Horus made a few half-hearted bats at the feathers, then turned his back on me. Can a cat have absolutely no sense of play (except he does love moths and the plastic casing off the ice cream cartons)?
1 posted on
09/12/2008 5:25:30 AM PDT by
pharmamom
To: pharmamom
How old is he? Does he like empty boxes or paper bags? How about chasing a laser light?
3 posted on
09/12/2008 5:29:45 AM PDT by
nuconvert
(Obama - Preferred by 4 out of 5 Dictators & Terrorists// Biden= Big,Blowhard Doofus)
To: pharmamom
Two words: laser pointer.
4 posted on
09/12/2008 5:32:46 AM PDT by
1rudeboy
To: pharmamom
In my experience, the best thing you can do is buy several expensive cat toys, (the cuter you think they are, the better), take them all out, put them on a knick-knack shelf, and then let the cat have a great time with the boxes.
5 posted on
09/12/2008 5:35:09 AM PDT by
tbpiper
(Obama/Biden: Instead of Ebony and Ivory, we have Arrogance and Insolence.)
To: pharmamom
Can a cat have absolutely no sense of play
Yes. My cat will only play with her squeeky mouse late at night long after I've gone to bed or during the day when she is home alone. Probably to break the boredom.
6 posted on
09/12/2008 5:35:49 AM PDT by
Hot Tabasco
(Wedgie Syndrome: The inability to recognize humor by individuals alwayls looking for an argument)
To: pharmamom
Well, a couple of real mice might get his attention...
7 posted on
09/12/2008 5:36:52 AM PDT by
Fresh Wind
(Tom Manion USMC '08!!)
To: pharmamom
My brother, an organic chemistry professor, says that there is a "catnip gene"...some cats simply are not affected.
He knows this, because back in the fabulous 60's, another fellow in his graduate class undertook to synthesise the active chemical in this "Catnip Reaction." The story goes that he took a small block of this concentrated cat-hash to a nearby zoo in Texas and when nobody was looking, heaved the mindbender into the tiger cage, and "Twenty minutes later that cat was STONED, man!"
9 posted on
09/12/2008 5:39:50 AM PDT by
50sDad
(OBAMA: In your heart you know he's Wright.)
To: pharmamom
I wouldn't introduce your cat to real catnip too early. It does work. But it can be like getting a little kid drunk. I had a cat who loved empty crunched up cigarette packs. I think it might have been the sound of the cellophane.
11 posted on
09/12/2008 5:42:31 AM PDT by
webrover
To: pharmamom
What kind of cold hearted anti-cat person leaves a comment so vile that the Mods have to delete it?
12 posted on
09/12/2008 5:42:48 AM PDT by
50sDad
(OBAMA: In your heart you know he's Wright.)
To: pharmamom
If you want to freak kitty out, try wiggling a piece of cooked spaghetti in front of him.
13 posted on
09/12/2008 5:43:47 AM PDT by
webrover
To: pharmamom
Clint Junior Lightning is devoted to a little piece of a rabbit’s foot with a bell attached. The noise is critical to his enjoyment.
14 posted on
09/12/2008 5:44:00 AM PDT by
Mad Dawg
(Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee.)
To: pharmamom
Ma'am, there is catnip and there is Catnip. Little-known fact. There's a chance that you're tempting kitty with the wrong stuff. Even the wrong stuff will slightly stimulate cats, but the right stuff is what you want. Could be that the toys you bought were made of the wrong stuff.
Best thing to do IMO is to visit a qualified botanist and ask him for a good source of Nepeta cataria -- that's the plant you want.
Even so, roughly one-in-three cats don't respond to catnip. Could be your cat is one of these.
And like humans, some cats are just permanently stunned, preferring to laze around and watch the world go by them. No harm in that -- if you wanted an energetic pet you would have gotten a dog.
15 posted on
09/12/2008 5:50:10 AM PDT by
DieHard the Hunter
(Is mise an ceann-cinnidh. Cha ghéill mi do dhuine. Fà g am bealach.)
To: pharmamom
Horus sounds boring. Get a puppy, Horus will livin up real fast.
19 posted on
09/12/2008 6:08:23 AM PDT by
submarinerswife
("If I win I can't 't be stopped! If I lose I shall be dead." - George S. Patton)
To: pharmamom
How old is the cat? If the cat is under a year, he may not respond. Or, like others said, some cats simply don’t get into it.
To: pharmamom
Ma'am = you missed the best one:
Obamas obsession with Palin reminds me of a saying I learned long ago: Sarah Palin is living rent-free in Obamas head.
I may have a head full of little people all jabbering simultaneously at times, but none of them belong in someone elses head. Karl Rove has obviously done brain surgery on Palin, taken one of her little people and implanted her in Obamas cranium. There, the mini-Sarah is busily ordering all the little Obamas around and effectively preoccupying his verbal editor. Karl Rove, evil neurosurgeon, strikes again. He really is a mad little Machiavelli, full of demonic machinations. We should now have Rovus ex machina.
LOL !!
22 posted on
09/12/2008 9:50:40 AM PDT by
brityank
(The more I learn about the Constitution, the more I realise this Government is UNconstitutional !!)
To: pharmamom
Right men, confuse the ... cat!
23 posted on
09/12/2008 9:54:15 AM PDT by
Poser
(Willing to fight for oil)
To: pharmamom
My last kitty was a catnip junkie. My new babies (now 2 yrs) have no interest in catnip at all. Boy cat does, however, go crazy over ketchup - especially if it has had McDonalds fries dipped in it.
Maybe Horus is the kind of cat who prefers to pick his own toys - we bought tons of toys for ours and they would rather steal and empty toilet paper roll, or one of my hair bands.
24 posted on
09/12/2008 10:07:41 AM PDT by
meowmeow
(In Loving Memory of Our Dear Viking Kitty (1987-2006))
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