The owner has provided well for their furry friends.
Cute and all, but what happens when they puke up there? And when you want to grab them for a vet trip?
Out of sight out of mind, but the owners might have an appropriate ladder
My cats have always been pretty easy to treat train. As soon as they hear the shake of the can ir the crinkle of the bag !BAM!
cat in front of me
One of our current cats doesn’t particularly like any food as far as I can figure. We need to sneak sleeping drugs into her favourite food to be able to get her in a carry cage for the vet … which is a problem when she doesn’t have a favourite food.
But hey, at least in the past couple of months she’s become affectionate with us. For the first two years or so we couldn’t get near her. Still can’t pick her up.
do you buy cat treats? how about raw fish?
![]()
![]()
Haven’t tried raw fish. For treats, she’ll eat them a little more enthusiastically than with usual food if they’re placed in front of her - but actually move to get the treats? Nope.
Either dumb as a post or (and?) incredibly entitled, that one. She’ll be complaining for her morning food but will just stare blankly if the food is placed somewhere other than directly in front of her. Some days she’ll find that distant bowl three meters away - but only some days.
Are you sure your cat isn’t sick or something?
Usually raw meat of any kind works on cats… they love those things.
I have a catcher´s net for hard cases. Currently the younger generation of cats is quite healthy and the rare trip to the vet uneventful as they are so tame. So different from the previous ones, that require net, gloves, helmet -for me, not for them.
Raw meat yes, raw fish is a no no. Even so, most meat, like beef and chicken, is first frozen to kill some parasites. Still…
For meds I use sardine, like the chicken paste strips from Japan, sardine flavored, they are a goner.
I have yet to find one who does not enjoy sneaking the chu toro from the sashimi plate.
May have a smell disorder. Blocked sinuses. Chronic respiratory infection.



