Sep
5
2011

Reading cat behaviour

All cat owners will know that a cat will do what it wants when it want to do it. You have no say in what your cats does except put up with its idiosyncrasies. What you can do however is learn to read your cat’s behaviour and act to divert a problem. Over the next few articles we’ll discuss some all-too-common scenarios and tell you what you can do to stop them.

You’re tying your shoelaces and the cat wants to play with them

This can end up being rather nasty. especially when you’re in a rush on the way out to work. Only you know your cat so only you know your cats reaction. Is your cat liable to jump out of the way when you pull your lace away or is it likely to excite the feline into a frenzy that will only be solved with a number of stitches and a bruised ego?

If your cat is liable to get over excited the best thing to do is nothing. You had best just sit it out and wait. Your cat will soon realise it’s hungry and move to the food bowl. While you have the chance tie your laces quickly and get to work in time for lunch


Some things I've noticed

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