Well, there are places where you can get your kitten neutered for cheap. They are basically like chop-shops -- they don't provide any regular veterinary care. They just do spaying/neutering. Your local ASPCA, Humane Society, or AC&C (Animal Care & Control) can refer you to one.
But your kitten is going to need lifetime care from a qualified, reputable veterinarian. When you get a new kitten, you are supposed to bring him in for an initial checkup and shots, and then he will need a regular checkup and shots every year from then on.
So, since you're going to need a real vet anyway, if you can afford it, you should definitely get your kitten neutered at an established veterinary clinic/hospital -- not a spay/neuter chop-shop. I have heard some Horror stories about those places, about the shoddy work they sometimes do, that results in newly-spayed female kittens' sutures oozing or opening up and the like. Neutering is, of course, a much less complicated procedure than spaying, so since you have a boy cat, the chances of them messing it up are much lower.
But still...the bottom line is that you get what you pay for. Having your kitten neutered at an established veterinary clinic might be more expensive, but chances are they're going to do it properly. Whereas if you have your kitten neutered for a bargain-basement price...well, chances are you're going to get bargain-basement results.
If you Google "find a veterinarian," you will find quite a few websites that will help you find one in your area. I have included links to five of them.
The feline neuter is one of the simplest surgical procedures performed in all of veterinary medicine. The cat is fasted over night so that anesthesia is performed on an empty stomach.
Once anaesthetised, the hair is plucked or shaved from the cat's scrotum, then cleaned with an antibacterial wash. The scrotum is opened with a small incision and the testicles are brought out. The cords are either pulled free and tied to each other or a small suture is used to tie the cords and the testicle is cut free. The skin incision on the scrotum is small enough so as not to require stitches of any kind.
Females - spay
Males - neuter
6 months
Cats remain fertile all their lives or until they are spayed/neutered. If you do not want kittens, the only 100% guaranteed way to avoid their conception is to spay/neuter your pets.
i dont think so you have to suggest to your pet to have kittens or puppies depending on what you have. They will not breed on their own.
I think you should ask them or someone who knows about it about that.
Yes, and I call the international news services. To neuter a doe means to remove the uterus, which removes any developing fetuses. Plus, a rabbit having kittens is also newsworthy, unless you posted your question incorrectly.
Definitely. I would never recommend doing that. It would be cruel to the kittens. If you have a litter of kittens and keep all the boys and girls, neuter the boys or something. --- Breeding sibling cats increases the chance of recessive genetic defects. Not all cats carry them, and this is why breeders are able to inbreed cats without defects through careful breeding.
Neuter
The word "Lied" in German is neuter.
A synonym for neuter is sterilize.
Cats can have up to 5 litters a YEAR. it's usually more like 3 or 4. Each litter can be from 1 kitten to 10 or more. The average is 4-6 kittens per litter. Cats have kittens as long as they live. Each kitten in a litter has kittens. Each of those kittens has kittens. = According to humane sites one un-spayed female cat and one un-neutered male cat and their offspring results in 420,000 kittens in 7 years. = It takes a male cat to produce each of those kittens. So spay AND neuter.
synonym for neuter is : sexless, spay. Neuter means not having either set of the reproductive organs. Neuter refers to neither masculine nor feminine.
Cats are not available through this web site, no. Cats are considered "chattels" and so can be bought outright if someone wants to sell one. A typical price for purchase of a cat from a shelter is about $100 - $150 US, which includes medical check, vaccination, and spay or neuter -- in the case of kittens, generally as a certificate for spay or neuter once the cat is of age.
Yes, the noun 'pie' is a neuter noun, a word for a thing that has no gender.