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26th October 2013, 08:50 PM #21
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- Feb 2010
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The longer you keep them apart I find the more likely the resident ones will get more upset,they know there are others in the house & are wondering why they can't see them, the one time I tried keeping two babes apart from the others there was more upset than when I just let them get together & sort themselves out,yep if you are a breeder it has to be done that way in case of cross infection but as long as you are around to make sure things don't get out of hand the sooner the better , have a good water sprayer close by as a good squirt can very often give you the time to sort things out if it goes to far OTT or if you have one or two residents that you know are more likely to accept introduce them first rather than all full on....... have to admit though it is the worst part of bringing more furry family in but will all be worth it......xxxx
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28th October 2013, 04:53 PM #22
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The kittens are starting to accept the MC's ok, little hissing but then it turns to growling which is a sign to separate them. My older resident cats have started fighting which is not good.
I let the MC's out of the bathroom for a roam around yesterday whilst the other cats were out of the way in the kitchen and one decided to hide in the loft! So going to have to find time to block up the loft so he can't get up there, not easy when the access is via a spiral staircase. The female MC just walked around the upstairs and then went back in the bathroom to sleep.
Groomed them on Saturday, they loved it and their fur was so soft afterwards.
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