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First of the week - How to bathe a Cat !!!

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  • 21-06-1999 8:23am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 26,458 ✭✭✭✭


    How To Bathe A Cat

    (Note: Jeffery LaCroix is a veterinarian with an office in Wilmington. He writes a column for the Morning Star called "From Paws to Tails."

    Here is his response to a letter regarding bathing a cat smile.gif

    Dear Dr. LaCroix: I've heard that cats never have to be bathed, and that they have some sort of special enzyme in their saliva that keeps them clean. This doesn't sound
    believable to me because there are definite "kitty" odors on my couch and dirty cat paw prints on our white hearth. Is this true about the saliva? If we do decide to give
    "Nice Kitty" a bath, how do we do that? - NSP, Wilmington

    Dear NSP: Fortunately for you, several years ago a client gave me a written set of instructions about cat bathing which I am privileged to share with you:

    Cat Bathing As A Martial Art

    A. Know that although the cat has the advantage of quickness and lack of concern for human life, you have the advantage of strength.

    Capitalize on that advantage by selecting the battlefield. Don't try to bathe him in an open area where he can force you to chase him. Pick a very small bathroom.

    If your bathroom is more than four feet square, I recommend that you get in the tub with the cat and close the sliding -glass doors as if you were about to take a shower.
    (A simple shower curtain will not do. A berserk cat can shred a three-ply rubber shower curtain quicker than a politician can shift positions.)

    B. Know that a cat has claws and will not hesitate to remove all the skin from your body. Your advantage here is that you are smart and know how to dress to protect
    yourself.

    I recommend canvas overalls tucked into high-top construction boots, a pair of steel-mesh gloves, an army helmet, a hockey face-mask, and a long-sleeved flak jacket.

    C. Use the element of surprise. Pick up your cat nonchalantly, as if to simply carry him to his supper dish. (Cats will not usually notice your strange attire. They have little or no interest in fashion as a rule.)

    D. Once you are inside the bathroom, speed is essential to survival. In a single liquid motion, shut the bathroom door, step into the tub enclosure, slide the glass door shut, dip
    the cat in the water and squirt him with shampoo.

    You have begun one of the wildest 45 seconds of your life.

    E. Cats have no handles. Add the fact that he now has soapy fur, and the problem is radically compounded.

    Do not expect to hold on to him for more than two or three seconds at a time. When you have him, however, you must remember to give him another squirt of shampoo and rub like crazy.

    He'll then spring free and fall back into the water, thereby rinsing himself off. (The national record for cats is three latherings, so don't expect too much.)

    F. Next, the cat must be dried. Novice cat bathers always assume this part will be the most difficult, for humans generally are worn out at this point and the cat is just
    getting really determined.

    In fact, the drying is simple compared with what you have just been through.

    That's because by now the cat is semi-permanently affixed to your right leg.

    You simply pop the drain plug with your foot, reach for your towel and wait.(Occasionally, however, the cat will end up clinging to the top of your army helmet. If this happens,
    the best thing you can do is to shake him loose and to encourage him toward your leg.) After all the water is drained from the tub, it is a simple matter to just reach down and dry the cat.

    In a few days the cat will relax enough to be removed from your leg. He will usually have nothing to say for about three weeks and will spend a lot of time sitting with his back to you.

    He might even become psychoceramic and develop the fixed stare of a plaster figurine.

    You will be tempted to assume he is angry.

    This isn't usually the case.

    As a rule he is simply plotting ways to get through your defenses and injure you for life the next time you decide to give him a bath.

    But at least now he smells a lot better.


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 48 Ex_hale


    !!!!!!LOL!!!!!! oh boy did i have a laugh at this one smile.gif


  • Site Banned Posts: 5 wanmo


    Ex_hale wrote: »
    !!!!!!LOL!!!!!! oh boy did i have a laugh at this one

    Me too


  • Registered Users Posts: 656 ✭✭✭AryaStark


    We had two tiny kittens years ago and they got into the shed and knocked a bottle of Spirits for cleaning paintbrushes all over themselves.

    We called the vet and he said to rinse them straight away and bring them in if we had any problems with their skin etc.. anyway cleaning them was some experience.

    Poor kitties didn't know what was happenings and tried to kill us haha they went mad.

    Lucky for us they eventually forgave us! It was their first and last bath!


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,810 ✭✭✭Hector Savage


    Amazing how the net has changed ..


  • Registered Users Posts: 28,118 ✭✭✭✭looksee


    We have just enjoyed your post, we could identify with a lot of it. Though I have found the best way to wash a cat (very rarely) is to put the water in a bucket, with a smidge of shampoo, hold the cat firmly by the scruff and under the bum and lower it into the bucket, keeping hold of the scruff.

    1. they will do the kitten thing (even grown up cats) of not trying to escape because you have the scruff, and

    2. there is not enough room in the bucket to effectively struggle.

    There is not a great deal of room for washing either so it has to be a bit of a hasty rub down. Supporting bum, but still holding scruff, haul cat out of bucket and very quickly into rinse bucket. Have second person to hand with large towel, smother cat in towel and speak kindly, promising treats and warm fires. They won't believe you but you will find you tend to do it automatically anyway.

    Meanwhile, and more to the point we have a cat stuck up a tree (chased by a dog). She claims she cannot get down, and for various reasons we cannot get up. She is calmly licking herself at the moment so doesn't seem too anxious. A lot of large crows keep coming and sitting in the tree and giving out about her presence. We will give her another couple of hours and then...well we are not sure, just hope she comes down.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 6,080 ✭✭✭Trigger Happy


    AH is not getting worse! This thread is proof.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 116 ✭✭Sajid Javid


    From experience I would say without a shadow of doubt that that reply was written by a cat in order to make the task of bathing a cat appear more difficult than it actually is the simple solution that any good cat behavioral scientist would advise is either zannax or oxycon and sheba for the cat.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,465 ✭✭✭Badly Drunk Boy


    I think it's very possible that the cat in the original post is actual dead now. Seriously!


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,810 ✭✭✭Hector Savage


    I think it's very possible that the cat in the original post is actual dead now. Seriously!

    Very likely!!


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,268 ✭✭✭MsGiggles


    Brilliant !


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  • Registered Users Posts: 21,432 ✭✭✭✭Alun


    Sphynx cats, the hairless ones, need a bath once a week as they otherwise get a build up of skin particles and oils on their skin and can develop acne :D

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZ9vUEZ0NP0


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,117 ✭✭✭✭Junkyard Tom


    1999 was about 12 years ago.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    It rains enough in this country for any cat to keep clean.

    Chuck 'em outside for a bit.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,362 ✭✭✭corner of hells


    My father had a scar that ran from the edge of his eye down to his chin , it looked amazing .

    A scar that many enquired of it's origin , was it a dueling scar or the result of a knife fight ?

    It was the result of him deciding one night to bathe a half wild cat that lived out our back garden while full of Guinness and a few whiskeys.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,277 ✭✭✭Your Face


    ...and thus the olden threads shall be resurrected, warning humankind of the coming apocalypse and the end of all things.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,858 ✭✭✭Church on Tuesday


    Your Face wrote: »
    ...and thus the olden threads shall be resurrected, warning humankind of the coming apocalypse and the end of all things.

    Old but gold.


  • Registered Users Posts: 28,118 ✭✭✭✭looksee


    If anybody cares, the cat up the tree in post 6 has just been rescued...we had to go and buy an extending ladder then plough around in mud and lashing rain to get her out of the tree, there was no way she was going anywhere under her own steam. She is fine if a bit damp and hungry.


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