17 Answers
I declawed one of my cats years and years ago.... Only her front claws..... She was very sickly and I didnt trust anyone else to care for her. The appartment i was in aloned me to keep her only if she was declawed. Yes I could have found a new appartment but at the time I took thier suggestion and just complied. After she passed I have had other cats.. none of them have been declawed.
12 years ago. Rating: 10 | |
No human being has the right to declaw a cat unless an authorized vet does it - although I have never heard of it. Wow so painful - reminds me of people having their nails taken off in concentration camps. They should have their nails clipped though as Ann says especially if house cats and the dew claw especially can become inbedded. More of a trim and mindful of the little red bit at the bottom which contains the nerves and if cut painful and will bleed. Scratching posts are also good.
12 years ago. Rating: 7 | |
Sorry guys,, We had our cat declawed a year ago. He was using our new log home as his personal scratching post. Please don't tell me he could have been trained we tried everything. But with one ruined door and a support beam that he shredded, enough was enough. I chose declawing over the bullet in the head. We raised him from a little furball that needed to be bottle fed for a few weeks several years ago. No I didn't want to do it. but he's still with us and still my bud. every night he crawls in my lap when I sit down and puts his head right under my chin and falls asleep. We still have our cat, still have a house, I think everything worked out ok.
12 years ago. Rating: 5 | |
That's good most people I know probably would have put him down. He's older and like I said not a people cat. Ipicked him up out of a ditch some 15 years ago, I might have spooked the mother but for some reason he was still there three hrs later when I came back, he couldn't ever crawl out of the tall weeds. I took him home , the wife and I bottle fed him for a few weeks and he's been our cat ever since. He never did this in the old house, or ever the trailer we stayed in while the new house was being built. Its almost like he looked at the new house and said wow huge scratching post and its all mine. I really don't agree with declawing either but we didn't know what else to do. I wasn't going to lose a $200,000 house to Boo and have it shredded up in a few years.
12 years ago. Rating: 4 | |
I think it should be outlawed and considered animal cruelty as well how about we take the people that do that and cut off their fingers up to the first knuckle all of them and see how they feel about it then?
12 years ago. Rating: 3 | |
Scratching is a territorial instinct by which cats place their mark and establish their turf. Through scratching, cats mark their domains with more than just visible signs of claw marks. Cat's paws also have scent glands that leave their own special scent on their territory.
And this is why they mark the most visible portions of your house. It's a cat's way of adding their own personal touch to your (and her) home. Her version of interior decorating <font><font size="2" color="#000000" face="Arial">If at first the cat is reluctant to give up their old scratching areas, there are means you can use to discourage them Covering the area with aluminum foil or double-sided tape is a great deterrent. These surfaces don't have a texture that feels good to scratch</font></font>
12 years ago. Rating: 2 | |