When it comes to convincing a kitty that something's good to do, it's all
in how you phrase it.
Take, for example, Stanley. He is turning into the biggest attention sponge
I've ever seen in my life. When he wants pettins, he will stand in front of
you, arch his back, and do the "pet me!" dance, where he kind of crab-walks
around until you notice him and give him a skritch.
My DH would look down in amusement and, while skritching Stanley, tell him,
"You just want AT-TENNN-TIONNNN". So then I started telling Stanley that,
too, in the same tone of voice. "I see a kitty looking for
AT-TENNN-TIONNNN, yes I do...", etc, and all the while I'd actually be
paying him at-tennn-tionnnn. Um, I mean "attention". ;o)
Last night, Stanley really, *really* needed his claws trimmed. So I waited
until he was napping. Then I took the claw trimmer, scooped him into my
lap, and told him, "Look at the good boy getting lots of AT-TENNN-TIONNNN,
everybody wants to pay him some AT-TENNN-TIONNNN, yes they do..." as I
stealthily went snip, snip, snip and trimmed his claws.
It took less than two minutes to get it all done, and he never griped once.
Why should he? He was getting AT-TENNN-TIONNNN, his favorite thing in the
whole wide world. :o)
Stanley doesn't like getting his claws trimmed, but he loves doting more
than anything. So all I had to do was tell him he was getting attention,
and he was fine. Like I said, it's all in how you phrase it. :o)
Donna, and the well-manicured Captain and Stanley
Karen - 16 Sep 2005 02:23 GMT
> When it comes to convincing a kitty that something's good to do, it's all
> in how you phrase it.
[quoted text clipped - 24 lines]
>
> Donna, and the well-manicured Captain and Stanley
That's as good as teaching a trick :)
mlbriggs - 16 Sep 2005 06:56 GMT
> When it comes to convincing a kitty that something's good to do, it's all
> in how you phrase it.
[quoted text clipped - 25 lines]
>
> Donna, and the well-manicured Captain and Stanley
Boy! I'd like to try that -- if I could only lift her. MLB
Debra - 16 Sep 2005 19:10 GMT
>Last night, Stanley really, *really* needed his claws trimmed. So I waited
>until he was napping. Then I took the claw trimmer, scooped him into my
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
>Donna, and the well-manicured Captain and Stanley
We have our kitties trained for trimming too. We give them rubs
during and treats after. The last time we trimmed the claws on our
three cats it took five minutes total, and one of the cats has extra
toes on every foot. It was unusual because it was like they all lined
up for their claw trimming instead of us having to collect them from
wherever they were in the house. Most of the time we have to hunt all
over the place for at least one napping cat.
Speaking of napping cats, DH used to trim Cleo's claws while she was
napping because she hated anyone messing with her paws. If she roused
he just rubbed her slowly and quietly until she drifted off to sleep
again and then continued trimming.
Debra in VA