The momma cat should not be spayed until she has weened her kittens, at approximately 8 weeks from birth.
A cat will stop lactating when she is no longer nursing her kittens. A cat will know when to stop her kittens from nursing when she is ready.
It is recommended to spay a mother cat when the kittens are weaned, but be sure to check when your vet is most comfortable to spay her. The spay will not cause her to behave any differently to her kittens, but is advised to wait until the kittens are on solid food as the procedure can disrupt, or even stop, milk flow.
No, unspayed cats will continue to go through heat cycles throughout their lives until they are spayed. Spaying a cat involves removing the reproductive organs responsible for heat cycles, preventing them from going into heat.
Female cats can continue to have kittens throughout their entire reproductive life, which typically ranges from about six months to ten years old. However, spaying a female cat can prevent further litters and is recommended to control overpopulation and maintain the cat's health.
It is recommended to wait at least 8 weeks after the kittens are born before spaying the mother cat. This allows her body to recover fully from giving birth and nursing. Consult with a veterinarian to determine the best timing for the spaying procedure.
A cat will stop lactating when she is no longer nursing her kittens. A cat will know when to stop her kittens from nursing when she is ready.
Yes if the baby is too big. Please Please Please get your cat/kitten spayed. as this helps prevent lots of unwanted kittens and it can stop your cat from getting some cancers aswell.
It is recommended to spay a mother cat when the kittens are weaned, but be sure to check when your vet is most comfortable to spay her. The spay will not cause her to behave any differently to her kittens, but is advised to wait until the kittens are on solid food as the procedure can disrupt, or even stop, milk flow.
If the reason you want to know that is a female cat drives you crazy during the spring and summer, the answer is GET HER SPAYED. Kittens only two months old who weigh only three pounds are ready for the surgery, but as long as the cat is OK with general anesthesia, it is never too late.
Because there is an increasing amount of kittens being put into shelters and having to be put down, because the owners were not smart enough to get their cat desexed. It also helps stop the males urinating in places you'd rather he would'nt, and it makes him less aggressive and territorial.
after the kitten were weaned because if she was spayed before the kittens were done weaning then she may stop producing milk or the chemical in the gas the vet uses to to put the cat to sleep before surgery could be passed through the milk to kittens poisening them
Have you had them spayed?
Mother cats typically stop producing milk for their kittens when the kittens are around 8-10 weeks old.
No, unspayed cats will continue to go through heat cycles throughout their lives until they are spayed. Spaying a cat involves removing the reproductive organs responsible for heat cycles, preventing them from going into heat.
A Mother cat would normally stop feeding their kittens around 6-8 weeks after giving birth to them, the mother cat would stop feeding them and start to push them off because they grow teeth and bite the nipple and after a week of not feeding the nipple should dry up and when you squeeze the nipple nothing should come out thanks, llew
Female cats can continue to have kittens throughout their entire reproductive life, which typically ranges from about six months to ten years old. However, spaying a female cat can prevent further litters and is recommended to control overpopulation and maintain the cat's health.
You can't.