A scratching post is a nearly indispensable item for any cat owner. It will reduce many of the headaches of cat ownership caused by normal cat behavior. Firstly, it will keep your cats from sharpening their claws on furniture, curtains, carpet, walls and door frames. Secondly, it gives kittens and energetic cats with a vigorous activity to keep them occupied. Scratching behavior is a normal and essential function too keep their claws in proper shape and can help alleviate stress. If you have multiple cats, you may find that the scratching post will become a social meeting place.
A cat scratch post can be used by cat owners to get the feline to stop scratching furniture. It also makes the cats claws duller and less of a weapon.
Cats have to scratch for their claws to stay healthy. Introduce them to a cat scratching post. Place the cat's feet on it as you hold the cat in an upright position and rub the feet on the post. Sometimes placing a toy or the scent of cat nip on the post will intice them more. Continue to encourage the cat to use the post. Eventually, it should get the hint.You don't want the cat to never have something to scratch. Their claws could become abnormally long or twisted and cause them and you problems. If your cat has a particular place he/she likes to scratch, then you could place the post in front of it and after a week or 2 put the post a little bit away from the spot. Continue that and eventually your cat will seek out the post on its own.
try training themADD:To expand on the first answer, providing scratching posts or "trees" (tall posts with several platforms) for your cat to stretch and sharpen its claws in will greatly help in stopping inappropriate scratching. Covering furniture or other items that are scratched with citrus juice, double-sided tape or even kitchen foil are all methods that will help deter a cat from scratching.Be sure that the scratch post or tree is an adequate height; when a cat sharpens its claws, it stretches and flexes all the muscles in its toes, legs, shoulders and back, so a cat will naturally seek something that is high enough to accommodate such exercises.Training a cat to use a post instead of furniture is usually very easy to do. Most cats will naturally take to a sisal-wrapped post rather than the sofa or curtains. Try placing posts next to anything that the cat likes to scratch. You can even run your fingernails down the post, to mimic scratching to entice the cat to scratch. Spraying catnip on the post also helps, as well as draping favourite toys over it.Be sure to praise your cat when he or she uses the post instead of the furniture.
No certain type of breed scratches more than another. Some cats, usually kittens, scratch more often. If your cat scratches furniture, a good investment would be buying a scratching post. Cats naturally have to scratch!
You don't feed it to them, you sprinkle it on their toys or in a toy filled with catnip for them to enjoy their kitty high. It's also good to sprinkle on their scratch post to get them to scratch the post and not your furniture.
You can't but giving the cat it's own scratching post will help. It's natural for a cat to scratch or claw the carpet as this helps remove the old claw shells/layers to reveal a new sharper claw. It sheds the old layers. One thing I have found to repel cats is citrus rinds. If the cat has just a spot or 2 on the carpet that it scratches then squeezing an orange peel in that area could work.
Cats have to scratch for their claws to stay healthy. Introduce them to a cat scratching post. Place the cat's feet on it as you hold the cat in an upright position and rub the feet on the post. Sometimes placing a toy or the scent of cat nip on the post will intice them more. Continue to encourage the cat to use the post. Eventually, it should get the hint.You don't want the cat to never have something to scratch. Their claws could become abnormally long or twisted and cause them and you problems. If your cat has a particular place he/she likes to scratch, then you could place the post in front of it and after a week or 2 put the post a little bit away from the spot. Continue that and eventually your cat will seek out the post on its own.
it's proball because one cat thinks the other will break it
Scratch Cat and Gobo
Put a sprinkle of catnip and encourage your cat to use it bring your cat to the post when it is gonna scratch something that will get it in trouble. There are 2 versions of the Emery Cat- one is the scratch pad, the other is a door hanger. Some cats prefer either horizontal or vertical scratching.
well you get a piece of wood that is 3 dimentional piece of wood and you cut it to the length you want then you get a flat piece of wood and you screw or hammer the nail to the scratch post then you get some old carpet that your cat can scratch and use a staple gun to staple the rug on the post. And there you have a scratch post. If you don't get this please ask me if you have any questions on my bio bord
A cat uses its hind legs to scratch.
Cat-scratch disease is caused by Bartonella henselae
My cat scratch me badly
Cat Scratch Fever was created on -19-03-01.
Cat scratch fever, also known as cat scratch disease, is cause by getting scratched by an infected cat. The burning sensation is caused by the inflammation of lymph nodes.
Cat scratch disease is caused by a bacteria, and is most common in children. Generally cat scratch disease (or cat scratch fever, as it is often referred) is not serious. The infection is caused by a scratch or bite from a cat. Sometimes, there are no symptoms, but other times, it results in sore and swollen lymph nodes. Cat scratch disease usually resolves itself without the need for medical treatment.
Cat Scratch Fever - song - was created in 1977-05.