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- Path: sparky!uunet!valinor.mythical.com!judy
- From: judy@valinor.mythical.com (Judy Labovitz)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.cats
- Subject: Re: rubber bands and milk rings
- Message-ID: <wToJuB1w165w@valinor.mythical.com>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 92 09:57:07 CST
- References: <4209@unisql.UUCP>
- Distribution: world
- Organization: (What? Organized??) - Mythical Computer Systems
- Lines: 58
-
- collene@unisql.UUCP (Collene Pearce) writes:
-
- > So, my question is -- is there anyone out there who has (or knows of)
- > a declawed cat which still plays with things like rubberbands and milk
- > jug rings? These are Tamora's favorite toys and I want to know if she
- > will still be able to play with them after being declawed (if that
- > becomes necessary). I suspect not, but am hoping she could.
-
- My youngest cat, Buster (3yr, spayed tortie female), is declawed in the
- front. She still plays enthusiastically with everything that she played
- with before. Which means that, after chasing a single piece of her dry
- food to make sure it's dead, she picks it up in one paw and eats it out of
- her "hand." After close observation, I've determined that she does this
- by spreading out her toes and gripping the piece of food with her pads as
- she pulls her toes together. With the exception of destroying the couch
- and the rugs, I've yet to find anything she can't do without her claws.
- She picks up bugs with her paws, fishes wads of paper out from under the
- dressers, and picks up the hard styrofoam cubes she adores with her
- paws. She even climbs some of the trees in the backyard; she gets a good
- running start (usually chasing a squirrel) and leaps up the tree and uses
- her back legs to push upward with and the front legs to keep her from
- falling backwards by wrapping them around the tree. Rough bark helps :-).
- Note that she only goes outside when I'm out there with her. She is an
- indoor cat with outside priviledges.
-
- > Perhaps it would depend on the procedure used? My vet will use
- > whichever procedure I request. What do you think? Will she be able
- > to play with them in any manner (now she picks them up with her mouth and
- > slaps them with her hands and then chases them; repeat)? Do you know
- > another kitty who does?
-
- Buster doesn't chase milk jug rings so I can't speak to them
- specifically. From your description, it sounds like your cat doesn't
- really use her claws when she plays. If she wanted to pick them after
- without claws, she would learn how - tip it sideways and slide a paw in,
- or grip it with her pads, or tuck a bit between her toes.
-
- Buster was declawed by removing the claw and claw sheath. She had no
- problems with surgery and was disgusted by having newspaper in the
- litterbox for a few days. She always entered the one with the papers
- (the one that she usually used), turned around and came out, then went
- into the other box that had regular litter in it (the other cat usually
- used this one) and performed her business there. After seeing this a few
- times, we replaced her paper with litter and she was a happy camper.
- Contrary to what others have reported, she had no personlaity shift and
- has not become a biter. Neither has the other cat (the parents had her
- declawed when I was 15) who is now 16 1/2 and "claws" by scratching along
- the spiral-bound notebooks in the bookcases.
-
- > (Please no flames about declawing. They will have no effect on my decision
- > and are a waste of bandwidth. I just don't have any "anti" values about it.)
-
- Ditto. Flame wars never change opinions, they just get people upset.
-
- Judy
- Judith A Labovitz judy@valinor.mythical.com
- uunet!valinor!judy
- I bark, therefore I am. ---- Rene Descarte's dog.
-