Results 11 to 14 of 14
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28th June 2013, 09:14 AM #11
It may be very daft, but I am quite sure Neevie and I have started bonding more since I talk to her... I talk to her most when she's a good girl, when we have a cuddle, when she eats - I tell her nonsense, how pretty she is, what a good girl she is, I try to make her associate my voice with good things.
On the other hand, when she's bad I ignore her, I just don't talk to her - if she's very bad I just pick her up without a word and dump her in another room, the bathroom for example, Joey. If she pees in the sink so be it, it's a sink, you can just clean it with bleach... If she tries to interrupt my cooking I lock her out of the kitchen, still without a word, calmly. If she kicks off in the living room as a result, it's straight to time out in the bathroom. She hates when I ignore her.
The key seems to be consistency, and also ensure that GOOD behaviour is rewarded by whatever he likes, and reinforced by your voice, and bad behaviour means you ignore him, he is not there, you just dump the nuisance cat somewhere where he can't be such a bother - just for a little while, time for you to do what you have to do...
Once again, I do not profess to be an expert, I am not saying it will work with yours, but that's what I did and Neevie is better now... and I don't know if that's what did the trick, I just notice that her getting better seems to coincide with starting this approach...
Neevie hasn't been in time out for at least 1 and a half months - she used to be there at least twice a day at one point. I just hope my experience can help you.
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30th June 2013, 09:00 PM #12
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I am so sorry I cant offer any advise, but you have had some really good replies. I hope things get better for you soon x
Chris X
"a cats eyes are windows enabling us to see into another world"
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14th July 2013, 01:07 PM #13
I found this article, which may help; https://www.bluecross.org.uk/1957-27...sive-cats.html Alekto- it mentions that hand rearing can cause agression so hopefully may give you a liitle insight into your piratical coon's head!
It is from a local cat charity- Joey, is there a cat charity near you that can offer some advice on Finn's behaviour?
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8th September 2013, 05:33 PM #14
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Sidney went through an very aggressive stage too when he was little, time out and being ignored seemed to be his worst fear so we used it against him shamelessly. He was scruffed and dumped, all in silence, and left until the humans were able to bear him again. A few weeks in, he was neutered. He then slowly improved over the next few months.
Taking him out for walks helped a lot - the mental stimulation seemed to make him very tired and half an hour outside saved two hours with Da Bird indoors. Try Mynwood Cat Jackets - cheap and very effective. Now we have Sidney-proofed the garden (Felisafe fencing) so he can go in and out at will - he is now being very pleasant to live with, although he is massacring the butterfly population....
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