Post
by wodesorel » Sun Jul 19, 2015 1:43 pm
We think she was 7 days old when this couple who was on the way to a brothers funeral out of state found her in their flower bed as they were pulling out the driveway. They thought it was a dead squirrel, and then realized it was a bloody, messy baby kitten with it's eyes still shut but already infected. I had just lost my cat who was my constant companion a week before (on my hubby's birthday) and just agreed to foster Winter since the shelter was going to put her down for 'being feral' (she was just terrified), and my husband called me an hour before he was supposed to come home with the kitten and asked if I could take a bottle baby. To say I lost it would be an understatement. But, since there was no one else, I agreed to tag team with him. I stayed up nights with her, and he took her to work so I could sleep. She was the best bottle baby ever. Never fussed, never cried. Medical issues.... She came with lice and fleas, she pooped all of four times during the time it had to be done manually and the vets kept saying it was normal (it should have been once to twice a day so I was freaking out), the day after we got her at work a bunch of maggots crawled out of her ear and landed kn my husband's shirt, three weeks in the crust I thought was from formula turned out to be ringworm over half her body, me and a bunch of our other cats got it as well. She also has a birth defect that causes bloodvessels to grow in her eyes which causes ulcerations and clouding. But, she's my baby and my shadow and my husband calls her my daughter. (And I am not one of those kinds of pet people. Usually.) I'm still in touch with the people who found her,too.
As far as spraying, that should end as soon as he's fixed. Unneutered males do it to mark territory. Unneutered females will also leave pee spots to attract males. It can take a couple of months for the hormones to dissipate. It can become a learned behaviour, in which case medication like Prozac might be needed. I've got this jerkface of a cat with an unknown history who could not find a home elsewhere, and we keep him drugged every few months or else he sprays. He did it at the shelter, too, and when he was adopted as an only cat and then returned. We're thinking he was 4 or so when he was fixed and he's so high strung that he's never calmed down enough to stop. On meds he's wonderful. Off meds he's good for a while and then starts to cause trouble again.
Having more litterboxes is usually the cure for them not going where you want them to. Ideally it's one box per cat in the house, plus an extra, and cleaned twice a day. We have a litterbox farm in the basement. I use the flatter rubbermaid bins, or the roughneck totes with a U cut into a short side for entry. Bigger and less easier for them to kick out litter. With kittens they can get confused with anything that seems like a box with things to dig into, so try to hide those things as best you can for now or they can learn that it's okay to do. Sometimes they can get turned off by the scent or feel of the litter, but when babies are born into it they don't normally fuss unless there's a sudden change in the litter they'd been used to.
As far as cleaning up the messes, I like Chlorox 2 Free. It will pull the smell out of anything, and it generally doesn't ruin clothes or fabrics. My allergies to scented cleaning products is so bad that I use it to clean the house now. A 1/4 cup in a spray bottle with a drop of lemon dish soap and I can tackle anything they do.