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Conference misery::feline_v1

Title:Meower Power is Valuing Differences
Notice:FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY
Moderator:MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO
Created:Sun Feb 09 1986
Last Modified:Tue Jan 11 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5089
Total number of notes:60366

1590.0. "String-eating kitty" by SWAT::COCHRANE (I never blink.) Wed Jul 27 1988 19:55

    I am having a problem with Niniane, now a active 9 month old kitten.
    She likes to chew string, actually more than chew, eat!  Anything
    that is a sting or a tie, be it on the laundry bag, my nightgown
    or a ball of twine, she eats it!!! I try to keep as much as I can
    out of reach, because I know if she gets some wrapped around her
    intestine she can be a sick little kitty (or a dead little kitty),
    but she gets into the gosh darndest places, and just when I think
    I've got everything out of reach, she finds something new!  I already
    found a good size piece of string in the litter box-definitely used-
    and I don't know how she swallowed it in the first place.
     
    How can I stop her?  It's very frustrating, she won't listen to
    reason.....
    
    Mary-Michael
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1590.1"Teething Kitty"?!?AIMHI::BOYKOWed Jul 27 1988 20:057
    Just a thought---
          maybe your kitty is having "teething" problems.  I know my
    cat love to chew shoelaces, elastics, hair ties, and raw hide.
    I got her one of those soft plastic chew toys.  She uses it
    quite frequently.  Maybe her teeth are bothering her, or its
    instinct!??
    
1590.2Aja used to do that....JAWS::COTEfeelin' kinda hyper...Wed Jul 27 1988 20:0614
    Aja used to be a string junky also. She once got deathly sick
    from it and we took a midnight run to the vet's. I honestly
    didn't think she's make the night, she was that sick.
    
    Anyhow, there wasn't much they could do except watch her for a
    couple days and examine the 'poop du jour'. All things should
    pass and soon the string did...
    
    Luckily, it was a pastime she outgrew (although she still loves
    to suck on a wet towel....).
    
    Edd
    
    
1590.3Kitty-proofSTAR::BARTHWed Jul 27 1988 20:1510
    Tristan doesn't so much eat string as play with it.  We've simply
    had to make our house cat proof for him.  We always put any string
    like object away in a closet or a closed room.  We keep the door
    to our study closed so there is always some place to put things
    that could be dangerous.  We've also put a child-proof thingy on
    the door to the cabinet that contains the trash can, so they can't
    get anything out of there.  Sometimes prevention is easier than
    training or curing.
    
    Karen, Tristan and Tenzing.
1590.4Is playing OK?WITNES::MACONEWed Jul 27 1988 20:585
    Re: .3
    
    Is there a problem with the kitties playing with the string as long
    as they don't eat it?  I hope not since we have strings tied in
    convenient spots around our house for Oscar and Porty to play with.
1590.5CIRCUS::KOLLINGKaren, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif.Wed Jul 27 1988 22:545
    Re: .4
    
    Could they chew a piece off or get the whole thing loose?  Then
    there is a danger.
    
1590.6Caution...KOALA::FAMULAROJoe, ZKO3-2T43, DTN381-2565Thu Jul 28 1988 17:089
    Caution:

    A friend of mine has a cat that swallowed string.  She took it to the
    vet who told her never to pull on the string unless you know that its
    only swallowed or in the process of swallowing a very small piece. 
    Pulling might cause cause internal damage to the cat if the string got
    knotted.  Let the cat pass it out either end on its own.  Kitty lube of 
    some sort might help.

1590.7CIRCUS::KOLLINGKaren, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif.Thu Jul 28 1988 18:346
    Re: let it pass out of the cat on its own.
          
    I have also heard that pulling can be very bad (from either end),
    but if I noticed a string I'd take the cat to the vet.  It could
    already be tangled internally.
    
1590.8Blue plate specialMEMV01::BULLOCKHulk's REAL name is Terry!Fri Jul 29 1988 15:0811
    .2:
    
    "Poop du jour"????!!!!   Believe me, I recognize the seriousness
    of the base note, but I am sitting here in my cube laughing my head
    off at that one!!!
    
    (I may have that done up in cross-stitch!!)
    
    Now wiping tears from my eyes even as we speak,
    
    Jane
1590.9And "poop du jour" it was indeed...SWAT::COCHRANEI never blink.Fri Jul 29 1988 18:109
    re: .2  
    
    I thought it was pretty funny too, and it's my kitty with the problem!!
    The only drawback was the particular piece of string was nearly two feet long
    when she passed it, and it suprised her so much she passed it *all over* the basement.
    
    Now isn't *that* a vivid image.......  ;-)                                
    
    Mary-Michael
1590.10Our little "puppy" NinianeSWAT::COCHRANEI never blink.Tue Aug 02 1988 12:2210
    I think we may have solved the problem.  We went out on Sunday and
    found some very thin rawhide chews for puppies.  She thinks they're
    wonderful!  She chews and chews on them, and has expressed less
    and less interest in shoelaces, mini blind pulls, sweatpant ties,
    etc.
    
    Only problem is, she keeps "burying" them under the carpet....
    
    Mary-Michael
    
1590.11EDUC8::TRACHMANTue Aug 02 1988 13:595
    Oh, I tried those once - the slim ones like pencils.  A few of
    my guys loved them - carried them around and chewed like crazy.
    I also have tried the smallest nyla (sp?) bones - Lara really
    likes it - she thinks she owns the one I can find.  The thin
    rawhide sure does get lost easily.
1590.12mine like them, tooVAXWRK::SKALTSISDebTue Aug 02 1988 15:356
    RE: .10
    
    My cats like those, too. Panther is so cute when he struts around
    with one in his mouth (he is trying to look macho).
    
    Deb
1590.13String's are MINEMARRHQ::KORCHNAKTue Aug 02 1988 15:4913
    I do alot of cross-stitch, and Shanti LOVES to watch. To the point
    that she ever so carefully sneaks up and looks for a string just
    "hanging". And if she finds one, she grabs it and starts chewing.
    As soon as I catch her and yell "NO" she runs as fast as she can
    looking out of the corner of her eye at me like "You're not gonna
    get this, it's MINE NOW!"
    
    then when I finally get it out of her mouth, it's like "You rotten
    thing! That was MY string!"
    
    What's even worse is when you clean the litter box and find things
    attached with different colored string. I wish she didn't like them!
    
1590.14SCRUZ::CORDES_JABy the shards of my dragon's eggWed Aug 03 1988 01:2213
    Re:  .10
    
    Did it take much to get your kitty interested in chewing the rawhide
    chews or did they take to it immediately?  I tried these with Bailey
    when her chewing problem (actually that's my problem with her chewing)
    started and the best I could get out of her was one or two uninterested
    bats at them, she never chewed them.
    
    Since that time I've managed to become extremely neat in order to
    keep shoelaces on my shoes, straps on my bras, etc.
    
    Jan
    
1590.15give it some flavorVAXWRK::SKALTSISDebWed Aug 03 1988 02:308
    Mine wouldn't look at them when I first bought them. I had given
    a friend's dog a rawhide bone for Christmas, I a remember her telling
    me that often the dog wouldn't look at the bone until they gave
    it some flavor, so they boiled it in beef broth. I tried this with
    the rawhide sticks and the boys and Eirene took to them like a fish
    takes to water. (I'm not sure if I used beef broth or clam juice).
    
    Deb
1590.16Beware of needles!!SALEM::NOYCETue Aug 09 1988 16:1411
    The real problem with cats eating string (thread) is what it can
    do to them if there is a needle on the end of it.  My cat Lucky
    when he was 8 months old found the sewing box open and ate one of
    the threads in there with out our knowing it.  When he stopped eating
    and started loosing weight we took him to the vet (same place as
    we used last Friday) and when they exrayed him we could see the
    needle in the intestines.  The needle had tried to pass thru and
    had gone in and out the walls of the intestines effectively sewing
    his intestines togather.  They operated and he was lucky ;-) enough
    to come out of it with no life long problems.  What a way to diet!!
    Ken