5 Things You Should Know About Grandpa Shirt
5 Things You Should Know About Grandpa Shirt
When I decided to get my kids a cat, we went to the local shelter and within minutes fell in love with a sweet, 1-year-old female orange/white tabby. I was ready to adopt her there on the spot until I read over her profile and realize she had been declawed. 5 Things You Should Know About Grandpa Shirt I feel that cats need to have their claws for protection, especially if they ever wandered outside. I asked the shelter why that cat had been surrendered and she disclosed that the cat had been owned by an older lady who could no longer keep up with Kitty's bathroom habits of going everywhere but the litterbox. So, unfortunately, that kitty did not join our family that day and we moved on to a fully claw equipped kitty. 5 Things You Should Know About Grandpa Shirt. I've had cats since I was a very young child (hey, that makes the cat owned by a family!), and every cat I or my family have had was not declawed. You know what happened? I wasn't traumatized or critically injured, I learned to respect that cats had claws and to treat them with kindness so they wouldn't use them on me, and I had a lot of very happy cats who weren't hiding the pain in their paws because that's what cats do. The rescue where I got my current cats has a contract that specifies no declawing; the one my roommate works with has the same line in their contact, and neither has any problem adopting out the cats they pull from shelters. All your arguments are wrong.
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Mike Lanier Cats are prey animals as well as predators and they instinctively hide the pain. Only cats in agony will limp or cry. The most common ways for declawed cats to express pain, if they can't hide it, is to stop using their litter box, start biting, become generally grouchy, shift their weight backward so they're standing on their wrists and crouched back legs, sit with their toes hanging over the edge of a counter or table, avoid hard floors, chew on their paws, and/or become less active than they used to be. It's hard to appreciate just how good cats are at hiding pain. I got a better understanding after meeting a cat who hid a broken jaw in a shelter for a week. He ate, he meowed, he rolled around adorably, he seemed normal. The jaw was discovered when he was examined under anesthesia before being neutered. Cats are tough.
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