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#1
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My constant supervision has helped over the years, sometimes they even play
(while supervised), but my aggressive cat's natural tendency is always lurking. She is a great cat to people, she is not really a bully, she's just ETERNALLY AGGRESSIVE against anything that moves and isn't 10 times bigger than she is. I found another humane way of stopping my big aggressive cat from constantly annoying my smaller cat. It will require testing, but it looks promising. Just leave a door (bathroom with a view to outside, or whatever) open enough for the smaller cat to get through but not big enough for the larger aggressive cat. That will work well unless the victim is much smaller, but it's possible here. That would be nice since it would be on demand. Other such possibilities would include some sort of ramp/bridge that only allows a certain weight... (I hope that sounds funny). The small cat gets lots of use out of the Skyway where the aggressive cat is mostly prohibited from going. Have fun. -- I post at the risk of being trolled by trolls who self-admittedly are here to do nothing but troll... |
#2
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The small cat took to it immediately.
Probably should've done that a LONG time ago. PRELIMINARILY speaking, it's marvelous. I wrote: My constant supervision has helped over the years, sometimes they even play (while supervised), but my aggressive cat's natural tendency is always lurking. She is a great cat to people, she is not really a bully, she's just ETERNALLY AGGRESSIVE against anything that moves and isn't 10 times bigger than she is. I found another humane way of stopping my big aggressive cat from constantly annoying my smaller cat. It will require testing, but it looks promising. Just leave a door (bathroom with a view to outside, or whatever) open enough for the smaller cat to get through but not big enough for the larger aggressive cat. That should work if the victim is much smaller, like here. That would be nice since it would be on demand. Other such possibilities would include some sort of ramp/bridge that only allows a certain weight... The small cat gets lots of use out of the Skyway where the aggressive cat is mostly prohibited from going. Have fun. |
#3
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On 10003 Sep 1993, John Doe wrote:
The small cat took to it immediately. Probably should've done that a LONG time ago. PRELIMINARILY speaking, it's marvelous. Very glad you seem to have found a mitigation! Thank you for sharing. -- Mark |
#4
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Mark Carroll wrote:
John Doe wrote: The small cat took to it immediately. Probably should've done that a LONG time ago. PRELIMINARILY speaking, it's marvelous. Very glad you seem to have found a mitigation! Thank you for sharing. Now the small cat is using it when the big cat plays too rough (like always). No more need to referee. No need to pay constant attention. I thought their Skyway provided an adequate sleeping place even though more restricted, but the small cat has slept in the private room since I began using the latch. Need to keep Toobig's claws clipped so it can't hook the small cat when it's slipping into the private room. Coincidently, Toobig is the easiest cat in the world to clip its claws, it has no fear of humans (or even a vacuum cleaner). Something like that should be available regardless of the size difference. But how... -- I wrote: My constant supervision has helped over the years, sometimes they even play (while supervised), but my aggressive cat's natural tendency is always lurking. She is a great cat to people, she is not really a bully, she's just ETERNALLY AGGRESSIVE against anything that moves and isn't 10 times bigger than she is. I found another humane way of stopping my big aggressive cat from constantly annoying my smaller cat. It will require testing, but it looks promising. Just leave a door (bathroom with a view to outside, or whatever) open enough for the smaller cat to get through but not big enough for the larger aggressive cat. That should work if the victim is much smaller, like here. That would be nice since it would be on demand. Other such possibilities would include some sort of ramp/bridge that only allows a certain weight... The small cat gets lots of use out of the Skyway where the aggressive cat is mostly prohibited from going. Have fun. |
#5
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John Doe wrote:
Mark Carroll wrote: John Doe wrote: The small cat took to it immediately. Probably should've done that a LONG time ago. PRELIMINARILY speaking, it's marvelous. Very glad you seem to have found a mitigation! Thank you for sharing. Now the small cat is using it when the big cat plays too rough (like always). No more need to referee. No need to pay constant attention. I thought their Skyway provided an adequate sleeping place even though more restricted, but the small cat has slept in the private room since I began using the latch. Need to keep Toobig's claws clipped so it can't hook the small cat when it's slipping into the private room. Coincidently, Toobig is the easiest cat in the world to clip its claws, it has no fear of humans (or even a vacuum cleaner). Something like that should be available regardless of the size difference. But how... The latch is very simple and has fine adjustment for the door gap. On its current setting... The big cat chases the small cat until the small cat runs through the gap. Repeat. After a while of in and out running around, sometimes the big cat pushes its way into that room after the small cat goes back there. But then the small cat squeezes back out and the big cat is stuck in there... The small cat appears to know how to work the situation. The big cat probably wants to hang out by the open screened window anyway, so not all is lost. |
#6
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Still working like a charm.
The method can probably be used for homes with both dogs and cats. Anything that is larger and aggressive. Regulars know, but... Cats suffer from anxiety, especially indoors under pressure. They don't like being chased around (shocker). It's improved things 100% here. Much better for me. Better knowing that the small cat is able to de-escalate the situation by itself. And it does. Interesting seeing how the private room is being used during play. Possible the big cat shows signs of not wanting the small cat to run out of reach. In other words, it might actually miss it. And it knows too much badgering will cause the small cat to run away. The big cat is still problematic if I'm not here and the door is not properly latched slightly open. But it wasn't intended to fix Toobig's psychology. I wrote: My constant supervision has helped over the years, sometimes they even play (while supervised), but my aggressive cat's natural tendency is always lurking. She is a great cat to people, she is not really a bully, she's just ETERNALLY AGGRESSIVE against anything that moves and isn't 10 times bigger than she is. I found another humane way of stopping my big aggressive cat from constantly annoying my smaller cat. It will require testing, but it looks promising. Just leave a door (bathroom with a view to outside, or whatever) open enough for the smaller cat to get through but not big enough for the larger aggressive cat. That will work well unless the victim is much smaller, but it's possible here. That would be nice since it would be on demand. Other such possibilities would include some sort of ramp/bridge that only allows a certain weight... (I hope that sounds funny). The small cat gets lots of use out of the Skyway where the aggressive cat is mostly prohibited from going. Have fun. |
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