Declawed cat, bitting more often
Hello, I adopted a tabby cat from my shelter, he is declawed on all four paws and he broke his foot by jumping on a shoe box but I heard that they could only do 2 front paws, not four paws. Here is my question, since we brought him home, he been bitting more then usual and he plays more agressive with my other two cats. We call him Toby, he very wild, always playing and very playful kitty. Also, he gets in the way too much. I want to know if this has something to do with his behavor because he has been declawed. Is their any solution to stop the bitting? Please help!! By the way, he doesn't sleep much and is always eating and he likes humane food.
Declawing or not....mean is mean....
I think it is up to the owner to decided if they want to declaw a cat or not. It is a personal choice. We do still have choices as I recall. I have chosen to NOT declaw my cats. I do not condem anyone for making their choice TO declaw. There are lots of folks on this forum with declawed cats!
I have had declawed cats in the past, and I never noticed a difference in their personalities. They played less roughly, but that was it. I would go outside with them, never let them by themselves, and they would scratch on trees, catch chipmunks etc., just as though they had claws.
You can think what you want about the clawing/declawing issue, but don't let your imaginations run away! Really. I know this is a hot topic, but lets not condem folks, its a choice.
:)
A connection? Who REALLY KNOWS?
Well, this is an old topic, I agree. It will continue as long as cats are around and being declawed.
As I have said in the past, it is a choice, and not one that I would decide to DO. Since it is not illegal here in the states, people continue to declaw.
In my experience with declawed cats, they don't know the difference. Two of my cats have their claws and one does not have his front claws. They fight, scratch, bite equally. I really think the difference is what folks allow their cats to do. I try to discourage biting altogether. I know that some people try to think like cats, but how can we? All I have ever seen with declawed cats is the standard scratching on everything as though they have their claws. Granted, they do figure out that they cannot pickup things with their paws without claws, and they use their mouths, but that is not related to actually biting someone and each other. I think biting is a natural activity for cats.
Many opinions - but who REALLY KNOWS!!!!