Brand new furniture becomes trash in months. Gotta mop up streaks when she decides to hide behind the couch and not drink her water. Get woke up in the middle of the night when fatty decides she didn’t eat enough.

I could sit here and type for a hundred years and not even come close to airing out my frustration. :p

God help me.

  • @garbagebagel@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Put scratching posts (both vertical and flat) near the areas where they are doing this. Redirect when you see them doing it in the wrong spots, and you can get sprays to make certain areas more/less attractive for scratching. They also might want more play time. Scratching is normal cat behaviour but there are ways to give them healthy ways to practice it.

    • @kernelle@lemmy.world
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      1417 days ago

      If you’re buying one with rope, buy one winded vertical and one with horizontal winding. Mine hates the horizontal ones, but then absolutely loves vertical windings.

    • @theangryseal@lemmy.worldOP
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      116 days ago

      I have sprayed her with water, ran her off, put up scratching posts right in front of it, only to look over and see her scratching around it.

      • @TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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        16 days ago

        You have to teach them what No means. Just like any other animal. And when they’re young, not when they’re seven years old.

        • @HellsBelle@sh.itjust.works
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          116 days ago

          You can do it when they’re seven years old. You just have to be persistent with it. I’ve taught older cats to come when I whistle and to pay attention when they’re doing wrong stuff.

          I have to wonder if maybe she’s not lonely. Maybe a kitten/cat buddie would help her release some of her pent-up furniture/door frame aggression.

  • @swampwitch@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    When our new kitten decided her favourite scratching post was the doorframe outside the bathroom, we went ahead and bought one of those hanging scratching mats to nail over it.

    Saved the doorframe, and have a happy kitten.

    • FuglyDuck
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      116 days ago

      Has there been any conclusive study that shows raw feeding actually helps anything- and more importantly, helps enough to overcome the very real risks involved?

      • @Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.works
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        115 days ago

        I’ve been raw feeding for over decade. The health of my cats massively improved. The ones that have been raw fed right from the get go are the healthiest I’ve ever been owned by. One of my cats, the vet said was the “most beautiful specimen he’s ever seen” (yes he used that terminology lol and all my cats are just mutty rescues) and said he was incredibly healthy.

        I’ve gotten more food poisoning from supermarket food than I ever have off raw cat food, which is to say never in that time. We use a high quality local business that specialises solely in raw feeding.

        With regards to research, just bear in mind that the pet food industry is a multi-billion dollar industry with vested interests in maintaining the status quo. There’s also plenty of evidence to show that, as an industry, there’s a lot of dodgy stuff going on and that its causing huge health issues for pets, including deaths. I believe there’s been several documentaries on it but I haven’t looked this info up in many years.

        I’ll edit this with some studies once I’m on my PC and not my phone because it’s annoying to do with a phone keyboard.