The mother cat will instinctively hiss and try to keep its kittens away from it just to allow them to learn how to live alone, in case something happened to the mother, and to give them independence.
Its the mothers way of weaning her kitten. She's letting her kitten know it's time to move out of home, even though it seems like a simple push out the door! Cat's don't have the same love for their children as humans do, once the kitten is old enough to fend for itself, it becomes just another cat with which they have to compete for food and territory an mates. I guess in some circumstances they might remain friendly toward each other, maybe if you had the mother spayed? Answer: general info Yep, it's that good old shove out of the nest. Once the kitten begins to display more independence you should find that it's mum settles down and they become friends again. I even had a cat that used to babysit for the new babies when his mum was having a pee/food break from her 3rd litter. He thought it was fabulous and purred contentedly, the babies weren't too confused and mum had some quiet time away from them. In any case, I had 2 boys and I'd loved to have been able to hiss & spit at them and chase them away when they got old enough to look after themselves. In fact, I tried and they STILL came back home...!
Maybe they have outgrown the period when she has to feed them and they insist on getting a little milk,
Its normal for older cats to hiss at younger ones when they get annoyed.
Establishing dominance and that she doesn't want to mate.
It is not going to live, birth defect
New born kittens hiss at you, even when their eyes are closed, because they don't know you and you scare them. It is a natural protective reflex. Older kittens hiss at you for the same reason. You scared them or startled them.
Well, it depends. If the cat is hissing at you without a good reason, then you should correct them by saying no firmly and maybe shooing them away. However, your cat may hiss at another cat or dog (which in most cases, should be corrected). Sometimes a mother cat will even hiss at her kittens if she feels they are misbehaving. When this happens, don't correct her. Mother kitty knows best! :)
When female cats are carrying kittens, they naturally become very protective over their kittens, even if they are not born yet. A male cat does not need to do anything provocative but still he can get hissed at. If he comes too close he might even get scratched. This is natural behaviour; males often learn to avoid pregnant females.
when your cat hiss does it hurt them
Your cat is probaly scared of you, try giving it treats from your hand, playing with it , dont pet your cat until it seems calmer around you. If your cat is angry it might hiss and it might hiss because a stranger is at your house and is trying to pet your cat.
Snake
yah!.... a cat
hiss
Hiss can be either a noun or a verb.Noun: The hiss from the tape deck was very annoying.Verb: The cat tends to hiss at anyone he doesn't recognize.
My client witnesses a hermaphrodite cat have kittens, it looks mostly male from the outside but delivered kittens.
'with two kittens' describe the cat. So, you should write 'is sleeping'. But if you mean that all three of them are sleeping, write 'A cat and his two kittens are sleeping'.
kittens is little cat(s)