|
Welcome to our Cat Forums! | ||||
Welcome to our CatForums! You are seeing this message because you are viewing our cat forums as a guest. You can continue to browse our many cat related areas as a guest but you are more than welcome to register and join our friendly community of Cat Lovers! ... And for free! Doing so will also remove this message and some of the ads, such as the one on the left. Please click here to register. |
|
|||||
|
|||||
hi and welcome! Wow, you have found yourself in a situation havent you. I've not had a pregnant cat before but many members have experience in this area and I'm sure someone will be along soon who can give you advice. Good luck. |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
What a surprise! I too have never had a pregnant female, but many members have and hopefully someone will pop on soon with advice. Did your vet give you any information about what to expect/do? |
|||||
|
|
||||
|
||||
We found a cat about 3-4 years ago. She was very tiny and only weighed 4.2 lbs. Imagine our surprise when she gained weight very quickly and we found out she was due in three weeks with 3-4 kittens. We put her in a room all to herself and bought a kitty cube (just a softsided cube shaped toy for cats). We set her up with food and water (we fed kitten food as it is more nutritious than regular food and better for a pregnant queen). Jitterbug had her kittens in the middle of the day (in her birthing cube) and we kept her in there till the kittens were about 6 weeks old. Then they had the run of the house with everybody else. In our special circumstances Jitterbug had a recent injury and we were keeping her from jumping up on any furniture as her depth perception was off. One sign that it is time for the kittens to be born is that the mom's temp will go up. Once she has the kittens (birthing could take hours), she will eat the placenta of every kitten. Let her do this as it is very nutritious for the babies. She will clean them up and nurse them and do all the work! If you notice she is breathing hard ( in labor) and nothing is happening, then you will want to give the vet a call. Good luck, If you have any other questions please ask. |
||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
Hi If you can possibly confine her to one place in the last week of her pregnancy ie a room or dog crate (cage) all the better. Especially during the night or when you have to go out and leave her alone. It will make her feel more secure and stop her wandering around looking for somewhere to have her babies. If you can get some vetbed to put in where she will have her babies. You can buy that from most pet stores. It is very good as it soaks away any wet ie blood and fluids from the sacs and helps to keep the babies from losing their temperatures which happens very easily when they are first born. It is usually easy to see if a female cat is in labour as they will become restless, dig their bedding and scratch up newspaper. She may become clingy and want you by her side all the time. They also sometimes look like they are making the motions of trying to be sick but that is the contractions. Birthing can last any amount of time but the vets usually say if the queen is constantly straining and pushing for more than an hour an nothing happens it is usually advisable to seek medical attention for the cat. If you can find a store that stocks Royal Canin dried food. Royal Canin baby cat is an excellent source of vitamins and nutrition for a pregnant and nursing cat. Failing that Royal canin kitten should do just as well. Try to encourage eating dried food as the more dried food they eat the more they drink and that helps the milk production. You will probably find that mum will do all the hard work and you won't need to do a thing except sit there and be amazed at these tiny little creatures coming into the world. Trust me it is an amazing sight and so lovely to see. Good luck and keep us updated with how things go. Welcome to catsey btw Sarah x |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
Gosh what a handful to end up with unexpectedly! Good on you tho for not giving up on her I have no advice to add as I've never had a pregnant cat but those here that are experienced, are wonderful I wish you and your kitty all the luck with the birth |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
You bought a cat that was 7 weeks pregnant & didn't know? Excellent advice from Sarah, can't really add anything to what she has told you, just keep her quiet & away from any other animals & most important thing of us is a premium quality diet. I agree RC BC is the best you can get for her! |
|||||
|
|
||||
|
||||
I had a cat that had kittens. She had a mucous plug that appeared first. Then she started to get restless and pant alot. I stayed with her the whole time. I had a box that i had her in. It took quite awhile for the first kitten to show then after that they came pretty fast. She had 4. Make sure to watch after she is done. Fruffy still acted funny after she was done having kittens and we thought she had one stuck in her. So we had to load her and the kittens(on sunday of course) to the vet for an emergency visit. It turned out she had afterbirth stuck in her. They gave meds and a shot and she was fine. Dont take chances tho she coulda died from it by getting infection. It is pretty obvious when they go into labor. Just be ready. I had mine in the living room and she screamed on the first kitten,which brought all the other cats in ready to fight. I had to get her into the bathroom asap. Hope I helped some. Feel free to ask me anything you might need to know. |
||||
|
|
||||
|
||||
And welcome from me. I`ve never had children so cannot advise but best wishes anyway. PS-I`m not `Shooting Star`-although I was for ages on other sites until I changed my computer and had to re-register. The chances of anyone being here as well as sites I visit,apart from the person who kindly gave me the link are very small but thought it best to mention it to avoid any confusion |
||||
|