boxes are so Ivy
> Jane will come up long enough to take a leak but NOT long enough to go
> poop. She has taken to going poop on the oriental carpet in the dining
> room and it is ALWAYS almost liquid. Cleaning that up every day is NOT
> fun.
> So, we have -- for the second time in the last three weeks --
> isolated Cassie from the rest of the cats. The first time she was kept in
> the guest bathroom for three days. During that time, there was no poop in
> the dining room and Ivy Jane was running around playing with Bunnie Sue &
> Cheeto. We let Cassie out and the next day the poop in the dining room
> started again :-(. We will be gone on a cruise for the next week and have
> decided to isolate Cassie again but will give her the run of the guest
> bedroom, bathroom and the computer room. She started a horrible fight
> last night about midnight and ended up in the bathroom but today I opened
> the doors to the other rooms and have spent several hours with her while
> on the 'puter. Ivy Jane has again been playing and hanging out upstairs
> and in the kitchen.
> Unfortunately, Ivy Jane pooped in the dining room again this evening and
> I'm not sure what is going on. I really don't look forward to coming home
> in seven days to at least seven piles of dried poop stuck to the wool
> carpet! I'm starting to wonder if she might have something physically
> wrong so if we come home to lots of poop, I'll be taking her to the Baby
> Dr. If the Dr. finds nothing physically wrong with her and she continues
> to use the dining room as her litter box, then I'll try putting a litter
> box downstairs. If she *still* poops in the dining room, then she will
> likely be the one to end up being isolated!
> Ivy Jane was already traumatized when we adopted her and I hate to
> think of having to put her back into some sort of cage. If that is the
> case, I'm going to see about getting a very large dog kennel so that she
> has room to move around and be a bit active. I've already decided that we
> will have to make room for the kennel in the 'puter room so that she gets
> to have some safe interaction with the rest of the family.
> I know that if cats aren't well and have very loose stool, they will
> often avoid using the litter box (just when they *should* be using the
> box, too)! If Ivy Jane keeps pooping in the dining room and it's very
> loose stool, I need to find out if it's a physical problem or just
> emotional. If she quits then we know for sure that it's an emotional
> thing that was eliminated once Cassie was removed from the equation. After
> spending the previous 4 years or so in a smallish cage, I'm not sure but
> that Ivy Jane might prefer spending her time in a much larger cage so that
> she feels safer. She's still not letting us get close to her and only
> allows a little scratching on top of her head while she waits for her
> canned food. I'm fine with that as I never expected her to get really
> friendly. I'm just concerned that, after being with us since early
> January and using the cat box properly from the very first, she has
> started having such loose bowels AND making her deposits in the dining
> room.
> VBS -- seems like I am going to feel like a not so good cat mom no
> matter what I do. I'll be saying prayers to St. Frank and want to ask
> again for everyone to send "good stuff" our way in the hopes that we can
> find a happy solution to this very vexing problem. Thanks & CiaoMeow
> >^;;^<
> PAX, Tia Mary >^;;^< (RCTQ Queen of Kitties)
> Angels can't show their wings on earth but nothing was ever said about
> their whiskers!
> Visit my Photo albums at http://community.webshots.com/user/tiamary
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Posted by Michelle C. on October 3, 2009, 2:35 pm
J* wrote:
show/hide quoted text
> nope, it doesnt relate to quilting other than lots of us who quilt also have
> cats who are pretty good QIs. a job someone has to do and they are so good
> at it.
> ...and with all that poop to clean up i'd forget to put OT as well.
> no worrys from me tho.
Actually, she did label the subject OT--at least it came through that
way on my computer. Maybe not everyone is seeing that?
Best regards,
Michelle in Nevada
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