Sunday 31 January 2010

If you don't smarten up...

I'll take you back to the vet!

What do you tell bored, grumpy cats who fight all over the house?

Well, after a trip to the vet the other day - they didn't complain all afternoon! Quite content to curl up and have a big nap!

They want to go outdoors, but with -30 C. temperatures last night they whined an whinged in the morning. 
Oliver meowed the whole 45 minute trip in the car.

Sady sat quietly awaiting her fate. She is the old pro. Like those of us in middle age, we know that wellness and prevention is better than curing disease.

I wish that family physicians gave us Wellness Binders full of information!


Sady thought that her crate was the safest place to be! "Nope, not coming out. I've done this 7 times and know the indignities I must suffer!"

It is important, in cottage country, to keep their shots up to date. The vets poke and prod and ensure that their parts are in working order, give them a rabies shot, and worm pill and shove a thermometer up their butts.

With one cat having food allergies, the others have a special diet, too.  We have to watch Sady, she's not a cheap date!

The other issue: you could pick up a zoonosis from your animals.
Zoonoses consist of: rabies, avian influenza, but the Center for Disease Control (USA) estimates that between 1 and 3 million of their 300 million population are infected with a zoonisis each year. [Novartis Animal Health, 2006]

Those most at risk, as with H1N1, include the very young, or those with chronic diseases, or spend time in high-risk envronments such as landscape gardeners, breeders. Pregnant women, especially, are most susceptible.

Our vet explained that the bats have rabies, and cats are notorious about swatting at flying things, as well as bringing home a mouse or mole per day (each!).

There are round worms, mosquito-born illnesses, and all sorts of sand fleas out here in the wild, as well. Children play outdoors where round worms may be, and young children put their hands in their mouths. A problem, obviously, in sand boxes. Fleas can cause allergic bites on human skin.

Ringworm, actually a fungus - but lesions in the skin look like a worm.  Sarcoptic Mange is a skin mite. Ticks suck blood, and can transmit diseases, (Lime Disease, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, Erhlichiosis, Tularemia).


Roundworms are shed in feces, and the parasite can be transmitted to hands, end end up in internal organs, or eyes where they live as larva. Raccoon Roundworm is found in 'coon droppings, and can cause a fatal brain infection in humans.   Dogs, in turn, can eat raccoon feces, or pick up the infection, shed the eggs in their feces, posing a rick to family members.

Cat feces hosts toxoplasmosis, normally found in uncooked meat, but also in the litter box. Bartonella causes cat-scratch disease, found on cat claws. In people they have a small red area, and can develop a fever, blisters, muscle aches, fatigue and headaches.


The solution to all these issues? Visit your vet for professional advice, and don't forget proper hand washing techniques. Keep litter boxes clean, wear gloves with cleaning them. Deworm animals, watch for wounds, control their fleas, and keep toilet bowl lids closed!
 
But, back to our adventure!

Oliver had a blast! He is a 'curtain climber', loves the attic, too, and got up onto the vet's counter. Of course, the treats were up there, and he began sniffing at the dog treat bag. He'll eat anything, even removes the tin foil wrapping from chocolate kisses and eats those!

He was happy looking out the window, watching the dogs arrive. He did the "Na, na, na, na, boo boo!" dance. Safe inside.

He gazed strangely as Sady was having HER worm pill, thinking - little food thief that he is, that she was getting food and he wasn't!

We know that cats live longer as indoor cats, but we love walking them on the ice, and around the property.  They like the outdoor life as much as we do.


They keep down the mice population and sit beside us as we sit on the deck or read by the lake shore.

7 comments:

Lucy said...

Because the eagles hunt over our house, we don't take our little girl out with her harness on. She is so skittish and a fraidy cat, so the harness is just wise. I often wish I could too let her run free.

Cathy Olliffe-Webster said...

Hee hee... love your cat photos. Especially the one of Oliver in his crate, big, sad, pathetic eyes staring out from his dark face. You can just tell he is NOT impressed.

Yogi♪♪♪ said...

Here in suburbia its just good manners to keep the cats inside. We still keep their shots current and take'em to the vet for checkups.

Jenn Jilks said...

I understand that thought, L & D, the hawks scare me some, but we live in a nice forest.

I know, Cathy, he's quite the actor. "Woe is me!"

Yogi, our frontage is 250', and the neighbours on either side are not up in winter. The cats love that their territory triples once they go. I used to live in suburbia, wandering cats are not polite in the city. We have always lived (well, in the last few chapters) near a forested space. IT makes such a difference.

Anonymous said...

We have an outdoor cat. In the UK it's considered cruel to keep a cat imprisoned indoors. That said our kitten hasn't shown any interest in going outdoors and unless she does we will keep her in as she isn't very bright.

Nancy Tapley said...

"Look what the cat brought in!" Great phrase, and yes my cats adore going outside. Still it's estimated that 4 million cats in Canada account for the deaths of 140 million small birds and rodents every year. My cousins in Australia cannot allow cats outside -- it's prohibited by law, because of the destruction of the ground-nesting birds that never evolved with predators like these.
Achmed is currently into Live Release in the living room of the critters he can catch - not so many now its so cold outside, but still the occasional flying squirrel. That's stressful for everyone, I'm sure, especially the squirrel! Word of caution, don't get Janet, at Wing and a Prayer Bird Sanctuary, started on the topic of 'outdoor cats' :0(

Jenn Jilks said...

Well, Nancy, I'm pretty fatalistic about the cats outdoors. For every animal they get, another will grow up, at least. The forest can support a lot of birds, and I figure that one or two less will be replaced.
I remember talking to the MNR person who was trapping 'coons. She explained that they have to trap them an inoculate them, rather than take them away. If they destroy ones with rabies, another will move in and take up the space in the ecosystem.
Oliver brought in a chipmunk to play with one day. Had a heckuva time catching it to take it back out! I think Ol just wanted to watch me scramble!