I am
updating this day to day as things come up, or I think of
something. I decided to compile it because people seemed to
be making fundamental mistakes in caring for their kittens,
either through a lack of common sense, or a desire to do
the best for their cats without realising the consequences!
Nearly all these points have come up through my experiences
with Rescuing (I'm the Rescue Officer for the Old-style
Siamese Club).
ALWAYS
weigh your kittens daily. The
first sign of a problem is shown by weights. Even a very
experienced breeder cannot judge a weight gain or loss of a
few grams overnight or over 24 hours by 'feel' - nobody
can, and this could be a first sign of trouble that could
be averted. Weighing am and pm is not a bad idea in the
first couple of weeks, as that will give you an even
clearer idea of progress.
ALWAYS spend time with the kittens to
watch their litter behaviour. Some
kittens have developmental problems in the urinary system,
and a kitten trying to urinate constantly without success
will eventually burst its bladder if you don't step in. You
also need to watch out for tummy upsets.
Check
hydration of the queen and kittens daily
(pinch up the fur - if it doesn't snap back but remains
standing for a while, the cat is dehydrated and needs
veterinary care.) Always keep a couple of sachets of
small-animal rehydrations salts in the house (Lectade) as
the speedy administration of this can cure early diarrhoea
symptoms and save you from extensive veterinary bills if a
cat is dehydrated.
Having
a kitten room
Most
breeders establish a kitten room in their house. This is
mostly for their own sanity, but also for sanitation!
Kittens need to be confined or they will run wild and
become manic. More to the point, they will widdle
everywhere. It's very important for litter training that
the kittens are surrounded by litter trays, so there is
never any excuse for going anywhere else. If you give your
kittens a bit more space, you absolutely must not do it
until their litter training habits are fixed in place. Even
then, there must be litter trays in every likely corner.
Don't let them sleep on your bed, as they will wet it, and
that habit is extremely hard to break, and may cause the
new owners to return the kitten to you.
It is important that the queen can come and go freely but
the kittens cannot: put a barrier or half-door in the
doorway so that the queen can come and go to find you if
she wants, and also so that she doesn't have to be stuck in
with her kittens all the time. They get bored, so make sure
you take plenty of time to play with her every day.
Although it is good to let your queen have her way about
moving the kittens etc., you must have a boundary point at
which you will not allow her to have her own way. I had a
queen who was determined to put her kittens on top of a
cupboard. In the end we compromised by letting her go on
top of the filing cabinets in a sturdy box, but when they
were older they had no choice but to go into the kitten
room where they could learn to run about safely.
Although a kitten room puts a certain distance between you
and your babies, this can be a good thing: letting them go
to their new homes is hard, and having them in their own
room reminds you that they are not yours. From the kitten's
point of view it helps them not to become over-bonded to
you, so that when they go to their new home it is not so
traumatic for them and they will attach easily to their new
owner.
Whatever you do, make sure that if you have more than one
cat it is easy to keep the kittens away from the other
cat(s). Most adults do not like kittens, and an upset adult
can end up spraying around the house if it feels its
territory is being invaded, or if it feels stressed.
Breeders' houses are sometimes a bit whiffy: this is not
because the breeder is a slob, it's because breeding girls
and other adults are a far more volatile community than a
bunch of happy neuters, and inevitably some spraying (even
if it's only from a queen on heat) is the result of the
tensions that are natural in this situation.
Multiple
queens or other cats in the house: let
your queen decide if she wants another cat with her. I have
been angered by the blinkered advice of some breeders who
insist that a queen should never have another cat with her.
This is absurd. One lady lost a litter of kittens because
the queen was so distressed at being separated from her
partner (at the insistence of the stud owner) that she
suppressed ehr labour, and had to have a c-section to
deliver the 7 dead kittens. This was a tragedy that should
never have happened. Never separate cats who are very
attached to each other just because one is going to kitten.
This will cause extraordinary distress, and letting them be
together will ensure a contented and relaxed queen both
during birthing and after. Don't force them to be together
though: the cats will decide.
If you want to have
two queens pregnant together make
sure that the births will not be more than a week apart, or
else will be at least 6 weeks apart. Queens will often want
to move their kittens in together, and this can cause
problems with larger kittens stealing the milk from the
smaller ones (not such a problem if the older ones are
weaning). If they are more than a week apart you may have
to establish two kitten rooms, and keep the queens apart,
which could be distressing for them if they are very
attached to each other - as with any multiple cat
situation, do
what distresses the cats least,
not what is most convenient for you! They know what is best
for them (usually). Kittens can be put together once they
are weaned, and vaccinating at different times should be
fine: vaccination is not supposed to make a cat shed virus,
particularly if you use a killed vaccine, but it's very
important that a younger litter is not able to lick the
vaccination site of a recently vaccinated kitten, as this
could cause problems. You may need to keep the litters
apart for 24 hours, but by vaccination age this is not a
problem.
NEVER
allow your kittens to climb curtains. It may
be amusing for you, but it will drive the new owners
insane. Curtain-climbing is learned at an early age. If
your kittens never see a curtain it is unlikely they will
develop this habit once they leave home. Blinds work very
well for me in my kitten room!
Likewise, if your kittens are brought up with
scratching posts, they
are far more likely to exercise their claws on this than on
the new owner's furniture
NEVER
carry a kitten around constantly, or
allow your family to do so. This creates an obsessive
dependency which is a nightmare in later life. I have dealt
with a number of rescues which were caused solely by the
foolishness of a breeder allowing a kitten to over-attach.
One breeder even made a sling so that she could carry the
kitten around with her all day. Obsessive dependency can
cause an adult cat to attack other animals, children and
even the spouse of the person it attaches to. It yowls and
fusses for attention and to be held constantly, scratching
at doors and carpets, and may develop other
behavioural/anxiety problems like destructiveness,
hair-pulling, inappropriate defecation etc. I have had to
rehome a number of cats because they were driving their
owners insane, and it has taken months of 'super-nanny'
type rehabilitation to get the cat to a point where the
owners can live a normal life. Please don't do this.
