Sunday, 29 May 2011

Hunter

We sat down for a meal (unusual, it's normally TV dinners round here) and I noticed Natalie looking like she was about to pounce on Nathan. I called to R to look out of the window, and we realised that he had something in his paws. A whitish, furryish something.

A mouse! One of our cats has finally caught a mouse!

We have mice, and can hear them scratching around in the walls. It would be good if the cats could catch a mouse, from time to time.

But then, mice aren't really very white, are they?

He began tossing and throwing this furryish object in the air, Natalie standing nearby looking extremely jealous.

I decided to go and investigate. Fortunately, he didn't run off with his prey and I got close enough to see that it wasn't a mouse. It was a little brown bird.

We have lots of birds in our garden, and we're particularly proud of the blue tit babies that are fledging and a pair of bullfinches that stop by from time to time. So far, we've not noticed the cats even paying much attention to the birds. Until now.

I think it was a sparrow, and it was dead. Nathan seemed to be quite enjoying gnawing it and playing with it, which was rather vile.

We were sort of impressed he caught something, as we didn't think he'd have it in him, and also really quite sad that a bird had died. I just hope the baby blue tits stay off the ground as they have been. Fingers crossed.

Saturday, 28 May 2011

Where are you, Nathan?

Last night, both R and I went out separately. I got home about 11pm and called the cats in as soon as I was in the house.

Natalie came in straight away, chowed on her food and then wouldn't leave me alone. It wasn't quite lovebombing or maybe I'm more used to it now, but she was by my side as I changed into my pyjamas and got a cheek rub in on my bumcheek. She loves me.

Nathan didn't come in so after about 20 minutes I called him again.

Ten minutes after that, R came home, made some food, and Nathan still wasn't in. It was after midnight by now and we were wanting to go to bed. R walked round the garden, shook the food, called his name and searched around the house. But there was no Nathan.

They usually come in quite quickly, and I'd assumed that he'd be in as soon as he heard the food as I was sure he would be hungry.

Apparently, he wasn't.

We left the cat flap on one way, so glad we got a four way flap, and went to bed. Initially, we shut Natalie in their room but then decided to let her sleep with us.

Of course, this led to some antics, with her crawling across our pillows then settling down for a pre-sleep wash. She got kicked out shortly after.

Somehow, she found her way back in and woke us up at 4.30 attempting to yack up a hairball. On the bed. I got up and shooed her away, and decided to go down to see if Nathan had finally decided to come home.

And he had! He was eating, which is the first thing they do when they come in, so it was possibly a case of very good timing. Maybe Natalie was sick that he'd come back and she'd have to share again? ;)

It was a bit worrying, because he is the slightly more pathetic one, and we have badgers and foxes in the garden and land beyond the house. We didn't want him getting beaten up by a badger. Then we wondered if he'd got locked in a garage. He's come home before with engine oil on one of his ears. Maybe we'll have to fashion some sort of camera attachment to find out just where they go during the day. It would be fascinating!

I wanted to keep him in this morning, but he was doing the cat version of "I really really need a poo!" by the door so I had to let him out. I've seem him falling off hedges, and he's come in once to cry at me, so let's hope it was a one-off.

Chillaxing

Thursday, 26 May 2011

Brother and sister II

What was I saying yesterday about how they get on? This makes it look like they are totally in love!



I'm not keen on the amount of licking she's giving to the site of the rodent ulcer, but if this happens a lot it explains why he's lost so much fur from it. Bless her. I wonder if he's allergic to her spit and this is the explanation for why he keeps getting the ulcers?!

Oh, and, isn't just SO CUTE?! ;)

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Brother and sister

Let us in!

I've posted a lot about the cats separately, but not much about how they interact.

The overall advice seems to be that having more than one cat is a Very Bad Idea (although I've noted that a lot of people who say this have several!). Cats are territorial (but social...) and don't like to share their space or their humans with other cats.

If you MUST get two cats, littermates are best, and the best combination is a brother and a sister cat. We win one point. Finally.

When we adopted them, the sanctuary said that Natalie was extremely shy and needed Nathan around to help her out a bit. Since they've settled in, she's come out of her shell twice the size. I'll illustrate this by saying that although we get them in at night, it's Nathan I worry about when he's a bit slow to come back. I know Natalie could beat up a badger no problems; Nathan, not so much.

Their interactions with each other are interesting. They do quite a lot of tearing around after each other, probably because they are both still young cats. At first, I worried that he bullied her, as he was always the one jumping on her. It felt like she couldn't go anywhere without being mounted. I really don't approve of siblings mounting each other, for the record.

Since then, I've seen her drop-kick him in the face, punch him on the nose with her back legs from lying down and kick him in the guts. She can handle herself.

They've recently starting fighting with hissing, where before it was purely playfighting with no verbalising. I don't know if the hissing is just play too, but it certainly sounds a bit nastier.

When we let them out in the morning they go off together, which is sweet, and they do some investigating together, as per the photo at the top. They are quite independent of each other generally though. Domestic cats are definitely more tiger than lion, and pack hunting doesn't come into the equation. When they're hunting bees, it's every cat for him/herself.

I hope they carry on getting on, and a little less fighting would be very pleasant, in the long term. It's noisy, above everything!

Here's a short photo story from today:

Bookends

This looks cute, like they're bookends, right? In reality, it's like the game of chicken they play in Grease, and they're going to run at each other for a wrestle. You can see Nathan's baldy face patch clearly in this picture.

Fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiighttt!!!

POW! Smackdown! Nathan on top of Natalie, looks like he's biting her shoulder. She's kicking him where he hasn't got any balls. It's quite dramatic in real life.

After the smackdown

Then they walk away, like nothing happened. Nothing to see here.

As I type, they are chasing each other around the hall and living room. So peaceful.

Thursday, 19 May 2011

Nathan T Cat

Evil cat

Nathan el diablokitty.

I haven't been on good terms with Nathan lately, I didn't really understand him. I began to wonder if Natalie was dominating him. We can trust her a lot more, and so she's the cat that gets to sleep on our bed in the mornings, sit on our laps as much as she likes and generally be as near us as she pleases. This is because she hasn't done piss/spray droplets on us or our floors. As far as we know.

Poor Nathan. It can't be much fun being an undersized male cat (although he's not even one year old yet) and having your smaller sibling own you whenever she pleases. His rodent ulcers/eosinophilic granuloma has got a lot worse over the last 48 hours too. I'll try to get a picture. I read in Cat vs Cat by Pam Johnson-Bennett that when a cat is ill, it instantly loses any dominance. Poor poor Nathan. No wonder he's been feeling a bit sorry for himself.

I decided to buy him a new scratching post, for the room he prefers when they're in the house. I've done this and hope he gets to enjoy it. Natalie definitely scratches more than him, and does so at the foot of the stairs at least twice a day. I'm not sure what that means in terms of territory and boundaries, but she's a very scent-marky cat with her face and the whole house, and us, must just stink of her to Nathan.

I was really pleased with a spot purchase though. It's a dog blanket for cars for wet dogs to sit on so that they don't ruin the upholstery. But what else would it be perfect for? Allowing a cat to sit on one's lap without the fear that piss/spray will end up on your clothing. I've already had him on my lap twice today and he got so excited he dribbled! I love it when cats dribble, you know they're really happy then. So, we'll persevere with that, and the great thing about it, that as we'll only use it with Nathan, it'll smell of him and hopefully reduce his desire to "mark" us with urine (well, that should be ME really) when he's on our laps. Win win all round.

Not such a diablokitty after all.

Bullycat

As I said yesterday, I think we have a bullycat.

It is quite huge, compared to our two, or perhaps just fatter and furrier. Neither of them could have it in a fight. It has quite a big head, so maybe it's a boycat.

I call it the blue cat, but it's actually grey and white and we used to see it in the garden before we got the cats.

I'm not sure if this story involves the same cat, but it certainly explains some of Nathan's behaviour if so.

You often hear cat behaviourists saying they don't like cat flaps. I read Cat Confidential by Vicky Halls before getting the cats and she is not a cat flap fan. She likened it to humans removing the front door and replacing it with an unlocked flap. I know I'd be terrifed about who could get in, day and night.

We do lock the cat flap at night, and place one of their unused beds in front of it. This is to stop Natalie pounding on it constantly as that cat really does like to go out, rather than reassure the cats they are safe inside, and I'll give some thought to this in light of last night's events.

The cats are extremely spoilt and have their own room, which is off the kitchen and is attached to the garage. There's a corridor from the garage down the side of their room (behind a wall) that also leads to the garden. As their room has a glass sliding door, they have two cat flaps - their room to garage, and garage to garden. Lovely.

Last night, I had to go into the garage and as I shut the door on their room, keeping the bed in front of the flap (they'd been put to bed) I heard an ALMIGHTY pounding on the catflap from the garden. I was absolutely TERRIFIED. It was so loud and persistent and completely unexpected. I actually froze in position for a good minute, before finishing off my chore and running upstairs to get my partner to go into the garden and lock the external catflap. It probably was just another neighbourhood cat, but oh so scary!

We don't usually lock the external flap, and it made me wonder if bullycat comes into our garage when the cats are in bed and pounds on the flap, making them scared and anxious? I really hope not, and it really has made me count my blessings that Nathan's spray/piss problems are actually quite minor. I know some people really do suffer with their cats' stresses and anxieties.

I think we may re-evaluate the cat flaps over the next few days and see what we come up with. Nothing may change, but I do know it's extremely important for cats to feel secure to get the best out of them.

Here's a picture of them in their room from when we'd had them a month. They're so much bigger now!

Spoilt cats

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

Hide and seek

The first clue we had that Natalie liked to hide was the day the kitchen fitters came to finish off their work. The cats were indoor cats at that point, and confined to the kitchen, to reduce the likelihood of hiding. We put them in the living room while the fitters came. And when they left, we couldn't find Natalie.

Eventually, we found her here:

natalie IN THE PIANO

Then we discovered she likes drawers:
In a drawer

One night, people on the council estate did fireworks, for no reason we could discern, and she hid on a bookshelf. I couldn't get any pictures of that.

She does seem to like our two pieces of inherited antique furniture. She got in the piano again last night, and a couple of days before that, had a little nestle under the music table:
More hiding

I think she gets sick of being papped. But what's the point of having cats, if not to take pictures of them being stupid?

They also like overhangs:
CRT telly

hidey hole

I've seen a big bully cat in the garden and I think he scares our cats into hiding inside. He walked past Nathan the other day, when I happened to be watching. The piloerection (fur standing on end) was so freaky! The two cats sniffed noses, then bullycat sprayed on my plants and sauntered off. Cheeky furry bastard! My poor kitties are being intimidated in their own back garden. Will have to try to find a way to get rid of him. He is very large, and they are very small though. Poor kitties. At least our messy house has plenty of hidey holes and overhangs!