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Cat getting neutered
Comments
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The true MSE way would be to film him and send it to You've Been Framed for the 250 quid :eek:
If you google 'Cat (insert here a word that means what your cat is doing)' you'll find you are not alone! :rotfl:
I think I'd get him checked by the Vet as there are a few things that could be causing this - or it could be a learnt behaviour (LOL who the heck taught him???!)Some days you're the dog..... most days you're the tree!0 -
My kitty is getting spayed for freeeeeeee next month! Yay!
Good to hear your kitty is ok, I've never had a cat come home with a bucket on its head post spay though.
I feed the PAH 40% meat dried food, the stuff in the brown box. It's about £6 for a 2kg pack and my kittles loves it, in fact it's the only food she'll happily eat! I've just swapped her to the adult version which she's pleased about because the kitten version has milk nuggets which she always ate around :rotfl:0 -
uktigerlily-they def wont send her home unless she can walk and is fairly bright. so dont worry!0
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my boy's wotsit occasionally pops out even though he is neutered, he doesn't play with it though! he has usually just washed himself down there when it makes an appearance...0
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eeuuww - pervy cat!:eek:
sorry, I have nothing constructive to add, except - eeeuuuww!
I am sure someone on here can advise more sensibly though!0 -
Waterfalls wrote: »uktigerlily-they def wont send her home unless she can walk and is fairly bright. so dont worry!
hmm, (tiger, not wanting to worry you at all here) but - when we picked my mums young lurcher-ish dog up at tea time after a morning spey (about 9am I think) - she certainly couldnt walk for more than a few steps and was very 'drunk' - we had taken her to the vets just round the corner from my mums (less than 100 yards) in the hope we would be able to walk her back and not have to lift her in and out of the car. In the end we had to take her plastic bed round and heave her in and out of the car in that, she was like a dead thing and her head kept lolling about.
I was really worried about her, and it was a full 24 hours before she seemed to have any real life in her. I did ask about anasthesia at the vets before she went in as i know sighthounds can be sensitive to some of them, and was reassured by them, but I do wonder if she reason she took so long to come round was because she has so little body fat?0 -
foreign_correspondent wrote: »hmm, (tiger, not wanting to worry you at all here) but - when we picked my mums young lurcher-ish dog up at tea time after a morning spey (about 9am I think) - she certainly couldnt walk for more than a few steps and was very 'drunk' - we had taken her to the vets just round the corner from my mums (less than 100 yards) in the hope we would be able to walk her back and not have to lift her in and out of the car. In the end we had to take her plastic bed round and heave her in and out of the car in that, she was like a dead thing and her head kept lolling about.
I was really worried about her, and it was a full 24 hours before she seemed to have any real life in her. I did ask about anasthesia at the vets before she went in as i know sighthounds can be sensitive to some of them, and was reassured by them, but I do wonder if she reason she took so long to come round was because she has so little body fat?
sorry to hear that, but it does vary. on the whole at my practice we dont let them home until we are sure that she are able to stand/walk and are eating as we know it will only worry u guys, and the risks with ga's are reduced. they are usually about 80-90% round from the ga.0 -
For the Hills keep an eye out at pets at home, they often do 3 for 2 on it.
Its good food, all the premium dried ones are.
Much nicer in the summer too & don't smell.0 -
f1re_cr4cker wrote: »pmsl im sorry to be of no help but that really has made me smile- i hope someone here can help!0
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Waterfalls wrote: »sorry to hear that, but it does vary. on the whole at my practice we dont let them home until we are sure that she are able to stand/walk and are eating as we know it will only worry u guys, and the risks with ga's are reduced. they are usually about 80-90% round from the ga.
Do you think it is something intrinsic to the dog that made her so dopey afterwards? I have had dogs done before and not had this but they have generally been smaller chunkier types and not so lean, so I wondered if that was the difference, or perhaps something else in her make up?
It could also be that she is a bit of a drama queen, but she was very shivery and odd altogether.0
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