Although I've never had the experience of moving with pets, I did find good ideas on how to do it
especially with a fearful cat. Good luck with your move. I hope all goes well.
http://www.aspca.org/pet-care/virtua...-cat-new-house
Although I've never had the experience of moving with pets, I did find good ideas on how to do it
especially with a fearful cat. Good luck with your move. I hope all goes well.
http://www.aspca.org/pet-care/virtua...-cat-new-house
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Definitely move your precious cat first. I have moved several times in my life and every time with a cat or cats. What I have always done is if you can bring your cat to the apartment the night before the move and keep it in its carrier with the door open and allow your cat to be able to get acclimated to the new sounds, smells, and surroundings. Allow it to go anywhere it wants but make sure you cat proof any places it could get stuck in or small places it could crawl into and hide. You and your cat will be fine, and during the move place it in it's carrier with door open with food and litter box in a room you can keep closed until move is over, this will help stress levels on the both of you. Good luck!!!
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Recently went through this myself with a cat who is terrified of his own shadow, much less moving to a brand new house (seriously, we can't even bring a box in from UPS without him hissing and running away in fear and hiding for HOURS).
Moving the cat first is fine. I would recommend dedicating a smaller room to the cat(s) for the first few days or week or so, do NOT let him have full reign of the new house yet, just one bedroom or in my case the laundry room. Put in some familiar items; their furniture, scratching posts, litter, food and water (if applicable).
Look into getting some phermone diffusers, like Feliway, for the room. The diffuser usually lasts for about a month, and I can't remember what square footage they recommend it for but it worked well in our laundry room in the unfinished part of the basement. They also have a spray which works very well, too, but it needs to be applied a little frequently and the initial alcohol smell from spraying can upset cats... so you'd need to spray a blanket or something, let it sit for 5 minutes or so, then put it in the room once the alcohol smell goes away.
They also have special "calming" diets out there, too, that may help take the edge off. They are not medications, but more of a natural supplement.
Then, once everything is moved in, boxes are unpacked, and the dust has settled... then you can slowly let him out of the room to explore rooms one by one.
Again... you don't want to overwhelm him with the entire house. Maybe the first few days let him explore the basement, then move upstairs to the livingroom, then the kitchen a few days later, then the bedrooms, etc. But take it slow. You'll know what I mean when I say "slink-walking" that freaked out cats will do... Voltron "slink-walked" around the house for the first week or so after introducing him to all the rooms, and would run and hide (for hours upon hours) if something happened (loud noise, something falling, etc).
I continued using the Feliway diffuser for another month afterwards in the laundry room. Even after he was more comfortable with the rest of the house, he would still go down to the laundry room as his "safe zone". The dogs weren't allowed down there, it was quieter, and it was his "refuge" when he would start to get stressed out.
Oh... another VERY VERY VERY important note here... MAKE SURE HE IS EATING. Stressed out cats may not eat, and cats MUST eat every 24 hours or they are at risk for getting "hepatic lipidosis", or "fatty liver" disease... and it can be fatal. My sister's cat actually got so stressed out after their move that she got fatty liver not once, but twice, and ultimately had to be euthanized because of the irreparable damage to her liver![]()
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