you had to fine the mom
First of all, keep the mom cat comfortable, fed well, and clean. The same goes for after the kittens come. Second, you'll need to prepare for the kittens. Make sure the bed/box or wherever the mom cat is staying is big enough for herself and for her kittens. Keep the bedding clean as well.
They care for kittens the same way your house cat cares for her kittens.
A Kittens Tail Moves When The Kitten/Cat. Is Scared Or Angry.
If the question is "Do kittens make messes", then the answer is yes, and Mom cat cleans them up, until she has trained the kittens to use the litter box.
Mom cats often adopt another cat's litter, especially if the mom recently gave birth. For young kittens, that's okay BUT mom will need more food with protein (e.g. a good dry and wet food). However, 12-week old kittens should NOT be nursing. Separate the older kittens from their "adopted" mom and get them onto dry food.
NO.
It depends on the cat because sometimes she'll shoe them away herself but she could keep them.
A blue cat called nicole waterspn who can get very dangerous and angry more angry then you can imagine
No -- it's quite unusual for a mother cat not to clean her kittens. This may be a problem -- or just an idiosyncracy. Either way, I'd have a chat with my vet and see if this represents a danger to the kittens or their mom.
All the kittens will be orange. (Orange is carried on the x chromosome, so all the females will have orange genes on both of their x's and the males will have it on the only x they have.) If they are both carrying dilute, the kittens could be cream.
A cat who has not recently had kittens cannot nurse. But if a cat just recently weaned one litter, and a new kitten is brought, she may be able to start producing milk again. It is not uncommon for a mom to accept another cat's litter--- maternal-mothering instinct is powerful.