nobody knows how long your cats can get along it mostly depends on if one of your cats is Territorial or aggressive.
Whether or not a Bengal cat will get a long with a boxer will depend on the cat and the dog. Dogs and cats all have their own personality, some get along and some do not. There are many homes where both dogs and cats live and get along with one another.
They should get along eventually. How long it will take is unknown. I would keep them in separate rooms with the doors closed.
Do you mean a tabby cat (striped)? Not all cats get along together and any time you introduce cats there's going to be a time of hissing and growling before they adjust. So yes, a tabby cat Can get along with another cat, but it's no guarantee.
You can't force 2 cats to get along you just have to let them do their thing and work it out themselves.
Answer Something that happened when he/she was a kitten, an old cat can still remember.cats are very smart also cats can hear from a mile a way.cat has along meire
I think as long as the poodle and the cat get along and they can be trusted to play together and what not, then its perfectly fine.
any cat can get along with another cat, it does not matter what colour they are
Usually, yes, as long as they get along. Easiest to adopt two who get along along already from a shelter. They will keep each other company when you are away from home.
If your cat is hissing at strangers you can't stop your cat from hissing at them. The only thing I can think of that would stop a cat from hissing at someone is letting a cat get to know a person long enough that the cat isn't afraid of the person, and will therefore get along with him/her.
A cat can infect another cat with Pasteurella multocida and other bacteria by a bite. The long teeth of the cat push these normal oral bacteria beneath the skin where they often cause an abscess, or pocket of pus. The cats originally get the Pasteurella in their mouths from the mother cat.
Not every dog gets along with a cat. But some do. You should get the cat first if you want a cat and a dog. The dog should be a puppy when you get it.
Some cats, regardless of gender, spray/pee if you get another cat whether they're fixed or not. Is your cat really territorial and protective, one woman/man cat? Then they may protest against you getting another cat--or they might not, if they like that other cat. Technically, a spayed female cat should not induce hormone-based behavior from a male cat, though it would definitely help if the male was fixed as well. If the chances are that your current cat will get along fine with another, I'd go ahead and take the risk of getting a spayed female--because after all, you're saving another life if you adopt another cat.