Kelli
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- May 27, 2008
- Messages
- 5,455
Date: 6/7/2009 8:31:21 PM
Author: honey22
OMG! Do people actually declaw their cats to suit their lifestyle, furniture, preferences?!?! This is torture and should be illegal.![]()
If you want to take an animal into your life, you should be prepared for everything and that includes some scratched furniture (I have lost an entire garden to my two labs and wouldn''t trade them for the world).
I know honey me too. ((HUGS))Date: 6/7/2009 10:58:41 PM
Author: AmberGretchen
Totally agree with all of those who said it is inhumane and brutal, and should be outlawed. You are totally doing the right thing Gypsy - if Lucy went to a home that would declaw her it would haunt you forever.
I really wish there was more I could do to help - I've been keeping my ear to the ground, but everyone I know has kitties already![]()
Date: 6/8/2009 12:11:12 PM
Author: hoofbeats95
My cat is declawed. I had it done when I adopted her. I will be honest and say that I didn''t know what was involved. The cats that I had seen in homes growing up (my mom would never let us have an animal in the house) were always declawed (fronts only). I thought it was the norm. So I had Sophie declawed in front. Would I do it again? No. I honestly didn''t even ''think'' about what it was doing. I feel horrible for what she went through now. I honestly try not to think about it. She is a perfectly well behaved cat with no behavior problems. I don''t think it affected her as some people are describing. Again I feel terrible. I want to get her a sister or brother so she has a friend. But now I''m afraid of mixing her with a cat that has claws.I will say that there are terrible things that happen to animals in this world. Declawing is pretty low on that list IMO. There is much worse constant abuse that happens. I figure my cat is happy, healthy and loves life. So I''m not against declawing. I don''t have a stance. I think if someone will give that animal a good home then it''s better than some of the alternatives. Your case is different cause the cat has a good home now. But there are a lot of cats that don''t.![]()
Lola (the girl in my av) was declawed by her previous owners. Ezra, her brother, has all of his claws intact, and it is no problem for Lola. She is quite adept at getting him in a headlock with her front legs and scratching the heck out of his head with her back legs (which have claws). She also will smack him right in the nose, which suprises/hurts him enough to get him to back off. It''s actually really funny to watch them get each other in a headlock and scratch each others heads with their back claws.Date: 6/8/2009 12:11:12 PM
Author: hoofbeats95
My cat is declawed. I had it done when I adopted her. I will be honest and say that I didn''t know what was involved. The cats that I had seen in homes growing up (my mom would never let us have an animal in the house) were always declawed (fronts only). I thought it was the norm. So I had Sophie declawed in front. Would I do it again? No. I honestly didn''t even ''think'' about what it was doing. I feel horrible for what she went through now. I honestly try not to think about it. She is a perfectly well behaved cat with no behavior problems. I don''t think it affected her as some people are describing. Again I feel terrible. I want to get her a sister or brother so she has a friend. But now I''m afraid of mixing her with a cat that has claws.I will say that there are terrible things that happen to animals in this world. Declawing is pretty low on that list IMO. There is much worse constant abuse that happens. I figure my cat is happy, healthy and loves life. So I''m not against declawing. I don''t have a stance. I think if someone will give that animal a good home then it''s better than some of the alternatives. Your case is different cause the cat has a good home now. But there are a lot of cats that don''t.![]()
Honestly, I really think you're doing the only thing that can be done. You made a regrettable mistake, you learned from it, and you're passing that on. I honestly had no idea what it was until I was researching getting a cat. I think the people at the humane society should have explained what it entailed. They were the guardians of the cat, and I do believe it was their responsibility to at least tell you what that would do.Date: 6/8/2009 1:20:12 PM
Author: hoofbeats95
Ignorance is no excuse for sure. It's only my explanation. I think vets should tell you what you are committing to before agreeing to do the procedure. In my case I requested it via the humane society as they sent her to be fixed and get shots. Then I picked her up from the vet. So I never saw the vet. If someone at the humane society had told me what was really happening I'd have likely backed out of doing it. Especially since she was a kitten essentially and could have been trained from the beginning to not use her claws. Live and learn I guess. There are several mistakes I've made with my animals - a cat and a horse. But I've learned from them and spread my knowledge to others when I can.
Date: 6/8/2009 1:42:10 PM
Author: Gypsy
On the plus side, to give a full picture of the issue as I''ve seen it, declawed cats go quickly in shelters. Saves the new owners the guilt of doing it, and gets them what they want. But, that''s only with the ones that don''t turn mean or competely human shy. The ones that get adopted are the ones that HATE the owners that did the declaw to them, but can learn with socialization and time to trust humans again, and then can be re-adopted out to a new place. And yes, some of them have the pain forever and will NOT let you touch thier paws. AT ALL. And will bite if you try to.
Just curious if the owners of the cat themselves would say that the cat changed after being declawed or if that is just a guess. From there I would want to know the age the cat was declawed & also fixed, how many homes the cat had been in & whether it was around all adults & or children & their ages, was the cat exposed to other dogs, cats, animals & if so it''s reaction, was the cat kept strictly indoors or indoors & out etc. etc.Date: 6/8/2009 1:42:10 PM
Author: Gypsy
LOL @ Lucy having no behavioural problems. Oh she does, the moody little turd. But scratching furniture, rugs, walls etc. is not one of them. She''s a nipper and has a foot fetish. She loves to nibble on your toes. And god help you if you are a toe wiggler like I am.![]()
I have seen cats without major issues who have been declawed. They are usually declawed as kittens at 6 months, while getting neutered, and I think that females react a little better to it than males. I still don''t think it should be done, personally.
I think the major issue with declawing is that people see it as preventative. I''ve heard vets say that they will only do it to kittens. Well, the problem there is unless you have a particularly destructive and untrainable kitten... that''s too young to sentence the cat to mutilation. Then if you give the cat enough time to grow into their personality, and you see them being destructive (AND YOU HAVE TRIED TO CURB THE BEHAVIOR with scratching pads of all types, soft paws, manicures)... well, most vets I know won''t do it to older cats unless it''s between a kill shelter and declawing. And if you get them de-clawed as kittens, well... god, I hope you mean to keep the baby for ever and ever. And never let it out. That catch 22 is why I think it should be illegal.
I think my personal feeling is, if you are adopting an already adult cat. It should not be on your to-do list. It just shouldn''t be. I have only ONE cat who scratches stuff and he''s VERY particular. He likes high knot count, expensive persian silk and wool rugs, and he only scratches the silk. So we rolled up the carpet. And then he started using his cardboard Scratch Lounge again. The carpet is fine rolled up undre my bed. I like my new contemporary carpet from Crate and Barrel better and the fancy shmantzy silk and wool rug is in storage until I get a room I can keep the cats out of.
It''s the ''declawing is the owner''s choice'' thing that bothers me. It''s not a choice. It''s very much a last resort. And even then... IF you get it done to an adult cat you have to be VERY VERY careful about the after surgery care.
Duncan had one of his canines removed. And now has to have more teeth removed later this year () and I noticed some behavioral issues that cropped up after the first surgery, and we worked them with him to ammeliorate them , and then with his eye treatments (he felt hunted cause every time he turned around we were putting drops in his eyes) he''s got some lovely habits he''s acquired.... and now he''s losing 4 more teeth in major surgery (plus I have to get an ultra sound for cancer all over his chest and stomach) so I am anticipating more behavioural/trust issues from him. And that''s all from absolutely NECESSARY treatements. I just wouldn''t put my cat through anything surgical and scary and bewildering, life altering and painful if it wasn''t absolutely needed. It changes them. And it takes a LONG time to re-build trust. And Duncan is an angel. He really is. And he trusts us implicitily. I can''t imagine getting a new cat, who doesn''t know you or trust you, then doing that to them, and expecting them to love and trust and want to be your companion.![]()
On the plus side, to give a full picture of the issue as I''ve seen it, declawed cats go quickly in shelters. Saves the new owners the guilt of doing it, and gets them what they want. But, that''s only with the ones that don''t turn mean or competely human shy. The ones that get adopted are the ones that HATE the owners that did the declaw to them, but can learn with socialization and time to trust humans again, and then can be re-adopted out to a new place. And yes, some of them have the pain forever and will NOT let you touch thier paws. AT ALL. And will bite if you try to.
Not to pick a fight hereDate: 6/8/2009 6:36:45 PM
Author: Gypsy
See for me. Since the cat cannot understand why it is being harmed and because it is so defenseless in the care of it's guardian it's like a child. A young child. Just because it's legal to spank your kid, and your momma did it to you, doesn't mean you should. At some point, we have to stop doing things because we can, because we're stronger, because we feel entitled because we are 'granting' the animal the right to share our lives. And appreciate that its a mutual arrangement. We domesticated them, we have, like a virus, taken over the earth, and pets are our companions. They take care of us too. I cry, my cats (all of them) come running to find out what's wrong and suddenly I've got three of them either sitting on me trying to comfort me, or trying to cheer me up. We have a duty of care not to be negligent in our responsibilites to them. And causing them unwarranted harm merely for our convenience or our favorite recliner is wrong. Even if they are 'just cats.'
Some do it for cosmetic reasons so no, not all parents do it because it it is beneficial or even look into the all reasons it is done. This is why I dont like comparison of animals to people. I do not treat animals like people-they are not.Date: 6/8/2009 6:28:59 PM
Author: brooklyngirl
Animals are not people, and perhaps they have their ''place,'' but that doesn''t mean that humans should do whatever they want with them. They feel pain, fear, can become confused, depressed, and whole bunch of other things that have to do with emotions. I''m very confident that a declawed cat appreciates that it''s missing important parts of its body, just like a human can. I just can''t see why that has to happen unnecessarily.
ETA Circumcision is a whole other ballgame, and I''m not sure I want to get into with this thread. But, it is done for a variety of reasons, one of which being religion. Whatever reason it''s done for though, it is done because the parents believe it will be beneficial to their child. Declawing is done for the benefit of the owner, not the cat.