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computer angel posted:While we were visiting my inlaws, my husband fed a skinny dirty stray some ham and afterwards she did the incredibly intelligent tactic of planting herself outside their house and never leaving. So we took her to the vet, made sure she was fixed, and checked if she was chipped (she was, but no info). Now she's an inside cat in our house and we call her Lump after how she looked the first night we found her sleeping on the picnic table. Her belly is nude from being spayed which at first I thought meant recent surgery but now I think it's just like that permanently. She loves being inside and is incredibly easy to handle, which leads me to believe she was dumped by her previous owners which is not uncommon in our city. I kind of wanted a Ragdoll cat but I guess having a garbage one from off the street is ok too. Anyways that's my story. Garbage cat from off the street is beautiful and sweet. Congratulations and thanks for taking her in!
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# ? Aug 16, 2019 22:22 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 19:07 |
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computer angel posted:While we were visiting my inlaws, my husband fed a skinny dirty stray some ham and afterwards she did the incredibly intelligent tactic of planting herself outside their house and never leaving. So we took her to the vet, made sure she was fixed, and checked if she was chipped (she was, but no info). Now she's an inside cat in our house and we call her Lump after how she looked the first night we found her sleeping on the picnic table. Her belly is nude from being spayed which at first I thought meant recent surgery but now I think it's just like that permanently. She loves being inside and is incredibly easy to handle, which leads me to believe she was dumped by her previous owners which is not uncommon in our city. I kind of wanted a Ragdoll cat but I guess having a garbage one from off the street is ok too. Anyways that's my story. She sounds like a real sweetie You might be surprised at just how beautiful she'll become with enough rest, good food, good care, and love. Poor little thing clearly had a rough time on the street, but I'd be willing to bet that in six months or less she'll have regrown that missing hair and will be a gorgeous dilute tortie. A pox on people who abandon pets, and blessings on those who adopt them.
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# ? Aug 16, 2019 23:56 |
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computer angel posted:While we were visiting my inlaws, my husband fed a skinny dirty stray some ham and afterwards she did the incredibly intelligent tactic of planting herself outside their house and never leaving. So we took her to the vet, made sure she was fixed, and checked if she was chipped (she was, but no info). Now she's an inside cat in our house and we call her Lump after how she looked the first night we found her sleeping on the picnic table. Her belly is nude from being spayed which at first I thought meant recent surgery but now I think it's just like that permanently. She loves being inside and is incredibly easy to handle, which leads me to believe she was dumped by her previous owners which is not uncommon in our city. I kind of wanted a Ragdoll cat but I guess having a garbage one from off the street is ok too. Anyways that's my story. baka kaba posted:It's something that's been trialled here and the NHS's clinical guidance body has approved it so I'm not really worried that it doesn't do anything, it's more about if anyone's run into any complications with it, or any stories about it helping with this condition (which is apparently really common and something you just have to manage forever? poor lil dude) While it looks like the medical community is a little mixed on whether it's really effective for most things, it does seem like complications are rare, so it probably wouldn't hurt to try. Still, before I committed, I would:
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 00:08 |
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My dad brought two cats in from outside recently. I've only got a picture of one and it's horrible because he just upgraded to a smart phone recently and has no idea how to use it. I wanna pet that face
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 00:21 |
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That's a smart lookin' cat. Here's an inquisitive Tictac from way early this morning when I couldn't sleep:
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 00:37 |
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Sweetheart always seems to know when I'm taking pictures of her and gets all curious (or shy).
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 00:58 |
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Fartington Butts posted:That's a smart lookin' cat. I have not met him yet so I cannot confirm smarts. I do have this text about cat number 2 quote:Also cat #2 is in the house she is not happy
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 01:18 |
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Oh basil, you certainly have your moods.
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 02:25 |
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GenericGirlName posted:Oh basil, you certainly have your moods. This is a sleek black catte!
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 02:34 |
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Your cat's face is too big, you should swap it for one with a smaller face.
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 02:40 |
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I learned my lesson that Arm and Hammer litters are not all the same. We normally get one in a black box that's a bit more expensive than the giant orange box. This time I figured "gently caress it lets get the orange one" and it does not absorb odor in the same way and it's just The Worst. Also I love how when I've got sinus issues rear end in a top hat isn't his normal rear end in a top hat self. He curls up beside me and just lets me pet him with no claws or bites or standing on me.
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 17:07 |
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Played a video of a cheetah meowing on my phone, looked up to see this:
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 18:17 |
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seiferguy posted:Played a video of a cheetah meowing on my phone, looked up to see this: Looking for a cat friend
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# ? Aug 17, 2019 19:29 |
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LoreOfSerpents posted:You should be careful about applying results in humans for one condition to a cat with a totally different condition. It seems like research on laser therapy in cats is very sparse, let alone research specific to gingivitis. Here's a summary about laser therapy use in animals (but not cats specifically): http://skeptvet.com/Blog/2016/03/wvc-2016-the-laser-craze/ and a slightly newer version (with ads) at Veterinary Practice News. Hey thanks, I had a look through those links and I'm not surprised really, I couldn't find any info on it being especially effective for cat mouths so I was just wondering if anyone had any positive experiences. I've talked to the vet about treatment before, I mentioned the full teeth extraction and she said it's not at that point yet, so I'm just looking at ways to manage it without putting him on steroids. He's generally happy and healthy, and greedy as heck sometimes, but the inflammation always comes back eventually. So I was wondering if the laser could help with healing from that, so it doesn't flare up again as easily once the antibiotics wear off. She didn't say it was a cure, just that it can help but yeah, I'm sketchy on it and I don't want to put him through something uncomfortable, or any unnecessary anaesthetic. I'll ask her more about it next time I'm there is it me or does the google photos robot love generating these
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# ? Aug 18, 2019 00:33 |
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I'm so glad I have a friend who is a vet tech. Basil ripped his loving claw off (idk how or where) and I discovered it at 10:30pm on a loving Saturday. Thankfully he's apparently handling it correctly/well so I just need to do a regular vet appointment soon and keep an eye out for overgrooming but I've been in a state of terror since and absolutely sure this cat is experiencing the worst time of his life! Even though he's been exactly his regular self. Cats are dumb as hell yo
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# ? Aug 18, 2019 13:09 |
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Cats' thing about hiding their distress is so goddamn frustrating!baka kaba posted:is it me or does the google photos robot love generating these Mine keeps generating "Meow Movie" and it's not like I need to be reminded I take a lot of pictures of my cat.
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# ? Aug 18, 2019 17:04 |
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My 20 year old girl has added blind/visually impaired to her list of ailments today. The vet changed her hyperthyroid dose which could have a knock on effect on her blood pressure which then can cause blindness. She's coping OK so we'll just keep an eye on her till tomorrow when I can ring the vets. She was briefly on blood pressure medicine but it didn't seem to do anything except make her bite the crap out of my thumb (pills are not welcome). If it's back to blood pressure she'd better give me something that isn't a pill.
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# ? Aug 18, 2019 18:49 |
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My cat is currently in Texas with my ex, and we want to bring her to me in Ohio. Are pet transportation services worth looking into? It seems cheaper and easier; neither of us would need to take a round flight, or deal with the crazy drive.
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# ? Aug 18, 2019 19:49 |
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bawfuls posted:*snip* Gonzo and Louis is still trouble though. He seems to stalk Louis more persistently and aggressively than he ever did Wilson. Today was a good example. Gonzo spent a good 10 minutes creeping up on Louis on the bed and stalking around him. He got so close so slowly that my SO thought he was trying to cuddle for a moment. But then he pounced and smacked Louis in the face before she intervened. He backed off but didn’t run, stayed put and cried a little before walking away. Louis spends so much of his time hiding, we aren’t sure how to help these two acclimate. bawfuls fucked around with this message at 05:46 on Aug 19, 2019 |
# ? Aug 19, 2019 04:54 |
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I figured I'd try tin foil to keep my little gremlin off the kitchen counter. So is my next option to build an elaborate contraption made of tape that I can take off easily to use the counter until he learns not to be there, or just give up and let him help me cook dinner every night?
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 05:58 |
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Check out scat mats. They're just spikey plastic pads you can put down. Lots of varieties. There are also static charge mats that give a light zap
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 06:14 |
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I'm trying to play with both my of cats. but 1 of them is more shy and the other just runs up to whatever i'm playing with. wand, red light or feather, anything really. The other shy cat will just stare and watch from afar. The only times I get to her to play is when the other cat is out of sight. They get along great and play with each other fine so I'm ???
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 10:38 |
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We gave up on trying to keep Fyodor all the way off the counter. Instead we came to an agreement that one part that doesn't really get used for food prep is the "Fyo Zone" we'll give him treats there and he has his little bowl of greens that sits there. He'll happily hang out in the zone while other kitchen stuff happens.
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 11:44 |
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Shroomie posted:So is my next option to build an elaborate contraption made of tape that I can take off easily to use the counter until he learns not to be there, or just give up and let him help me cook dinner every night? I used to get a product called Stickyfoot to dissuade my guy from getting on the mantle. It was a double-sided wide tape, just sticky enough to be unpleasant to his paws without harming him. It worked pretty well and he learned fairly quickly so that I didn't have to keep using it long term. I don't see that brand name around anymore, but I do see "cat training tape" on Amazon and other places, and it looks like much the same thing. Maybe give that a try?
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 16:03 |
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Had a bit of an.. eye opening scare this weekend. I was on my way out the door with my girlfriend to go to a show and our power kind of flickered, then about 30 seconds later our building's fire alarm started going off. A loud, screeching tone with a voice over the intercom started playing saying to take the stairs because the elevators are off. Trying to deal with 100 thoughts at once I immediately realized "I have no idea what to do." My girlfriend has MS and can't take stairs and our apartment people put us on the 7th floor for some reason. I run down the hallway and there's a bunch of my older neighbors (also disabled) who are shuffling into the stairwell because apparently the procedure for people who can't take stairs is to just... hang out in the stairwell. So I ran back into my apartment, my GF was trying to wrangle up our cats to take them outside. One cat bolted under the couch, and my other cat Leela (who I've mentioned before ITT is extremely skittish and anxious, especially around loud unexpected noises) was basically petrified. She locked in place under our couch and would not move. Now I was reasonably sure that this wasn't actually a fire and the system was tripped by a power outage, however wasn't positive so we started trying to put the cats in carriers so we could GTFO. She got Finn in a carrier but Leela would not budge and basically hissed/growled any time she got near her. I really have no idea what the procedure is here. I obviously wouldn't want to leave one cat in my apartment and hope for the best, but Leela went into a panicked state and even under the best of circumstances she's hard to get in a carrier when it's, say, time to go to the vet. I guess this is a scenario where I have to just put on a heavy jacket and grab her, risking getting scratched/bitten because I'm not leaving her in a burning building, but it really highlighted how loving unprepared we are for a scenario like that. It did end up being a power outage in the area that caused it to happen. I'm glad it happened now instead of waiting for a real loving fire to find out these things. At one point I ran down 7 flights of stairs to check outside and find out what was going on. I was very jealous of the one lady who I saw coming out of the building with her cat strapped into a harness, calmly walking her through the grass into the courtyard.
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 20:13 |
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I put some comfy towels in my carrier and have it next to my office desk. My guys hang out in it all the time and it makes shoving them in there a lot easier when it comes time to travel. I find my cats will overcome most scary noises if I just shake the treat jar as well. Makes it a lot easier to find the buggers when they're in some new hiding spot. The stairway thing is correct procedure, btw. Elevators are disabled and return to the ground floor on the alarm going off. Anyone unable to make it down the stairs should wait in the staircase for help. Fire code should make it so that it's the safest part of the building to be in. Firefighters make their way up and can evacuate anyone waiting.
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 20:21 |
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IronDoge posted:I put some comfy towels in my carrier and have it next to my office desk. My guys hang out in it all the time and it makes shoving them in there a lot easier when it comes time to travel. I find my cats will overcome most scary noises if I just shake the treat jar as well. Makes it a lot easier to find the buggers when they're in some new hiding spot. I should do that, we usually take them out in advance before vet visits but otherwise they're in the closet. And I appreciate this info, I did some research afterwards and yeah this seems like the best thing to do in that scenario. I figured it was more for visibility than anything if the firefighters are coming up the stairs but it makes sense that the stairwells are supposed to be the safest part of the building too.
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 20:29 |
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Toss a towel over them if you can. If you cover their head they'll usually freeze up enough to be manhandled a bit. That's what the feral cat professionals do at Tiny Kittens. Of course, they do not have fire alarms blaring and complicating things but having a thick towel between flesh and claws is always going to be a good idea if your cat is having none of what's going on. Also I cannot stress this enough: Top loading carriers are well worth the purchase! You can just open the top and dump them inside, towel and all, and there is no fuss trying to shove them into a hole they don't want to go into. I think my roommate almost lost a finger trying to get Ender to the vet when he was in a lot of pain because he had one of those front-loading only carriers and even with three adult people we could not get that cat into that carrier when he did not want to go in it.
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 20:30 |
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mistaya posted:Toss a towel over them if you can. If you cover their head they'll usually freeze up enough to be manhandled a bit. That's what the feral cat professionals do at Tiny Kittens. Of course, they do not have fire alarms blaring and complicating things but having a thick towel between flesh and claws is always going to be a good idea if your cat is having none of what's going on. These are good pieces of advice. You could also get a pair of elbow-length heavy leather welding gloves. Mine were less than US $20, and they've been great to have. I keep them by the front door, and neither tooth nor nail gets through them. My guy's carrier is also permanently on the floor in the back bedroom, with the door open and a comfy towel inside. My guy carries his toys to it and puts them inside.
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# ? Aug 19, 2019 20:51 |
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All of this really good advice, and it's worth keeping it in mind for the future. Lucky is harness trained; the one time we've had a fire alarm, he froze staring at the door trying to figure out the sound. I grabbed his harness and he was like???? ok??? Slapped that on, and evaced. It sucked since 13th floor, but it helped to know that my intended escape plan works fine. I've got Toaster now, but Toaster is so much more carrier friendly than Lucky I'll just scoop him in his carrier. The whole routine takes a few minutes max. It's unlikely to ever matter, but do be prepared!!!
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 00:31 |
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This is reminding me that we have only one carrier. it's top loading and big enough for them both but Basil gets so skittish I couldn't imagine putting them in together or peach tolerating him being so freaked out.
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 01:39 |
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Another thing that might be worth thinking about for anyone who'd have to go down a bunch of stairs to evacuate with cats would be to choose a carrier that has an adjustable shoulder strap. If you can sling the carrier across your body with most of the weight on your back or hip, it gives you more use of your hands and better balance and mobility getting down the stairs.
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 02:08 |
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So Neela loves licking condensation off windows. Like, she will scale our five food bed frame to lick the small panel up there, and climb in the tub after we’re done to lick the tub (waiting patiently outside the curtain until we’re done). I know for a fact she gets enough water because she’s constantly going to town on the cat fountain. She’s been like this basically since we got her. Is this some weird instinctual thing?
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 16:20 |
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Cinnamon does the same thing. When we get a bottle out of the fridge she'll hop up onto the table to lick the condensation off it. I guess it must be part of their heritage as desert animals that free-flowing water might be hard to come by so condensation on rocks etc is an alternative source of water.
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 16:23 |
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ProperGanderPusher posted:So Neela loves licking condensation off windows. Like, she will scale our five food bed frame to lick the small panel up there, and climb in the tub after we’re done to lick the tub (waiting patiently outside the curtain until we’re done). I know for a fact she gets enough water because she’s constantly going to town on the cat fountain. She’s been like this basically since we got her. Is this some weird instinctual thing? Yeah cats love novel water sources. It's just a cat thing. Peridot loves drinking from the shower but is convinced that if I ever spot her doing it I will be So Mad At Her so she tries to do it while I'm not looking. If I take too long leaving the bathroom after a shower she will yell at me from the doorway until I leave so she can drink the shower water without me knowing she's drinking the shower water. Cat logic!
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 16:25 |
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One of my cats loves drinking the water from the shower left on the metal track the shower doors are on. She'll sit there and wait for us to be done with the shower in anticipation. Also, yesterday I found a piece of poop (under the bed, not the litterbox, of course...) with a big piece of plastic in it. Like, the label from something, or some packing tape. About two inches long. Likely the same cat as above, as I've seen her chewing on plastic and ripping tape off boxes. I'm frankly a bit amazed, and quite a bit worried that she's going to hurt herself. Guess I need to be more careful with the recycling...! Rotten Red Rod fucked around with this message at 16:43 on Aug 20, 2019 |
# ? Aug 20, 2019 16:40 |
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ProperGanderPusher posted:So Neela loves licking condensation off windows. Like, she will scale our five food bed frame to lick the small panel up there, and climb in the tub after we’re done to lick the tub (waiting patiently outside the curtain until we’re done). I know for a fact she gets enough water because she’s constantly going to town on the cat fountain. She’s been like this basically since we got her. Is this some weird instinctual thing? Aleta loves licking the side of a frosty can. She is also crazy.
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 17:43 |
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Mel will only lick water off of berry cartons. You know, like those plastic cartons that a serving of strawberries come in. I'll wash the berries in the carton to make the whole thing wet, and then once I've eaten the berries I'll put it down my desk and Mel will spend equal parts chewing as hard as she can on the plastic and licking the residual water off it. idk but it makes her happy so
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 18:12 |
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Any suggestions on a cat with BO, preferably one that doesn’t involve giving it a bath? One of my cats has begun to smell like an armpit.
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 18:25 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 19:07 |
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Ballz posted:Any suggestions on a cat with BO, preferably one that doesn’t involve giving it a bath? One of my cats has begun to smell like an armpit. Have someone else give it a bath?
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# ? Aug 20, 2019 18:26 |