balulutiti
Forenprofi
- Mitglied seit
- 4. Februar 2008
- Beiträge
- 32.235
- Ort
- Wien
Und Softpaws braucht man nicht wirklich, wenn man sich vor anschaffung einer Katze informiert hat.
Ich hab nach den Gründen gefragt gehabt. Hier einige Antworten:
I moved into a new apartment. Although the only furniture I moved across the country was the cat scratching post, my cats still damaged door jams and carpet by scratching them. There are real reasons that land-lords want to prevent claw damage to their property, and soft paws are an excellent solution to that problem.
I'm planning to use them on my new kitten until she learns where to scratch and where not. Then I won't be using them anymore. I have a brand new leather couch and ottoman so there is no way I'm going to trust the kitten around it with bare claws, at least not until she is trained to use her scratching posts.
you can't always trust them to use scratchers, even if you have half a dozen in the room as I do. I also mentioned that I'm using them until I can trust that the new kitten won't hurt my other cat or my dog. I've already had one incident where my dog was clawed in the eye by another cat and it took her months to recover. It's my responsibility as a loving pet owner to ensure their safety as well.
I use Soft Paws on Chloe because she terrorizes my de-clawed cat (who I didn't de-claw, it was her previous owner) with her claws and also because I was sick of being scratched all over my face, arms, etc. while trying to groom her or give her medicine. It's a very humane alternative to de-clawing.
Das hier fand ich interessant:
😕She still scratches things, it just doesn't leave any damage. They are nice to use while training your cat where to scratch and where not to scratch