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Actually, it doesn't sound like this type of behavior (at least the pee-on-bed) is something new. The following was in the very first post:
Actually, it doesn't sound like this type of behavior (at least the pee-on-bed) is something new. The following was in the very first post:
My opinion of it: He should place the angry cat with issues, as her behavior is nothing new, she has been like this since I gave her to him as a kitten. In all, he will only be able to have her, and nothing else as a pet. He wants to foster, he wants to help, but he cant because of her. And she pee'ed on my bed when I took care of her while he was at boot camp...
And if you read the original message, the OP did NOT hand raise the cat, she just handled it a lot as a kitten. The kitten was raised by it's mother. I will agree that the OP does not appear to like the cat, but she did say that it had issues before she even gave it to him.
I have no experience with dealing with a single female cat, we have always had at least two cats. But we did have a female cat many years ago who was just nasty. We adopted her as a tiny kitten. She was in a 'shelter' that didn't seem to care much about the cats and dogs they had there. This kitten was really tiny, just a bag of bones covered with fur and fleas. As she got older, it became apparent that she had mental issues. The final straw was when she decided that she hated my daughter at about the time my daughter was just starting to crawl. She would go into the living room and actually lay on the floor with her front claws extended at the time I normally brought my daughter out. She was showing signs that she hated ALL children and was getting worse with us, too (she would jump up to sit with us and want us to pet her. When she decided petting time was over, she would attack and run). She got pregnant before we decided what to do with her, so we waited until the kittens could be weaned and took her for one last vet trip. We kept two of the kittens, and they were wonderful until we lost both at 16 years old. I often wondered if the starvation at such a young age messed her up. She was about 1 1/2 years old when we took her in for the last vet trip.
When I bring a kitten in to the house (often a barn kitten that needs treatment, or before I got the barn queens spayed I have had to bring late litters in for the winter), the resident females hiss if the kittens get too close and slap them down if the kittens persist in coming closer. They don't try to attack them or kill them. But again, I don't have just a single female here. If that is what they are like, I'm glad that I don't. Half of the females in my house are far more likely to kidnap kittens and act like those are 'their' kittens. I have had to search under furniture to return kittens to their mother more than once.
And if you read the original message, the OP did NOT hand raise the cat, she just handled it a lot as a kitten. The kitten was raised by it's mother. I will agree that the OP does not appear to like the cat, but she did say that it had issues before she even gave it to him.
I have no experience with dealing with a single female cat, we have always had at least two cats. But we did have a female cat many years ago who was just nasty. We adopted her as a tiny kitten. She was in a 'shelter' that didn't seem to care much about the cats and dogs they had there. This kitten was really tiny, just a bag of bones covered with fur and fleas. As she got older, it became apparent that she had mental issues. The final straw was when she decided that she hated my daughter at about the time my daughter was just starting to crawl. She would go into the living room and actually lay on the floor with her front claws extended at the time I normally brought my daughter out. She was showing signs that she hated ALL children and was getting worse with us, too (she would jump up to sit with us and want us to pet her. When she decided petting time was over, she would attack and run). She got pregnant before we decided what to do with her, so we waited until the kittens could be weaned and took her for one last vet trip. We kept two of the kittens, and they were wonderful until we lost both at 16 years old. I often wondered if the starvation at such a young age messed her up. She was about 1 1/2 years old when we took her in for the last vet trip.
When I bring a kitten in to the house (often a barn kitten that needs treatment, or before I got the barn queens spayed I have had to bring late litters in for the winter), the resident females hiss if the kittens get too close and slap them down if the kittens persist in coming closer. They don't try to attack them or kill them. But again, I don't have just a single female here. If that is what they are like, I'm glad that I don't. Half of the females in my house are far more likely to kidnap kittens and act like those are 'their' kittens. I have had to search under furniture to return kittens to their mother more than once.
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