desh ([personal profile] desh) wrote2008-12-24 12:02 am

(no subject)

Wow, snap mousetraps are bloody!

[identity profile] dagoski.livejournal.com 2008-12-24 06:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, most of the time it just isn't a problem. Plus, cats aren't boundary oriented. Our current batch of cats get super worried when a door separates them from us. They once crashed in the bathroom door to save Michelle from the bath. They're just that loyal. The boundary I enforce is the door to the outside. I try to observe when my indoors/outdoors cats come and go and intercept them with whatever wiggling thing they have in their mouths. Really, though, I don't have many behavioral problems with my cats.

[identity profile] goob712.livejournal.com 2008-12-24 07:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Train cats?

You obviously aren't familiar with felines.

[identity profile] goob712.livejournal.com 2008-12-24 08:56 pm (UTC)(link)
When I first got my cat, I did try to keep him out of the bedroom. He just wasn't having any of that though. He would scratch and scratch at the door until he could get it open. (it didn't have a latch on the inside)

He just HAD TO BE in the room I was in.

It's easier to train a cat to keep away from smaller areas like countertops or tables because there's usually not a pressing need in his mind to visit those places. But I've seen my cat who KNOWS not to jump on the counter do it anyway when the noise of crows on the roof carries through the vent. He hears the birds and is so overcome that he forgets he's not allowed there.