You did the best thing younew to do and it worked. Blessings to you both and your family. Sometimes you just take your best shot and pray.
On Mar 24, 2011, at 5:46 PM, Diane Rosenfeldt wrote:

My housemate and I were faced with such a decision 10 or 11 years ago, when we moved from our separate apartments to our formerly-two-flat house, and melded our cat families. She had two, an elderly lady named Kitty and a
pugnacious orange boy named Tribble. I had 3 -- my laid-back Luc, my
introverted fluffy tortie Phoebe, and my mom's black girly, Missy. Tribble had always deferred to Kitty when they lived together, and continued to do so, thank goodness. But as time went on and our cat population changed a
little, Tribble showed quite a bit of aggression, and we had to take
somebody or other to the vet to have bites treated at least twice. So we were in a real bind, since we are both cats-are-family-for-life people, and we did love Tribble with all his peculiarities. We knew nobody would adopt him anyway. We are both anti-declaw and had the raggedy furniture to prove it, but we decided that for the safety of the other cats we would have him declawed, feeling maybe he would lose some aggressiveness, and also that he might still be able to bite, but he wouldn't be able to dig in and hold on while he did so. We found the one place in town at the time that did the
laser technique.

We were worried about all the things mentioned -- the pain, the litter
problems, the behavioral problems. But he really seemed not to mind, even during the first days. He was fine with the litterbox, and didn't develop any behavioral problems above and beyond the ones he had going in. He was still aggressive, but wasn't able to inflict nearly the damage, which was mission accomplished as far as we were concerned. The upside for him is that to this day he still tries to sharpen those claws on furniture, wicker etc., and he's the only one that doesn't get shooed away. I know we got lucky here, and that most cats suffer more, but if we had it to do again we'd still make the same decision under the same circumstances. It was either
that or sentence Tribble to almost certain death.

Diane R.

-----Original Message-----
From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of MaiMaiPG
Sent: Wednesday, March 23, 2011 4:49 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FW: Keep Cats Indoors

I can see some times where it is either declaw the cat or end its
life.....for the safety of an elderly owner for example. That being said, Copper and Thomas have their claws and, with a little planning re furniture, there has been no problem. Dixie and Ebony kept theirs too. Ebony caused
some problems but, if I had known then  what I know now, I could have
limited them. It takes a little work and patience, planning and thinking. I would encourage anyone who wanted a declawed cat to try and get one that
has already been declawed.
On Mar 23, 2011, at 4:28 PM, Natalie wrote:

That's horrible, and many people do not realize what it entails and
how many cats lose their lives - they think it's a manicure...but many
vets are to blame.  Several people told me that after adopting from
us, they went to their own vet, and after telling them that the cats
will be kept indoors only, the vets said "Oh, you have an option to
declaw!"  Banfield Health.
The group at Petsmart, offers a big special for "kitten health" - all
the vaccines, exams, and declawing for a very good price!  I wrote to
them about declawing; they wrote back with the most ridiculous
comments.  If anyone would like to see their reply, I'll send it
privately.  Last year, I was informed that they will no longer cut
ears and tails on dogs, because it's purely cosmetic...I wrote to
them, asking their policy on declawing since they have made that big
leap on no longer mutilating dogs, they might have reconsidered doing
it to cats...no reply from them.
O always ask people what they would prefer, a few things scratched up
or urine-soaked carpets and furniture.....Besides, not all cats grow
up to be scratchers...and providing good posts and trimming their
nails works well.

-----Original Message-----
From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Edna Taylor
Sent: Wednesday, March 23, 2011 1:44 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] FW: Keep Cats Indoors


Natalie,  I am with you about the declawing.  Someone I know adopted
two
kittens from me and one died on the table during a declaw surgery.
Yes, I
HAD told her before hand "NO declawing" but people don't listen and
they always know best, yadda yadda :(  Then they wonder why Buster is
peeing on the bed and the floor because his paws hurt so badly from
the surgery.  SIGH :(

Date: Wed, 23 Mar 2011 12:55:49 -0400
From: at...@optonline.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: [Felvtalk] FW: Keep Cats Indoors

Edna, that's exactly what I tell people about letting their cats out
just because they want to. I ask them if they would allow their 3-yr
old to
play
in the middle of the street just because he/she wanted to? When I
hear
"but
the cat gets out", I tell them that they control the door, period!
Our
adoption contract stipulates "strictly indoors" - but, there's no
real way of enforcing it except to spot check wherever the cats live
and hope that adopters understand the reasons for it. I have removed
several adopted
cats
over the past 18 years. A friend, who also has a cat rescue group,
doesn't allow declawing (we don't either), came to her vet, and
noticed one of her adopters picking up her cat after spaying....she
looked into the carrier
and
noticed the poor kittens front paws bandaged.....she gave her an
earful,
but
what was she to do, take the cat back and have this person declaw yet
another one? Since then, we made it perfectly clear to that
veterinary hospital that no cat that was adopted from us can be
declawed, and should
a
customer ask for it, we must be notified immediately! Thank God that
my other veterinarian would never declaw!


-----Original Message-----
From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Edna Taylor
Sent: Wednesday, March 23, 2011 11:40 AM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Keep Cats Indoors


Just because your kid likes to eat McDonald's every day or binge
drink or
do
drugs because it makes them happy is NOT a reason to allow it.  The
same reasoning goes for cats, just because they LIKE it doesn't mean
it's good for them.  My cats may be "prisoners" in my house but I
sleep well at
night
knowing they are loved and safe and from what I can tell, they are
pretty freakin happy.  I have picked up enough broken and battered
bodies off the roadways to know that NONE of my cats or fosters will
EVER be allowed outside unless it is in a safe enclosure or on a
leash.

There was a young "individual" (can't call him a man because real men
do
not
torture animals) in Dallas that took his neighbor's inside/outside
cat and over a course of several hours beat and tortured the cat and
video taped
the
entire thing.  THAT is what happens to outdoor cats.  While some may
be lucky enough to escape being tortured, hit by cars, eaten by
coyotes or hawks or owls, most do not escape this fate.

Sorry but I 100% DISAGREE with "cats are wild animals and need to
live outside" point of view.

Just my 2 cents.

Edna

Date: Wed, 23 Mar 2011 09:13:09 -0400
From: at...@optonline.net
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Keep Cats Indoors

As an adopter, my views on this are very strict and well-defined - I
am responsible for placing cats in the safest possible homes, and I
would
do
no
less. I need to be able to sleep at night, knowing that the cats
that I
rescued and invested so much time, energy, and emotion will be
safe and
happy for a long time.
Yes, I agree, there still are a few safe area left, but not many and
none
are 100% safe, ever. It is true that times used to be safer for
cats to
be
outdoors - ours always had been, especially when I was growing up,
until
one
of our kittens was killed by a car....Unfortunately, it takes many
people
to
understand this only after a tragedy occurs. When an adopter tells
me
that
their cat ALWAYS sat on the front porch, and never left....and they
intend
to do the same with a new adopted cat, I say NO! Their old cat may
have
indeed done that, but it doesn't mean that a new cat will do it: It
takes
ONLY ONE TIME - chasing a squirrel or bird across the street, and
WHAM!
Cats can be perfectly happy indoors with tall cat trees by a
window, a
window perch, the right kind of toys to keep them interested and
active.
More and more people construct outdoor enclosures; simple ones to
really
elaborate ones, even just a little window screened porch. I don't
believe
that cats need to hunt; if they are homeless and hungry, yes, but
there's
no
need for a well-fed cat to kill small wildlife, not for food, but
for
fun
and the reflex of chasing something (could be a toy).

-----Original Message-----
From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of Lorrie
Sent: Wednesday, March 23, 2011 7:56 AM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Keep Cats Indoors

This is a hot topic, but I agree humans and loss of habitat
are the main threat to birds.

As for keeping cats inside. I've had cats all my life and they
have always been indoor/outdoor cats. All of them have lived to
16 to 17 years of age unless they've had some genetic problem like
heart disease. My cats were all rescues and they lived outside
before I had them, and they are totally miserable inside.

It's really only the last couple decades that cats have been living
indoors, but the invention of cat litter and urban sprawl have made
us think all cats have the perfect life indoors, when in reality,
cats are happier if they can live outdoors. They are programmed to
hunt small animals....which is the best nutrition for them. They
need
to climb trees, stalk at night with their night vision, and be free.
Cats were not made for sitting in a window sill, and a prison is a
prison no matter how many cat toys and kitty kondos we buy for them.

It's true that some outdoor cats have a shorter life expectancy, but
this mostly depends on where they live. If they live in a safe area
with little or no traffic then I feel they should be allowed to be
outside. There are some cats who will never willingly settle for the
indoor life. We live in the middle of the woods on a dead end road
with no traffic and our cats are allowed to go outside. I rarely see
them catch a bird, but they catch many mice & moles. I feel sad to
see anything killed, but cats and dogs are predators and this is
what
they were designed to do.

Lorrie


Sorry but that information is outdated or biased. The number one
killer of birds is humans due to habitat loss or construction for
same.

Humans: The Number One Threat to Birds
http://www.alleycat.org/NetCommunity/Page.aspx?pid=325

SomeWhere Sam



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