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Archive for the ‘Cat Declawing’ Category

Keep Your Cats Claws – Here is What to Do

In the United States, domesticated cats are allowed to be declawed. In a lot of countries around the world this practice has been outlawed because it is considered inhumane. Here in the United States, people take this option in order to protect their furniture. As you may know, cats have a disposition to scratch at furniture to keep their claws penetrating in order to capture prey. It is in their instinct since the domestication of cats.

Now when a cat is declawed, you leave it defenseless. So if it goes outside, it is vulnerable to its enemies and cannot capture prey to feed itself. Declawing is actually the removal of your cats toe. The surgery, I am sure is painful and I am sure the convalescence is painful also. So what can you do to stop your cat from scratching your furniture? There are several things that can be done:

1. You can teach your cat to scratch something else, such as a scratching post. We had a scratching post and put cat nip on it to teach our felines to use the scratching post. In addition, if they messed up and started scratching our furniture, we would shake a can which had coins in it. This would startle the cats and cause them to stop scratching our furniture.

2. You can also have nail caps put on them. This is painless and very effective.

3. Trimming of your cats claws on a regular bases will also help your furniture.

4. You can also put double-sided tape on your furniture. This helps stop scratching and protects your furniture, too.

5. There are also resistive sprays you can purchase from pet stores.

These are some of the things you can do without having your cats declawed.  I am sure there is more, take the time to learn and implement these actions to protect your cat from unneeded surgey.  They never had this problem before they were domesticated.

Four Things to Consider Before Declawing Your Cat

Declawing is a main surgery referred to as onychectomy. Conducted under anesthesia, it eliminates the tip of every digit (from the first knuckle out) of the cat’s forepaws. There is a slight risk of death in the surgical treatment and a declawed cat may well have an higher risk of infection and life-long distress in the paws. This surgery just isn’t recommended for an adult animal and it is considered an act of animal cruelty in certain countries (see below).

Individuals usually have cats declawed to stop them from hunting and from damaging furniture. Hardly ever, is  a cat declawed because it is vicious. Within the United States, some landlords require that tenants’ cats be declawed.

Veterinarians are usually against the process and some refuse to perform it due to the fact the absence of claws in a cat:

1. Deprives it of its principal safety abilities, such as, getting away from predators by clambering trees.
2. Affects its stretching and workout routines, leading to muscle atrophy.
3. Compromises its capacity to stabilize on lanky ground including railings and fence tops, leading to damage from accidents.
4. Can trigger insecurity along with a subsequent propensity to bite.

This surgical procedure is rare outdoors of North America. In Finland, Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland, declawing is criminalized by the laws and regulations in opposition to harshness to animals.17 In a lot of other European countries, it is criminalized beneath the conditions of the European Convention towards the Protection of Pet Animals, until “a veterinarian takes such non-curative procedures essential either for veterinary medical reasons or for the benefit of (the) animal”. 18 In Britain, animal shelters discover it hard to place imported cats which have been declawed and eventually most are euthanized.

An alternative to declawing is the application of blunt, vinyl nail caps that are affixed to the claws with nontoxic glue, requiring regular replacement when the cat sheds its claw sheaths (about every four to six weeks). Even so, the cat will still experience problems simply because the capped nails aren’t as useful as claws.

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