Archive for the ‘pat cat’ Category
New Kitten Cat
Your New Cat: Why Are the First 24 Hours So Important? Part-3
Summarizing from article wrote By John Young
The author of the E-book: “Your New Cat’s First 24 Hours”
FIVE THINGS YOU MUST CONSIDER BEFORE ADOPTING A CAT.
In Parts 1 and 2 of this series we considered the vital need to prepare your house for your cat, make sure her medical needs are met, and that you yourself are ready for the adoption of a feline — an independent animal that doesn’t respond to teaching and training the way a dog would.
• Time
A cat needs time spent with her. One of the big mistakes busy people make is to fail to realize that they have crazy schedules that don’t allow them to spend enough time with their newly adopted cat.
This could ultimately result in your cat running off. If you have no time to spend with your cat, she will not choose your house as “her den”. She will go searching for another one, and you could be soon reporting a “lost cat”.
• Money

New Cat Dog
A lot of people don’t count the cost of pet ownership. Many people shun pet medical insurance, not realizing that the same things that happen to people happen to cats, and can cost large sums of money to cure.
• Knowledge of Your Cat’s Medical Needs
Some people who adopt strays or cats owned by friends don’t realize the full extent of the medical attention their new cat may need:
– A complete vaccination regimen
– Spaying or neutering
In particular, that cute kitten you brought home from a friend’s litter will need a long series of vaccinations (along with boosters) that will extend over a period of a couple of years. I made it an outdoor cat, and it died of feline leukemia.
• Knowledge of Your Cat’s Physical Needs
When your cat climbs out of the carrier box for the first time, will you be equipped with the essentials?
Or, will you discover that you need these things later…and bring them in one at a time, after your cat has defecated in the corner, started clawing the furniture, or begun some other unauthorized behavior you are not prepared for? Making sure you have on hand what you need to receive your new cat is vital.
• Your Home Prepared.
You must be certain your home and your house occupants are prepared for the arrival of your new kitty.
FIRST INTRODUCTIONS
Your technique for doing that can be a deciding factor in whether or not your cat adapts to your home immediately, by the next day or the next month, or flees the house altogether.
Do you know about allergies, special foods, bathing, grooming, hair balls, removing urine, training and teaching without frightening and alienating her, and a multitude of other situations cat owners wrestle with on a daily basis? Do you know the hazards involved in letting her become an outdoor cat?
KNOW WHAT TO DO
As you’ve often heard, ‘preparation is the key to success’, and nowhere does that apply more appropriately than to cat ownership.
I say probably because every cat is different. Even with the best preparation by a knowledgeable owner, a cat may still want to hide for awhile. And if you discover that’s the case…
Copyright 2006 John Young
You may interested reading this article to Cats for Sale or Pet Cats
Cat New
Your New Cat: Why Are the First 24 Hours So Important? Part 1.
Summarizing from article wrote By John Young
The author of the E-book: “Your New Cat’s First 24 Hours”,
Adoption in Haste

wild Cat
The staff of animal shelters greet people looking for new pets with both joy and misgiving. People walk between the cages, looking over each cat, and the staff hope they will select a cat that has been there for a long time.
But they know what the people are looking for; they are looking for kittens, not adult cats.
If there are no kittens, the customers will sometimes reluctantly choose an adult cat as a “consolation prize”, pay the adoption fees and cart him or her off…
Only to return the cat two or three days later.
“I’m sorry, but this cat just didn’t work out. “This cat is just too wild. We need something tamer, something that will fit in.”
The staff member asks.
“The cat bolted and hid. We need something tamer; something that will fit in better.”
So go the sad tales of the returnees… but wait, it can be worse for cats adopted in other ways.
- Prepare themselves for a good relationship with their new cat
People who have never owned cats before don’t really realize what a cat is: A highly intelligent, independent animal which needs love and affection daily – but is not a dog.
Cats will bond with people, just as dogs do, but they don’t always bond with the person who has adopted them. It is in during that period that your cat will decide whom she wants to bond with.
Time
A cat needs time spent with her. One of the big mistakes busy people make is to fail to realize that they have busy schedules that don’t allow them to spend enough time with their newly adopted cat.
This could ultimately result in your cat running off. If you have no time to spend with your cat, she will not choose your house as “her den”. She will go out searching for another one, and you could be soon reporting a “lost cat”.
Or, to your consternation, you will find that the cat you thought would be a loving companion has bonded with another member of your household…somebody who did have the time to spend.
Money
A lot of people don’t count the cost of pet ownership. In their exuberance to adopt a cat, they forget that they don’t have the budget to keep her. Many people shun pet medical insurance, not realizing that the same things that happen to people happen to cats, and can cost large sums of money to cure.
Medical Needs
Some people who adopt strays or cats owned by friends don’t realize the full extent of the medical attention their new cat needs:
- A complete physical examination
- A complete vaccination regimen
• Spaying or neutering
I made it an outdoor cat, and it died of feline leukemia. Your cat’s physical needs
When your cat climbs out of the carrier box for the first time, will you be equipped with the essentials?
Or, will you discover that you need these things later…and bring them in one at a time, after your cat has defecated in the corner, started scratching the furniture, or begun some other unauthorized behavior you are not prepared for? (And, be advised, a cat is a very obsessed animal…once she starts doing something, it is very hard to change it).
Making sure you have what you need to receive your new cat is vital…and you must have the basics on hand before you bring her home.
Your technique for doing that can be a deciding factor in whether or not your cat adapts to your home immediately, by the next day or the next month, or flees the house altogether.
Do you know how to take care of your new cat in the days to come, assuming you handled your first introductions well? Do you know about allergies, special foods, bathing, grooming, hair balls, removing urine, training and teaching without frightening and alienating her, and a multitude of other situations cat owners wrestle with on a daily basis? Do you know the hazards involved in letting her become an outdoor cat?
Be prepared
As you’ve often heard, ‘preparation is the key to success’, and nowhere does that apply more appropriately than to cat ownership. I say probably because every cat is different. Even with the best preparation by a knowledgeable owner, a cat may still want to hide for awhile. And if you discover that’s the case…
The Key
So, that’s why I wrote my book, “Your New Cat’s First 24 Hours”, www.yourcatsecrets.com, to give you everything you need to know and have, not only to get ready for your new cat and introduce her to your household, but to understand and care for her in the days to follow.
I’ve got to say it again: preparation…and knowledge… is the key. When you decide to adopt, I hope you won’t do it in haste.
I hope you will do it knowledgeably and with understanding.
You may interested reading this article to Cats for Sale or Kitten for Sale
Pet Cats:
Choosing Your New Cat Friend
By: Nadjib Salim
Having an indoor cat can bring years of enjoyable pleasure for you and your new pet friend. But, before you get your first cat, decide what your commitment to this relationship will be. How much devotion, cost, effort, and attention are you willing to provide to your new friend.
If this pet cat is new for you, maybe you should learn how to taking care of your cat before bringing your new friend home. And the best way to find out how to caring for cat is by asking to your friends who already have cats before. Your friend is an excellent resource for educating you on how to care a cat. But you could also find what you need from another source such as, books, pet shop owners, cat community owners, veterinarians, and of course the internet which you will find a million information about how to take care your new cat.
Before you decide which one (cat) you will take, probably you have to consider what kind of cat are you looking. Is that an adult cat? Or kitten. Female or male, short or long hair, allure or domestic cat, pedigree or non pedigree.
Kitten or adult cat?

New Friend
For some people, a kitten is a funny and cute pet, but remembers, kitten is, just a new baby born. And like new other babies, you need to watch them carefully for every think, their food, their health, behavior etc. Otherwise an adult cat will capable more capable of attending their own personal care.
Female or Male?
Either female or male cats could become a wonderful friend for you. If the cat has been spayed or neutered, then the cat’s gender doesn’t play a huge role. In this mater, gender is not the option, just decide which one closer to your need.
Short or long hair
Some breeds shed more hair than others. Cats are fastidious groomers. Be prepared and not too surprised when they vomit a hairball from time to time, it is completely natural with little cause for alarm. The only one you have to do is routinely brushing them to collect their loose hair. Of course, you will need less routine brushing shorthair cats then the long hair one. It is also good for your friend to have a bath ones a while using special cat soap or shampoo, but not often.
Pedigree or non pedigree
some expect will pay more attention to pedigree, primarily because its allure. Lineage can be traced and its pedigree is probably more expensive than others. The other reasons why cat lovers will choose pedigree then non pedigree is their intention for invest breeding, competition or show. How about you? That your personal choice, depend on kind of cat you want, more cute or just usual, cheep or expensive.
One thinks you have to be sure, for some people pet cats are a wonderful friend and an addition to your family and will give you long of enjoyable pleasure.
You may want to check out my other tips on Kitten For Sale and Pet Cat
Cat Pictures:
Cat Pictures:
Cat or kitty some time doing funny attraction and make us laugh or smile family and give us enjoyable pleasure. So that way million of people like them. Cats become an object of photography since the camera invented and likely in front of camera, cats are photogenic. Look at this pictures below, there are act ferry funny, aren’t they?

Catblows
Pictures source: http://www.swapmeetdave.com
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Pet Cat:
The Allure of Cat , What and Why

Pat Cats
In America, cats as pets have long been popular. In most families where there are cats as pets, there is only one, possibly two cats. Stray cats tend to be loners. Noted for their independence, cats can also be loving and loyal to their owners. They adjust well to indoor living, take great care in grooming themselves, and are easily trained to use a cat box. Cats, when they’re not asleep, are observers.
Pet cats are also predatory, and some are very good mousers. In a flourishing society of condominiums and high-rise apartment buildings, many landlords ban dogs and accept cats. Cats, more than any other mammal, exhibit similar attributes and actions, no matter if they are wild or tame. Lions, tigers, leopards, wild cats, panthers, and house cats look similar and act very much alike–they are all predatory, nocturnal, fastidious, and defensive, but the domesticated cat is much smaller than its wild relatives. How did the wild cat first become domesticated, and where did it happen?
Origin of Cats
Looking back to the Late Eocene epoch (43.6 to 36.6 million years ago), it has been discovered that the “cat pattern” was already well established in the evolution of modern mammals. The earliest cats were easily recognizable as the ancestors of present-day felines.
The Anatomy of the Cat
The anatomy of the cat gives it great elasticity. It has a flexible spine and uses its tail and inner ear to maintain balance. Because of its inner-ear balance, it almost always lands on its feet when it falls and can jump from and to great heights without injury. For this reason, the cat is said to have nine lives.
The Historical Background of Cats
The cat, however, has not been so blessed. While dogs have been trained to assist humans as hunters, guides, companions, and enforcers, cats have no obvious purpose other than their presence in one’s life. Nursing homes often have a resident cat who is there only to be petted by the residents.
The Cat in Literature and Art
The cat is not as independent as it appears. From fairy tales to Wanda Gäg’s classic “Millions of Cats” (1929) to the long-running broadway show “Cats,” based on T. S. Elliot’s “Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats” (1939), to “The Marble Cake Cat” (1977) by Marjorie and Carl Allen; from Lewis Carroll’s Cheshire Cat in “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” (1865) to B. Kliban’s contemporary cartoon cats, the cat has long been a fascinating subject for both children and adults.
Many people believe that the Siamese cat originated in Ancient Egypt, but it actually is from the Far East and thought to be a domestication of the Asian wild cat. Most cats, however, unless they are show cats, are mixed breed.
Summarizing from article wrote by Marjorie Allen
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Marjorie_Allen
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