Is Is Fair For Hairdressers To Charge...
Body & Soul1 min ago
my cat is roughly 6-7 months old.. and for the past 2 months, every other week, shes has started to behave in the most odd way... she really miaowing and making baby like noise constantly, and its really loud.. rubbing herself all over me & the carpet.. it sounds like she is in pain, and seems to stop the whining when i have her on my lap and rubbing her belly....
any help would be great xxx
No best answer has yet been selected by missy1981. 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.I would agree with these, with one or two exceptions...you'll need to have her SPAYED :to remove the ovaries of (a female animal)
not neutered which is: castrate, to deprive of the testes.
(oh just a thought if she is NOT in season:Maybe she is asking for attention which ever way she knows how because you have responded to this act she is doing.)
I'm sure your vet will know which one to do, or at least I hope so..Sorry being silly....LOL
drgnrdr - neutering is to remove the sex organs of an animal. Spaying is merely a colloquial term. If you want to be pedantic we should perhaps be using the terminology 'ovariohysterectomy'. Neutering is perfectly acceptable terminology to apply to a female.
That aside, I hope the cat is seeing a vet soon!
That's not my definition it is the dictionary's.
Here this is what it said:
neuter
One entry found for neuter.
Main Entry: 3neuter
Function: transitive verb
: CASTRATE, ALTER
then I went to "castrate"
a : to deprive of the testes : GELD b : to deprive of the ovaries : SPAY
So I surmise it means "deprived of testes" was as close as it could come, since it uses "spay" for the example of "to deprive of ovaries"
Ovariohysterectomy is way to long to type....lol