An adult cat doesn't accept another cat's little kitten

maxi4, why do you have to get another kitten, knowing that you have such a cat? catch a small cat and close it, so that the adult cat could only smell it for 10 days. do not make her suffer. she used to go to the bathroom, let her go. how old is she? when you took the kitten?

Sergey Ermashkevich

Why a cat can not accept a kitten?

If a cat is introduced to a large kitten that is 5-6 months old, it will hardly accept it, thinking that its territory has been encroached upon. The cat is used to feeling like a mistress in the house.

And now it will need to share everything: a place to rest, bowls, toys and a potty! The baby will still be prying into her cups, although he will buy his own.

And most importantly – jealousy. Not only that favorite toys are taken away, but the mistress of the fluffy robber in his arms, stroking and treats.

Jealous fury can kick a kitten in the ears just for being petted.

It's even worse when the old dog starts behaving inadequately: peeing past the litter box, smashing things, scratching and ignoring owners.

What to do?

It is better to take the kitten into the family at 2-3 months of age. The cat will see that the varmint does not claim its place. He is too small to climb into her houses and eat her food.

The baby will be fed other food for kittens up to a year old. So the kitten will climb into the kitten's bowl to try the tasty food.

You need to buy the baby his own cot, litter box and toys. All these things should be washed, dried and rubbed on his fur.

You need to be more tactful when introducing the cat. Do not throw her baby, like a snow on his head. Act in stages.

The first week he will be in quarantine. You need to make sure that the baby is not sick. If he is not yet flea-treated and wormed, it is time to do it.

Let the baby live in a separate room until he gets used to his new owners. The rest is more interesting.

The cat realized a long time ago that someone else had moved into the house. She will often go to the door and sniff. When the peak of interest reaches its maximum, you can let her into the room. That is, she should go in with the kitten, not vice versa.

Prepare treats for the cat, so that the associations with the baby will be pleasant.

Sit on the floor, and hold the kitten in your arms. Let the pet sniff it, then be sure to give it a tasty treat.

Now you can put the baby down. Chances are he will run to the cat. If she didn't hit the kitten and let her in, then everything went right. If it didn't, start over.

HELP. CAT WON'T ACCEPT ANOTHER CAT'S KITTEN.

hello. Please help advice. Have a cat two years, not given birth. Took a kitten a day ago, also a girl. The cat does not accept, hisses, growls, but does not fight, runs away. The small one we keep in the kitchen, let out into the hall to run. The big one sticks out on the balcony, goes into the hall or the kitchen, sniffs and hisses at the smell. She started hissing at me and her husband. We try not to scold. We understand that stress. The little one feels good, runs around, is not afraid of the big one. Tell me what to do to make them accept each other. Maybe the larger one should take a sedative. Very worried, crying, not sleeping at night, feeling guilty for the big kitty. ((( help please!

Hello. It is worth limiting the kitty's territory. Best of all, not the kitchen, but the room. Put the litter box and food there as well.
Your cat should not feel that her territory is occupied. Do not try to introduce them, it is enough that they can smell each other. The introduction should be very gradual.

Afternoon. Isolate the animals. Do not impose communication. Each has its own bowls, toys, litter trays, after 7-10 days, start introducing them again, communication of 15 seconds under your control, the time increases gradually.

I have a similar problem, only everything is aggravated by the fact that the older cat is a terrible coward, hides from guests, even me sometimes avoids, and now she crammed under the couch in the room, occasionally comes out with my persuasion to eat. Kitten we keep in the kitchen so far, as even to change their places is not possible, an adult cat at the slightest threat reliably hides. With the toilet, the problem, she used to go straight to the bathroom, but now go out afraid to leave, left in her room the old litter box, but it did not go once a day. But the little one suffers only from a lack of attention and space to play.

os19061980

Preparing your home

You should buy your own kitty things in advance: a bowl for food, a litter tray, a bed or cot, toys.

Place these items in the apartment so that the cat can get to know, sniff and get used to them.
If possible, bring items that smell like kittens into the house and let her explore them as well.

Consider whether or not you are ready for a new kitten, since animals sense our condition, and your low mood or depression may have a negative effect on the behavior of an adult cat.

Introducing a cat to a kitten

Allocate a separate room for the new kitten (you can use the bathroom for this purpose), put his toys, tray and food bowl there. Anything that belongs to your cat will also need to be placed there.

The old resident cat can come to the door of this room, listen and explore, but there should be no contact with the new tenant yet.

First Encounter

As soon as you bring the kitten home, let the cat sniff it first while it is in the carrier or in your hands. Then take it to the prepared room and let it explore. The litter box, toys and bowls – all these things need to be accessible to your kitten. Do not let an adult cat into the kitten without your control.

Why an adult cat won't accept someone else's kitten

At night and at times when you are not in control of your pets, lock the kitten in its temporary home. Out of curiosity, the cat will listen to the fuss of the new neighbor, trying to open the door with his paw. Let this go on for a week.

Do not neglect the older cat after you have played with the baby. This will prevent her from feeling jealous, and the smell of the kitty left on your clothes after playing will become more familiar to her.

Prepare your cat

Make sure your cat is healthy. Putting extra stress on an unhealthy cat will only make things worse. Take your cat to the vet for a checkup to make sure she is healthy and that her vaccinations are up to date.

Respiratory illnesses are common in kittens, so you need to make sure the adult cat's immune system is ready to handle it.

While some cats accept a kitten right away, others usually need a little time to adjust to the change. Sometimes cats never fully accept a new kitten, but simply coexist by staying away from it.

Introduce the cat to the new kitten

When you bring the kitten home, let the cat sniff it while the kitten is in the carrier or in your arms. Go right into the room set aside in advance for your new kitty and let him explore.

The litter box, food bowls, bed and some toys should be easily accessible. Don't let your older cat have unsupervised access to the kitten.

At night or when you're not home and when you can't keep an eye on the kitten and your senior cat, keep the kitten in her allotted room with the door closed.

When your cat is curious, she can stick her paw under the door, sniff under the door and listen to the kitten. Do this for about a week, depending on how your cat responds to the change.

Don't forget to pay a lot of attention to the older cat after playing with the kitten. He will need your attention and support, and the smell of kitty on your clothes will help him get used to the newcomer.

How to make friends with a cat and a kitten

We have a 7 year old spayed cat living in our house. She is not very affectionate by nature. She only allows herself to be petted occasionally. When she was about a year old she had an unpleasant encounter with an adult cat (they lived at the cottage together, but they never became friends, the cat kept pouncing on her).
Now we have a 2 month old British female cat. We keep them in separate rooms for four days, changing rooms. The adult cat is constantly sitting on the closet, goes down only to the bathroom or to eat. Before, she only climbed on the closet occasionally. Today, on the fifth day, we let the kitten into the room where the older cat is. The adult cat sat on guard at all times, watching from above, when the little one came closer, snarled angrily, fuming. The little one did not see her.
Could you please tell me how to introduce them to each other, how long it might take? I'm very worried that an adult cat might pounce on the kitten and hurt him.

Lemonka

As for pounce-unlikely. The kitten is small, not a competitor. Continue to introduce the kitten for 10 minutes a day, increasing the time. Do not pet the kitten in front of the cat.
I almost took a kitten cat, a complete inadequate, so full that 2 years she lived apart from the other animals.She spent five days on the windowsill, but just yesterday came down.Sizzling, but the progress is evident, as you wish.
The other animals took the kitten for three days, and it was a short-term contact.
Here the main thing: the little kitten is not a competitor, but a misunderstanding on his feet)).

Thanks for the answer. We are slowly accustoming the older to the little one, today is better, no hissing at least. I did not know that you should not pet the kitten in front of the older one.

Limonka

Similar situation.
Kisa the cat is 6 years old, spayed and not affectionate. Or rather, she is affectionate only to her own, especially to her husband, and ALWAYS hisses, hisses, growls, and can pounce on strangers.
Kitten Klyopa is a little kitty from a stray cat, about 1 month old. We have 2 days so far.
Kitty hisses at the kitty. Not throwing, but hisses, and you can see that she is afraid. Hisses, turns and runs away. Strange even – such a colossal (5.5 kg, though not fat, but really big) and runs away from a small kitten.
Also now mostly sits on the closet, although before climbed up there, but not often.
I've heard advice to give the older cat lots of attention and love, but Kitty doesn't allow it – she shudders and runs away from us, hisses at us. Also heard that it is necessary to mix the smells – to bathe the kitten and then the same towel to wipe the older cat. But it did not work – Kitty runs under the bed, hides, is not given.
There is no way not to pet the kitten in front of her – Klyopa is very small and tame, without hands she cries, squeaks, meows. When she falls asleep, we put her in a basket and close her up, but when she wakes up she asks to get out of there and crawls into her arms.
I think there is progress – Kitty comes closer and closer to Klyopa, though she hisses. In the absence of Klyopa (while she sleeps in a carrier) Kitty is very affectionate with us, goes for a walk on the balcony and to my husband in the arms to stroke him.
How long will she get used to the little one? Is there a danger that she will tear it "like a dog, or should not be afraid of it?

An adult Siamese cat does not accept a kitten

My Siamese cat is nine years old. And then I had to get used to the new tenant. Picked up a 6-month-old cat with broken legs, very weak. He is now in a cast, hardly moving. I put him in a separate room. But the cat won't calm down. All day long it sits under the door and hisses. Showing them to each other is just scary. What do you advise?

And how long have you had the kitten?
Have you tried showing them to each other? How do they behave?
If possible, it is better not to push them until the kitten can't move.
Just don't bring your kitty close, just let her go and see what they do. And so it doesn't get to the point of self-mutilation, I would trim her claws beforehand.

I had the same story a couple months ago. Two or three days the kitten was in a separate room, released in the daytime in another room under observation.Cat approached him hissed, pawed, even hissed at me (from me the kitten smelled like) on the fourth day-night asleep in one room hissed ceased, even the foster mother now plays (gives mind sucking himself). Sometimes it hisses at him now, when he hisses it with his games.Osnovo show the "old man" that you love him, more often stroking and so on.

While acquaintance better postpone, let the cat to cure. And the cat will get over it ))))

I also brought a crippled teenage kitty once upon a time, I already had an adult cat. How he became jealous, horror. hissed, followed her around the apartment. then eventually got used to her presence. the main thing to show that the pet was not brought to him to replace, that he is also the favorite. ie need more attention to the old cat, and to deal with the new kitten is better when she does not see. over time, my friends. together all the same fun.

I have had the kitten for 3 days now. The cat still hasn't calmed down. Growls day and night. Showed her the kitten from a distance, she got even more furious. Still keep them in separate rooms.

Might never get used to it at all. My siamese is 13 years old. A year ago we brought a little Scottish lop-eared – she immediately took the baby in stride. Certainly not to throw, but hissed and hissed at every her approach. They live together for a year. The older one, of course, tolerates the younger one, but her love for the little one has not appeared – she hisses and hurts me.
Siamese are very territorial animals. It's incredibly difficult for them to share "theirs" with another cat. She keeps everyone in our dacha, from small to large, within 10 meters of the property, so it's not surprising.

Reasons for aggressive cat behavior

You brought a small kitten into the house, and the cat refuses to accept it? Let's figure out why an adult cat hisses at a kitten. The fact is that the cat most likely perceives the new tenant as a threat to its usual way of life. She may be jealous of her owner and demonstrate this by her attacks and hisses. If the cat's reaction is very negative to begin with, making friends with the cat and the kitten may be a bit difficult, but it is possible nevertheless. Situations where at first an adult cat does not accept a strange little kitten, and then becomes his best friend, are very common. You probably know cases where several cats live in the house at the same time and get along well with each other.

Of course, cats are extremely jealous of their territory and privacy. When you get a new pet you have to pay as much attention to your first cat, and better still more than usual, and let her know that you still love her. She has to be sure of you and of your attitude, this will reduce the passions and make her accept the new cat.

If you realize you don't have the time or energy for two equal pets, consider smaller animals such as birds, reptiles or rodents. But only if your cat's breed isn't overly predisposed to hunting, otherwise it could be a problem. If you decide to have an aquarium, it should be securely set up and access to it should be closed off to avoid trouble. The same goes for cages with rabbits and rodents – you shouldn't leave them under your cat's nose. Even if the cage is firmly closed, both animals will be stressed.

A dog can also make a great friend, but you may need a little more time and effort to get the cat and dog properly acquainted and friendly. If you manage to discuss the situation with a professional dog handler, you can get a lot of helpful advice and valuable information, and the adjustment will go much easier and faster.

How do you make friends with the new pet and the mature cat?

Your pets will need time to get used to each other, mark their boundaries, and eventually become true friends. Of course, in theory you can have adult pets as well, but it's better to opt for babies. Being unsophisticated in communication, kittens and puppies are much friendlier, they are more curious and this encourages them to get acquainted, and an adult cat does not perceive a new kitten or puppy as a rival, because it understands that it is still small. With a small kitten, it will be easier for an adult cat to "negotiate".

However, if the kitten is very small (younger than 1-2 months), there may be difficulties of a different nature. The cat may not be jealous of the kitten but take it as her own offspring, and then everything will depend on how she will evaluate the viability of the kitten. Until the kitten is strong enough, it should be near the cat only in your presence, to avoid serious trouble.

Do not be frightened or upset if the adult cat hisses at the kitten. What to do in this case should be decided according to the situation. Of course, in the beginning the cat will demonstrate that she is the mistress here and will not allow anyone to encroach on her territory. At the beginning you should not leave the cat and the new kitten together unattended. The new householder should know her place and not violate the boundaries of the first cat's personal space – in this case the peaceful coexistence of the old cat and the kitten is guaranteed. Moreover, until the new kitten has undergone all the necessary examinations and all preventive vaccinations it is better not to let him near the other cat. You should first make sure that he is healthy, or provide him with the necessary treatment if the kitten is found to have any infections or diseases. When the necessary tests have been done, but the results are not yet available, let the kitten stay in quarantine for a while in an area that is strictly fenced off for him. Try to spend time with both pets and if a tense situation arises, one of them should leave the room for a while. When you are not home, the animals should be in separate rooms, and the doors should be closed, so that in your absence the animals cannot penetrate into each other's territory. If the adult cat does not accept the kitten, what you should not do is to push the animals together on purpose – do not force the events, let the pets get used to each other.

How to help an elderly cat to make friends with the kitten

Often I am approached by cat owners with a request for advice because the older cat does not accept the new family member – a kitten. Owners underestimate this problem, as it is believed that kittens are easier to adapt to a new home and should not be a hassle. But it is often the older cat and her opinion about the new pet in the house that is overlooked.

When selecting a new pet, not only the species, breed, and character should be considered, but also the age, especially if other animals already live at home!

Many cat owners do not realize that their adult cats, may not accept a kitten and suffer from the arrival of a new pet in the house. A new kitten usually wants to make friends with everyone, but older cats may not want anything to do with a fussy, active and clingy baby.

Often older cats, after the arrival of a kitten, become sad, aloof, hiss a lot, and sometimes even stop eating if they have difficulty adjusting to a new family member. This behavior is because cats don't like change, especially at an older age.

Often I hear things like this. "Our elderly cat has become very boring, doesn't move much, has gained weight. We want to take a kitten, so he will cheer her up a little and play with her." .

A story like that is a road to failure and problems! An elderly cat often needs only one companion – you! If you can't give your elderly cat enough time to have a varied life, to keep her moving and not gain weight, to keep her learning new things and solving problems and training her brain, how can a kitten help with that? It will take up all the time you could have spent with the cat. And it's not a fact that a kitten will cause any positive emotions to the old-timer cat and not a lot of stress.

Certainly, positive stories, when people get a kitten and an elderly cat becomes more active, happen. But not in 100% of cases.

How do you accustom an adult cat to someone else's kitten? She sees a little kitten as a threat and growls.

Kitten lies down and the cat is one meter away and growls, very afraid of her, almost from birth the cat has never seen cats and dogs. What do you advise? The kitten is also a girl.

When a new pet is brought home, it is not shown to the old dog (not allowed right away!), but placed in a separate room with the doors closed. Then the animals are exchanged several times a day in the apartment so that they can't see each other, but get used to the new smells and are not afraid of them.
At first the cats may be frightened, refuse to eat, hide, hiss at the owner. During this period he needs to spend more time at home and socialize with the animals, without forcing them to do so: do not call them, do not take them in your arms, unless they come up and ask for affection. You should stop playing with the cat immediately if he is tired of it and wants to leave.

After 7 days or when the animals are no longer frightened, and they feel at ease, you can let them out by opening the door. Watch the cats carefully: hissing, pawing in the face are not yet aggression, but when …? isolate them again for 5-7 days, then reacquaint them.

It is desirable that for the first two weeks the animals communicate only under your supervision. If this is not possible, remove the door leaf in one of the rooms and put an iron mesh instead. The cats should be on different sides of it, but they should be able to see, hear and smell each other, and come and talk to each other if they want to. Two or three times a day they should be swapped. If the reason for aggression was fear, the above actions will help the animals adapt faster and get used to each other's scent.

Put bowls on both sides of the net and constantly refill them with food and water – this will pacify the cats. Also, on a full stomach they will have less desire to fight.

Aggressive behavior should be scolded, but not physically punished. For example, it is not advisable to slap the cat or flick his nose with your finger – this usually increases nervous excitement. It is better to scare it by spraying water from a sprayer, or to make a sharp sound, for example with a jar of coins. Take a clean 0.33-liter aluminum can, put 10 1 ruble coins in it and tape the hole with adhesive tape. Carry it around the apartment with you, and if you need to punish the cat, say "You can't! " and shake the can.

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