jellyoflight wrote:
Well, my friend has a small cat toy that you put a few small treats in, and it keeps their cat (aka the Queen of Sheba) amused for a fair few hours trying to get them out. They're pretty cheap.
funny you should say that, my cat is called sheba! for that very reason
my advice, is if she starts mucking up, not to actually hit her, because i've been told, several times, this is only encouraging her to be rough with you. i have to deal with the concequences of my actions, *points to hand scars* so yes. if they continue to muck up even with the squirt bottles, add some lemon into it, they will hate it.
also with food, don't let them get picky, then it gets expensive. our household never follows my rules for dealing with my cat, so shes consequently a pain to put it lightly, but mum pays for the food now since i gave up buying food thats $20 a kilo. if they don't eat it, take it away for a couple of hours, then put it back down again. eventually they get the message. *except my parents are too soft*
i would probably not advise rubber bands, but a roll of wool is fine for toys. and play with they as much as you can, because otherwise they start on the furniture
also cats are quite social creatures, so they need the interaction
also, btw do you have alot of wildlife near your house? i live near a national park, so we have built a bit of a cat run for our cat, but it cost a great deal. a cheaper alternative is a bell
lol.
also, make sure that your local council is ok with this. some councils actually aren't, in know that the council next to us despises cats, and tried to put a ban on them because we are so close to a national park.
best of luck in making a decision though
if you need to, then she will, being a small kitten, have a high chance of finding another home as well
If you see my sanity, get it to give me a call.