Crosswords2 mins ago
Cat Has Food Obsession
23 Answers
My cat has always loved his food and would eat at any time. he has always been a mad ginger moggie and is now 12. But he is becoming obsessed. Miaows all the time for food, really loud, he has been wormed and gets regular food, maybe he is bored but every time I get off the chair he jumps up and starts miaowing again and running to his empty dish. I usually ignore him. Or just cuddle him but how can I get him over this obsession ? He is not a skinny cat and well fed and loved but this is getting very annoying now and I find myself shouting at him to shut up which I dont want to do. I think he is just a potty cat.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by smurfchops. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Elderly cats can suffer from dementia, which involves lots of loud miaowing (sp.) for no particular reason, attention seeking, demanding food,and other obsessive and unusual behaviour. It is not unusual. I believe it would be worth taking him to the vet as there are drugs available which help calm dementia in cats. Sometimes they miaow loudly at night because they get muddled and need company.
Loftie is, of course, completely right.
But looking at your previous threads about this, seems as if Moggy has learned that MIAOW means he gets fed, cuddled or talked to. I've got one like that. He's perfectly healthy. We've agreed that I'll ignore him and he'll ignore the fact that I am ignoring him.
But looking at your previous threads about this, seems as if Moggy has learned that MIAOW means he gets fed, cuddled or talked to. I've got one like that. He's perfectly healthy. We've agreed that I'll ignore him and he'll ignore the fact that I am ignoring him.
Our cat is about the same age and he started gulping his food and throwing up. We've cut him down to half a pouch at a time mixed with dried food so he has to chew properly.Cost about £250 at the vets to check he was ok.
The vet said if it happened again he'd give him an injection to disperse the fur balls.He was over grooming, but seems to have settled back down to normal. We were conned another £30 for a grooming brush as well.
The vet said if it happened again he'd give him an injection to disperse the fur balls.He was over grooming, but seems to have settled back down to normal. We were conned another £30 for a grooming brush as well.
Our cat, aged about 17yrs, gets a lot of furballs which affect her appetite/ demand for food (they are not the same thing ). To counteract the furballs we dose her on catalax on the advice of our vet. Having said that, cats are very manipulative and I would have thought 12yrs is a bit young for dementia
Believe it or not Tambo, my cat, Alice, will only drink from a glass on the kitchen work surface!! She has her own glass. She won't drink from a bowl and she won't drink from a glass on the floor. She will however, drink from my glass of water by the side of the bed on the bedside table. I put a lid on it, but she manages to get it off!!