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Help Carrie Ann Inaba and Kit find deserving cribs for shelter cats in need of a forever home. In our first episode, we meet Blizzard, a ladies man looking for a little love.
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Did you know?
As the story goes, Louis XV, Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette were all Turkish Angora fans. When Turkish Angoras were first transported to England and France in the 1700s, they became very popular and were prized as status symbols. Only the richest cat lovers could afford them.
Cat training done properly will help you get the right cat behavior out of your cat. (As opposed, say, to proper dog behavior.)
First of all, you have to understand that cats are not human. They don’t perceive the world as we do, and they don’t think like we do. We really have to stop the bad habit of anthropomorphizing.
To hear some people talk, you’d think that their cats were just little people in fur coats. If my late cat Saki could hear them, she’d be rolling her eyes.
But to get back to cat training, the sensory world of cats is very different from ours. They can hear things we can’t, smell scents we can’t detect, and their sense of touch extends beyond their body (think cat whiskers). Their vision isn’t as acute as that of humans, but they have wider peripheral vision, and they have far better night vision.
You don’t have to cram your head into your kitty’s skull to figure out the best means of cat training.
You just have to think in terms of reward and punishment. Sentient creatures all seek pleasure and run like hell from pain (boy, do I know that one!).
So what you do is get the cat to associate its behavior with either pain or pleasure. In the long haul, positive reinforcement works better than aversive conditioning, so it makes more sense to reward your cat for good behavior than to punish it for bad behavior.
If the cat’s doing something you don’t like, simply ignore her. For instance, if the cat’s jumping up and down on your face at 4 in the morning, do not – I repeat, do not – get up and feed it. Because once you do that, then you’re doomed for life. You’ll be forever bound to get up in the wee hours to succor the demanding, wee demon. You’ll just be a sucker, and you know it.
Ignore the cat. Pretend you don’t see her, hear her, feel her. Even if the cat ratchets up her assault, stay put. Lie low. You’ve seen the footage: In the case of a nuclear attack, duck and take cover. It’s the same principle.
Although I did say that you shouldn’t punish your cat, if your cat’s doing something highly objectionable like biting your hand or tearing up your Le Corbusier couch, then you need to take immediate action.
One thing that will immediately stop a cat is to clap your hands and shout “No!” Or else squirt her with a water pistol.
No that any of these techniques ever worked with my cat Saki. If I yelled “No,” she looked at me like she thought I’d lost my mind. As to the water pistol, I gave that away to a friend with a small child.
All I can say is that in a matter of mere months, Saki had me well trained to feed her on cue.
In conclusion then, when you know what you’re doing, cat training can be fun and easy.
Today we have a post by a guest who's worked as a software engineer in Silicon Valley for more than two decades. (He's seen it all!) As a long-time cat lover and observer, he's long noticed a certain affinity between felines and software engineers.
What do cats and software engineers have in common?
Did you know? Most white cat breeds suffer from sunburn especially in the ears. This is because the fur is thinner in the ears. Application of sunscreen can be done but it is better to keep white cat breeds indoors when the sun is at its most punishing.
What an fantastic cat! Reminds me of Mr. Bigglesworth from Austin Powers before he lost his hair.
Wasn't Carrie Ann Inaba in that movie also?
Cats are smarter than dogs. You can't get eight cats to pull a sled through snow.
Does anyone know how FIV is spread?