• @wulrus@lemmy.world
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    1420 hours ago

    Hm. Maybe try putting the water away from the food. Some cats don’t like it near the food. (Presumably related to clean water sources in nature vs. dead prey.)

    My last cat only ever drank from the running tab. Jumped into the bathtub and meowed until someone turned it on, day or night.

    • @SgtAStrawberry@lemmy.world
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      611 hours ago

      We got one of those little water fountains, super popular. Everyone has there own place on it to drink. One likes where the water comes out, one likes the little pool and one likes the edge towards the nozzle, the water makes small waves there.

      • @wulrus@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        They really make sense; instinctively, cats trust running water more than stale water, for the same reasons I mentioned.

        Often thought about it, but didn’t get a chance to try.

  • @Psythik@lemm.ee
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    201 day ago

    If they’re an indoor cat, buy a cat harness and take them on a walk. Preferably one with a long leash.

    Do not try to walk them like a dog; that will never work.

    Cats are fiercely independent; try to force them in a particular direction and they’ll protest. Let them lead the way.

    If they try to go somewhere dangerous, simply stand in place and do not allow them to progress any further. Do not tug, they will eventually get the message on their own.

    Be prepared to spend a half hour minimum outside, ideally an hour or more. Cats like to take their time on a walk.

    • @wulrus@lemmy.world
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      38 hours ago

      That was so nice when I got an 8 year old indoor cat. You could see this world of wonder in her eyes, as she didn’t know where to look and where to sniff first.

      With time, I could let her run free but supervised in a shared apartment building garden. She always went to the same pine trees and couldn’t get enough sniffing them. Also jumped on the window sill of neighbour cats just to hiss at them from the outside.

      When I went to neighbours, for example to pick up a package or talk about something, she trotted next to me through the hallways like a well-trained dog and sat next to me when I talked to a neighbour. The whole stairway and hallways were another great adventure to her, sniffing and clawing doormats etc.

    • @Osprey@lemmy.world
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      616 hours ago

      Also be prepared to let the walk take 5 minutes or less if the cat doesn’t feel like it. Or if they find it too scary (but might want to try again a little while later).

    • @SalmiakDragon@feddit.nu
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      518 hours ago

      If you want this to be successful, you would be wise to devote time to harness training (i.e. getting used to the harness) first. Don’t just put the harness on - it can be a bad experience for the cat and move you further from the goal of a walk.

      • @wulrus@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        Yes, the worst was when something startled her (sting from a thistle?) and she dashed for the door full speed, into the harness, did a looping. A good fit is essential, could have cause major injury!

  • @RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Move the water away from the food. Get bowls that are wider and shallower than those so kitty’s whiskers don’t touch the sides when drinking and eating. Cats like separation between food and water, and they don’t like their whiskers touching the bowl when they eat.

    Might make mealtimes easier for kitty.

    • @drhodl@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Also, get ceramic bowls and keep them clean. Plastic and metal ones are associated with cat acne…

    • @SgtAStrawberry@lemmy.world
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      111 hours ago

      Except for some cats that show their face down a glass to drink, with their whiskers completely squashed between them and the glass.

      And apparently prefer it that way. Most cats will not like it but some do.

    • @Psythik@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      I keep telling my girlfriend this but she doesn’t listen. “I see her drinking her water all the time!”, she says. Yeah well she’d drink a lot more if you moved her water bowl!

      It frustrates me so much because kidney failure is extremely common in cats due to low water intake. She claims that she loves her cat so much yet refuses to research this shit.

      Meanwhile I have two water fountains for my kitty—both far away from the food—and let him drink from sink anytime he wants. She never lets him because he gets in the way of her “skincare routine”, but I am of the opinion that you should never pass up on an opportunity for your cat to drink more water.

      • @justme@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        319 hours ago

        When we got our two cats (they were buddies in the shelter, so they came in a bundle) one was super scared of everything. The first two weeks we only noticed his presence in the middle of the night, when he came out of hiding to eat. Then he started drinking out of my water cup, which is on my desk next to me. A year later I’m drinking out of a bottle and he has still his favorite cup on my desk :) the other one is using a fountain.

      • @SalmiakDragon@feddit.nu
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        18 hours ago

        At this point jusk ask her to move the water for your peace of mind. I’m worried this will breed resentment otherwise when her cat’s health fails, even if it’s only due to aging. If she respects you she will move the bowl, even if she believes it is totally unnecessary.

  • Schadrach
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    262 days ago

    The fourth is catnip. Always the 'nip.

    Once my mom asked me to clear out a planter box that had become overgrown because she wanted to plant tomatoes. I pulled up this 3ft tall stalk plant with little purplish flowers, and as soon as I shoved it in the trash bag, the cat came running from the other side of the house and dove face first in the bag. After a minute or so, it was backing out of the bag with the stalk between his teeth dragging it out of the bag and once it was out of the bag started nibbling on it and rolling around on the plant. Looked up what the plant was and apparently I had just pulled up his catnip grow operation. When he came down, he was mad at me for a few days.

  • @collapse_already@lemmy.ml
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    81 day ago

    My cat wants food she can kill herself. That and cheese. I have no idea why she is so interested in cheese. Also, we tend to not eat tuna to avoid her pestering.

      • @collapse_already@lemmy.ml
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        212 hours ago

        Years ago, I had a cat that loved cantaloupe. He was a stray in terrible shape when we got him (he adopted us). Our theory was that he found a cantaloupe that saved him from dehydration when he was feral. One of the nicest cats I have ever known.

    • @Phoonzang@lemmy.world
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      71 day ago

      I can be on a different continent opening a can of tuna, yet my cat will still be next to me in a jiffy with his “you gonna finish that” look

    • @Agent641@lemmy.world
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      382 days ago

      “My ancestors could take down water buffalo. Look what I’ve let myself become. I could probably only take down a Zebra now.”

    • This can actually be a large part of it. Cats are obligate hunters so they can be pretty regimented in wanting a ‘hunt’ to spur their appetite.

      A play session may be that fourth thing.

  • @PunnyName@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Split water and food bowls by a good amount of space. Opposite sides of the room, or different rooms altogether. And more than 1 water bowl. Apparently these tricks are useful.

    • Madrigal
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      342 days ago

      Yeah I only learned a couple of years ago that cats hate having their water anywhere near food. Moving bowls into different rooms made a huge difference to their water consumption.

      • @Maalus@lemmy.world
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        132 days ago

        There is also a trick I used to do - fill the food bowl with water (wetfood only). The cat plucked it out of the water and then drank the water. They take in most of their water from drinking blood / when eating. Also important to feed them internal organs - chicken hearts, livers, etc.

      • @Rakonat@lemmy.world
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        52 days ago

        My mom was a florist with a greenhouse attached to the house. Cats loved roaming the greenhouse to find mice of course, but by far their favorite was all the glasses of water my mom used to cut flowers with, we joked that one particular tuxedo cat had a refined palette and would only sip on rose water.

        When those cats were thirsty, they didn’t check the water by the dog food or one in their cat tree for a sip, they’d go right to the table and counter top and sniff around at every glass they could find till something seemed just right for them.

        Me and my sisters pretty much had to go around the house collecting glasses every day we got home from school cause my mother couldn’t be bothered to clean up after herself.

        • @MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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          51 day ago

          I’d suspect it’s a water safety thing, not wanting to drink stagnant water right next to their “kill”. The cats I’ve had have always preferred drinking running water in the bath

          This is but a hypothesis, though