|
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 Matt, and welcome. I've not got experience of a blind cat but I would suggest the following. Is she still happy to go outside? My friend in Brighton had a cat which went blind (as well as deaf, poor thing), and he was very nervous of stepping out of doors. Having bought a covered litter tray might not have been such a good idea, especially if she had no experience of them prior to loosing her sight. She might simply be confused by it now. I would suggest placing lots of open litter trays in different locations so she finds it easy to 'spend a penny'. If you can put some old litter with her scent in each tray as well as clean litter that should help her identify the tray's purpose. That's all I can propose at the moment, I'm sure other bods will be along soon with better suggestions. |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
Hello Matt, welcome to Catsey.. Sorry to hear that your dear cat has been left blind following a stroke but pleased she has adapted so well. I agree with Yola's suggestion of leaving a few extra litter trays around the house...... at her age, if she has a sudden urge to 'go' she will most likely locate a litter tray quicker. I personally would keep her in at night as she's blind - does she have a cat flap? The covered litter tray may confuse her if she has never seen one before. I have a covered one for my cat but I had to take the flap door right off before she would use it .....maybe you could try that.. |
|||||
|
|
||||
|
||||
Hi Many thanks for your replies. I think the idea of lots of litter trays with a bit of her old litter is a great idea. You're both probably quite right that the covered litter tray wasn't the right approach - a tabby can't change their spots after all After she first had the stroke, she was both immediately blind and slightly paralysed on one side. We all feared the worst, but her movement came back after 2 or 3 weeks and she is now physically fine. In this time she remained inside and slowly regained her confidence in moving around (though the first couple of days were tough and she had some bangs and bunps). Now she moves around the house at normal walking speed, turning corners and ducking under coffee tables as if she can see them! It is amazing how much a cat can sense through their whiskers, and when she does head in the wrong direction and start veering into something, any whisker contact and she will immediately correct herself before she bangs into it. Not sure if there is anywhere i could attach a video or her navigating her way around in these forums, but i'm sure many of you cat lovers would be fascinated with how capable she has become A couple of months ago i returned one day to see her jumping out of an open window (we live in a bungalow) and dropping gracefully as a seeing cat would onto the path about 2 feet below, before walking confidently towards the garden where she started to sun herself. I can only assume she had done it before as she seemed to know exactly where the ground was. We don't have a cat flap, but on wanting to get back into the house she found her way back to the back door and gave us a meow to let us know she was there like she always did. It was at this point we decided that we wouldn't stop her going outside if she chose to. Of course i have concerns about her going out - particularly from other cats or foxes, but the road is quiet and she doesn't seem to venture far. We've built a little outside home for her with cushions and a heater that she can go in if she is outside and its gets cold or rainy and we often see her napping in there. On a handful of occasions she has slept there overnight despite us calling her in (though only when it was really warm). The only issue is her recent toilet behaviour, and that is generally only outside, and hopefully your ideas will help with that - i'll let you know! Anyway, i'm starting to ramble. Thanks again for your thoughts and the kind welcome and i hope i'll be able to contribute to what feels like a very caring forum. Matt |
||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
Thanks for giving us her history Matt, she sounds like a grand old lady ......what do you call her? It's amazing how cats do adapt to being blind. One of our members fostered a blind Siamese not so long ago and he was as agile as a sighted cat. We would love to see a video of her if you have one ....... we have a section called Your Cats Videos where you could post it if you wish...... there is a sticky at the top of the section which will explain how you can get your videos posted..... http://www.catsey.com/forumdisplay.php?f=100 |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
She sounds like quite a character, would love to see some piccies of her. I once had a blind kitty but he was blind from birth, so it made no difference to him whatso ever. I would often find him hanging from curtain tops etc. |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
Hi Matt and welcome to Catsey. I am pleased that your lovely cat recovered from her stroke. You do write about her with such affection. We'd love to see a picture of her! Do hope that you can solve her toileting problems - I think the advice given earlier is the first step. Hope it works. |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|||||
I fostered a 6-7 Blind siamese, he had an accident a couple of years previous that left him blind.....It did not really affect him that much, he came here to a strange house with 3 dogs and 5 cats and settled in quite well, we had a few hissy, spitty moments, but nothing major.... He was amazing, had no trouble getting about, could jump up on the chairs, and if i opened a cupboard he was in it! I gave him a covered litter tray without a swing door as he seemed happier with that as opposed to an ordinary one.... If you called him, he came straight toyou.... He has now settled into his new home perfectly, no problems at all, manages stairs like any sighted cat.... They are amazing, seem to adapt very well to losing their sight. |
|||||
|