Today marked the 9th week for Noodle's little girl... well, I say little... she weighed in today at just over 1kg... from her birth weight of 103grams that's very impressive and a big well done to her mummy for producing so much nourishing milk and to Pot for getting so stuck in to the raw food diet.
Having had her weight taken, her heart and lungs were listened to and her mouth and teeth checked. Whilst those tasks were accomplished the vet and I discussed the vaccine, and I decided that I would forgo the feline leukaemia part of the vaccine this early on and felt very happy indeed to know that if Pot's New Owner wanted her to have it later on, there is no reason why she could not have that part of the vaccine only given individually or added in at the next annual booster. He referred to it as a bolt on which made me smile. We both held her so that there was no chance of her wriggling during administration and brave girl Pot didn't even squeak when the jab was given!
Next she was then given her worming pill. She took this incredibly easily, all credit to Phil our vet for that great talent as I'd never ever seen it done that fast and without any kind of fuss.
Dabbed onto her head next with delicate fingers was a spot on treatment for safeguarding her against parasites.
We decided to wait to have the microchip inserted until 12th January when she has her 2nd vaccination.
While this was all going on, Noodle sat very calmly watching on. I love that she never takes her eyes off of her daughter and monitors her so closely.
All I needed to do was pay up!
I have managed to get some fabulous photos of my beautiful girls this week... this one in particular melts my heart.
A warm welcome to the digital home of Hampshire’s most prestigious pedigree Sphynx cats & purely bred Sphynx kittens. You’ve evidently got puurrrfect taste & couldn’t have picked a better time to 🐾 paws 🐾 awhile & curl up with us …. We’re truly delighted you’re here & trust that you’ll find all the information you may seek. Please do contact us if we can assist. Registered Cattery: NakedSphynxCat You Tube: SphynxCatCam Naked Sphynx Cat Hampshire is a TICA
Friday, 22 December 2017
Thursday, 14 December 2017
RESERVED!
Today was a milestone in the life of Naked Sphynx Cat Hampshire as a cattery as we received our first visitor to see Noodle's kitten who as you know I have been calling Pot.
A very gorgeous & very funky lady called Kirsty arrived at our door and came in to meet us. We spent a wonderful couple of hours talking together; a time during which she was I think very able to see the kind of home environment that Noodle and her kitten live in.
It was a joy to see someone so enamoured with my little kitten. I felt instantly drawn to Kirsty and hope she felt some degree of connection to me too as I'd love it if she felt she wanted to kept in touch in future when she takes Pot home. You got it - Yes she has reserved her.
It is a funny kind of feeling... I knew that once Pot was seen that anyone would become smitten and so would wish to buy her, but until that actually happened I could think of Pot as still being mine. Now that she is reserved though I must begin to think of her as belonging to another family and learn to disconnect a little. It is a transition that, if I am to become a longterm breeder, I must be able to cope with. Meanwhile I still have a few weeks left where she will still be in our care.
Good job too since there is much still to do before Pot is ready. First she must have her vaccinations given 3 weeks apart...and be wormed, and have her microchip fitted. She has some more growing to do and is still enjoying suckling on mum, though strictly speaking the mother's milk is no longer her main source of food and is simply a comfort thing.
Congratulations Kirsty and Family and Congratulations to Pot. Soon you'll have a new family, a new home and a new name!
A very gorgeous & very funky lady called Kirsty arrived at our door and came in to meet us. We spent a wonderful couple of hours talking together; a time during which she was I think very able to see the kind of home environment that Noodle and her kitten live in.
It was a joy to see someone so enamoured with my little kitten. I felt instantly drawn to Kirsty and hope she felt some degree of connection to me too as I'd love it if she felt she wanted to kept in touch in future when she takes Pot home. You got it - Yes she has reserved her.
It is a funny kind of feeling... I knew that once Pot was seen that anyone would become smitten and so would wish to buy her, but until that actually happened I could think of Pot as still being mine. Now that she is reserved though I must begin to think of her as belonging to another family and learn to disconnect a little. It is a transition that, if I am to become a longterm breeder, I must be able to cope with. Meanwhile I still have a few weeks left where she will still be in our care.
Good job too since there is much still to do before Pot is ready. First she must have her vaccinations given 3 weeks apart...and be wormed, and have her microchip fitted. She has some more growing to do and is still enjoying suckling on mum, though strictly speaking the mother's milk is no longer her main source of food and is simply a comfort thing.
Congratulations Kirsty and Family and Congratulations to Pot. Soon you'll have a new family, a new home and a new name!
Petsafe Scoop Free Ultra - Review
This weekend I took delivery of a Petsafe Scoop Free Ultra I had purchased from Amazon UK.
The ultra model varies from the standard in that it has the privacy hood, the ability to alter the rake delay time and it counts the number of visits your cat makes to the box which is very useful if you need to monitor output from a health point of view.
The system uses the same silica litter I already use and promises to make waste management in terms of dealing with cat pee and poo scooping duties a doddle.
As well as feeling discomfort at the amount of waste produced by using the box cartridge refills their cost is also rather significant and prohibitive. For a pack of 3 lidded boxes with litter for each (at the time of writing) the price is upward of £45. For an individual one, the price is £16. Factor in a delivery charge too if you are buying online. If you need to change your box every 14 days, a 3 pack is going to last you only 6 weeks making it a very expensive system indeed! Perhaps you hate the job of pooper scooping for your cat so gross that you feel this is a cost worth paying in order to do away with the need to poop scoop?
I got a good price, which honestly was a lot of the reason I bought it when I did. I also paid half the price again in order to have (shipped from America) a reusable litter tray. It is a plastic tray and a plastic bar attachment that has been fitted with a couple of inexpensive magnets. It comes with a 2kg bag of Scoop Free Litter and this costs almost £50. I see no reason why it should cost as much as this and normally I would not even have entertained buying such an overpriced item, however without it I would not have even considered using this scoop free system at all because (a) the disposable trays sold to be used with this unit are (to me) very expensive to buy and (b) because of the amount of environmental waste they create.
The Petsafe Reusable Tray £46.00 on Amazon UK Dec. 2017. |
The idea behind the system is to make litter tray management easier and less of a yucky job. And the cartridge system promises to do just that. To be honest, cleaning the cat poo isn't a real problem for me, I'm not one of those who is squeamish but I am immune suppressed due to medication I take so anything I can do to safeguard my health in terms of less handling of pet waste even though I am very careful with gloves and handwashing is going to be beneficial.
The scoop free litter box system is basically an outer unit with a motorised rake. With the unit held up at one end, a disposable litter box prefilled with its litter crystals and its lid removed is slid in underneath and then the machine is lowered back down. Essentially, for the next 14 - 30 days (dependant on several factors, more on this later..) you have no more to do.
The litter crystals trap urine, its odour and bacteria held hygienically within them. while the water content of the urine is able to evaporate away. The crystals also draw moisture from the poo drying it out completely and thus pushed into its waste compartment there is no odour or worry about germs.
The system sensors pick up movement as your cat enters the box and a countdown timer begins after they leave. Dependant on the model you have this time is a set 20 minutes or a customisable 5, 10 or 20.
Having dried out the poo slightly (or absorbed the urine) during the 20 minute time lapse the rake now slowly sweeps across the litter, pushing the poo along. As the rake approaches the opposite end the lid of the waste container lifts up and the poo is pushed inside. Now the rake returns, lowering the lid of the waste container immediately keeping the waste out of site and as it goes it evens out the crystals ready for the cat's next visit.
As the litter crystals are saturated and become used, they change colour becoming yellow from the concentrated uring held inside them. Now it is time to change the cartridge by lifting the machine at the end again, sliding out the box and replacing it with a fresh one. You then pop the lid onto the used box and put it into the bin - all without touching the litter or the cats waste.
I mentioned earlier that there were several factors that might affect the length of time between cartridge changes. The most obvious would be the number of cats who would be using the box. The recommendation in the manual is that one box is ample for 2 cats.
The second factor would be the diet the cat is being fed with. A cat being given a raw food diet does not produce the same number of poo's and as an added factor to that, they are also smaller, less smelly and much drier. The raw fed cat also does not drink as much as a cat who has dry kibble in their diet and so the urine output is also reduced thus the crystals will not become saturated as quickly. Cats fed on commercial dry and canned food have more frequent need to poo, the stools are larger, softer and more malodourous.
Another factor that would affect urine output and shorten litter cartridge lifespan would be if the cat were older and/or suffered from health complaints affecting the kidney or urinary tract which cause the cat to urinate more frequently.
One way to make sure the crystals are being used most efficiently whether using the box cartridge system or a reusable tray as I do is to stir the crystals which can be done using a poop scoop each day. Yes, it is true this system is meant to do away with you having to work at the litter box with a pooper scooper but this will take 30 seconds at most each day and is well worth it.
Silica cat litter works by absorbing urine while allowing the water content of it to harmlessly evaporate. Stirring it will allow air flow and so aid in evaporation making it more efficient. True, the rake moves the litter but the rake goes up and down in one direction and cannot stir.
Stirring is essential to use all of the litter as cats often have a preference to wee in just one spot. Without stirring the crystals in your cats' chosen corner will saturate until they cannot soak anymore causing a pool of urine to form and sit underneath them while the rest of the crystals in the tray remain clean and dry.
Stirring saves you money because it makes your silica litter more effective extending its lifespan and able to do the job it was designed to do.
While it is a system that is by using the replacement cartridge box designed to be hands-off, the lidded boxes make the system very wasteful. Not just in terms of the actual materials, but also in their production and then in their disposal. Made from a cardboard with a plastic lining type element incorporated it to them and which is intended to reduce any chance of urine leakage should the crystals not absorb all of the urine while it is in use the box and its lid are bulky items to dispose of creating more costs on the environment.
Disposable Box Cartridge - £16 or £46 for a pack of 3 (Dec. 2017) |
To try to reduce my impact while still enjoying most of the benefits of the system I purchased at the same time the astronomically priced plastic tray accessory also made by Petsafe which is impregnated during manufacture with an antibacterial agent. Admittedly it too uses resources to make it, but overall, since it will be reused many, many times over, and used with a biodegradable silica crystal it is I feel, a more environmentally sound option. The downside is that rather than simply popping on a lid and throwing away a box filled with litter, I will need to bag up the contents of the tray and also clean it before refilling it again. It means then that there is still going to be some need for me to deal with the cat waste. I feel I can live with that job every 2 - 4 weeks for the sake of the planet and of my purse as I will still benefit from not having to poop scoop.
I have found about 3 different versions of the reusable plastic tray available for sale and all very similarly priced at around £45-50. All of them look similar and all work in the same way and I struggle to see why there is such a huge price tag. The only reason I went for this is the responsibility to planet and purse. When choosing it is worth bearing in mind that Petsafe will not honour the warranty on the scoop free litter box system if you use any other reusable plastic tray than their own. I'm not entirely sure why since the tray does not interfere with the workings of the motor or rake in any way and is simply a receptacle of the right size supplied with a separate magnetized system to work the opening and closing of the waste compartment lid as the rake does its sweep. I would hazard a that it must be more to do with the litter that its put into them.... or perhaps more likely is that this exclusion is intended as a way to make sure system users stick to using their expensive box cartridge refills or buy their own reusable tray.
As well as feeling discomfort at the amount of waste produced by using the box cartridge refills their cost is also rather significant and prohibitive. For a pack of 3 lidded boxes with litter for each (at the time of writing) the price is upward of £45. For an individual one, the price is £16. Factor in a delivery charge too if you are buying online. If you need to change your box every 14 days, a 3 pack is going to last you only 6 weeks making it a very expensive system indeed! Perhaps you hate the job of pooper scooping for your cat so gross that you feel this is a cost worth paying in order to do away with the need to poop scoop?
Using a reusable tray at £45-50 for a tray at first seems extravagant. However, it can be used over and over again. Environmentally it is a winner but financially the benefit is that it can be used with a cheaper brand of silica litter so the plastic tray ends up paying for itself. The downside of this though is of course that it reintroduces the need to empty and clean a tray periodically.
The next consideration after having purchased a reusable tray is in choosing the silica litter. There is much to consider still. It must be of decent quality even if it is cheaper to buy. It needs to function to absorb and hold the urine and to dry out the poop, otherwise, it will need to be changed too often and simply end up costing more and cause more work!
It must be of a suitable crystal size to work well in the unit. Too large and the crystals won't go through the rake as it sweeps along the unit. By being too large, the rake will be building a wall of crystals which will be pushed along putting strain the motor that it was never intended to cope with. Additionally, those large crystals are pushed into your waste box filling it with clean and dry crystals and leave no room for the poo. Thus filled the lid won't be able to close over it.
If the crystal size is too small they might possibly get into the rails the rake travels along particularly possible if your cat is one who really likes to dig and kick its litter around. This could cause the mechanism to become jammed or strain the motor if it blocks it.
I have looked extensively online at reviews and descriptions for various silica litters sold in the UK hoping to find other users comments on using it with their Scoop Free systems. So far the only silica litters I have found that actually state they are made for or are suitable for use with the Scoop Free Litter Box are Pet Safe's own Scoop Free (which is not easy to get in the UK and definitely not favourably priced) and one by Fresh Step that is also available only in the US.
I think since nothing of my research has been fruitful that there is going to be some trial and error on my part in order to find the best one for use with it. I am hoping very much that the brand I have been using in normal litter tray will work with my scoop free system because it does its job brilliantly well and would save me a lot of effort in finding the perfect one.
I will update here as I carry out trials and tests using the system in the coming weeks.
If you already use one of these systems and have found a litter that is perfect for use with it, I'd love to hear from you so please get in touch - nakedsphynxcathants@icloud.com
Monday, 11 December 2017
Week 7 - 8
Do They Know It's Christmas Time At All?
Possibly not, but they sure as heck want to help with wrapping gifts!
No Chistmas decor this year. My home is already a full on kitty playground and assault course without my adding to it with a tree to climb and fall from or know down... to have it festooned with baubles they will swipe at and knock off before chasing the around the room... or hung with fairy lights where they are sure to become tangled.
It might be a bit bah-humbug but honestly if you could see these girls running and jumping from room to room playing chase or laying in ambush of one another you'd understand.
In this last week, I have been trying to complete some projects destined to be or form part of gifts for people. One of these is a knitted mermaid. I wanted to do some bead work on her... add necklace and bracelets and perhaps a beaded headband. The thread is invisible, and the beads tiny and delicate... not an easy recipe at the best of times so I tried to pick my timing of working at it coordinating this with nap time. Can you tell yet that it was a disaster? Tipping beads into a container, no matter how quietly you try to do it, to a cat or kitten is like a call to action and so come running they did, leaping and bounding, climbing or sitting right in the way.... I needed three pairs of hands at least.... just as beads were strung I'd find that I was on the flight path as a kitten would run into my invisible thread taking it and the beads with it... or jumping up into my container sending beads flying. Frustration wasnt the word after having recovered beads and begun again time and time again.
In the end I resorted to closing them into the playpen just to get that job done.
Next came gift wrapping which I knew would be manner from heaven for them. The sound of paper being unrolled, cat and folded, or of tape being ripped from the roll was too exciting to ignore and getting involved was a great game!
Time and again I have wished for my eyeballs to be fitted with video camera, as day by day there are moments I would love to have captured. Mum and daughter involved in games or hunt, ambushes with my dear sweet kitten making these cute little sideways jumps trying to appear bigger than she is, or the cutest or funniest moments as she is startled by somthing real or imagined and seems to jump in the air and land in different poses. As always, any portraight type photo shot where both mum and baby are awake has been almost impossible when I want a result that is crystal clear. Instead they are blurred as one of them will move at the last moment!!!!
Possibly not, but they sure as heck want to help with wrapping gifts!
No Chistmas decor this year. My home is already a full on kitty playground and assault course without my adding to it with a tree to climb and fall from or know down... to have it festooned with baubles they will swipe at and knock off before chasing the around the room... or hung with fairy lights where they are sure to become tangled.
It might be a bit bah-humbug but honestly if you could see these girls running and jumping from room to room playing chase or laying in ambush of one another you'd understand.
In this last week, I have been trying to complete some projects destined to be or form part of gifts for people. One of these is a knitted mermaid. I wanted to do some bead work on her... add necklace and bracelets and perhaps a beaded headband. The thread is invisible, and the beads tiny and delicate... not an easy recipe at the best of times so I tried to pick my timing of working at it coordinating this with nap time. Can you tell yet that it was a disaster? Tipping beads into a container, no matter how quietly you try to do it, to a cat or kitten is like a call to action and so come running they did, leaping and bounding, climbing or sitting right in the way.... I needed three pairs of hands at least.... just as beads were strung I'd find that I was on the flight path as a kitten would run into my invisible thread taking it and the beads with it... or jumping up into my container sending beads flying. Frustration wasnt the word after having recovered beads and begun again time and time again.
In the end I resorted to closing them into the playpen just to get that job done.
Next came gift wrapping which I knew would be manner from heaven for them. The sound of paper being unrolled, cat and folded, or of tape being ripped from the roll was too exciting to ignore and getting involved was a great game!
Time and again I have wished for my eyeballs to be fitted with video camera, as day by day there are moments I would love to have captured. Mum and daughter involved in games or hunt, ambushes with my dear sweet kitten making these cute little sideways jumps trying to appear bigger than she is, or the cutest or funniest moments as she is startled by somthing real or imagined and seems to jump in the air and land in different poses. As always, any portraight type photo shot where both mum and baby are awake has been almost impossible when I want a result that is crystal clear. Instead they are blurred as one of them will move at the last moment!!!!
Thursday, 7 December 2017
From Strength to Strength & Preparing for Goodbye
So much progress..... Pot is now approaching the magic 8 week mark when she will meet possible new owner(s) during "viewings'.
It's kind of hard to believe how much has changed since that Friday in October when Noodle needed veterinary help right at the end of her pregnancy with the end result of one small kitten instead of the litter I'd been expecting and hoping for.
Her kitten was so very tiny, she seemed to me so fragile... a tiny warm bag of flesh and bones who was so helpless and yet had all the instincts to find a nipple and to feed.
I was anxious... would this kitten make it? Would Noodle be a natural mum and manage the demands having a kitten now placed upon her?
Terrified hands that needed to hold this kitten and somehow give her milk on day 3 when she was still not suckling well enough and was now growing weaker... and the difference it made when I did! How quickly those few feeds I supplemented day and night combined with hot flannels for mum changed the outcome.
Seeing this little kitten double in size before my eyes was incredible. Then the surprise of seeing her eyes wide opened when I had expected to see her eyes slowly open over a couple of days! Marvelling at the strength in those limbs and watching the first wobbly and teetering steps that are now so confident that running, jumping and climbing are no problem at all.
The anxieties I felt about feeding solids... worrying was I getting in right and the fear when she refused the pouched food I'd stockpiled during Noodle's pregnancy ready to feed a ravenous litter of kittens. Making up batches of dry food that needed to be soaked for hours before it was soft enough to feed to her which had some success. Then the rapid acceptance and delight in her when I admitted defeat with using commercial food and instead bought a freezer full of raw food. I didnt mind too much because I had planned to introduce to Noodle to BARF after she had finished lactating anyway so this was no hardship really. I will donate the left over food to Cats Protection).
The amazing success of weaning was of course followed by her needing to use the litter tray rather than for mum to clean her up....and I felt so glad when the first twice she got it right. I couldn't belive my luck. Swiftly followed by disappointment when she decided not to use it after all... and then finding a way to help her to work it all out so that we were both happy.
If my kitten was healthy before, the introduction of the raw food diet was like having put into her a couple of Duracell batteries! Now she was motoring; becoming the precocious and cheeky little lady that will be so hard to say goodbye to in a few weeks time.
Now she was feeding and littering it was time for her to have her first bath.... she is so small still that I could do this in the bathroom sink! She didn't seem to mind it too much either!
Finally, since she no longer needed 24hour assistance, I decided to relocate the cat nursery moving it out of my bedroom and taking it downstairs. I took the cage down (jenga) and set it up along with a large fabric pet play pen so I can contain her.
The downside of this move is two fold. The first is that Noodle is in heat again ( the second time since the birth) and is very, very noisy - And secondly in her now being in a quandary....she has always slept with me since she came.... so now she is feeling pulled in two directions - her duty as a mother and being with her kitten, against her wish to be with me (and to be given the attention she feels she needs with these hormones going crazy in her).
So a downside (perhaps) is that the move has put an end to the night time hours of mother - daughter snuggles. It may even have stopped Pot" from nursing on her at all. This is OK because Pot doesn't need mother's milk any longer but it is kind of sad. This separation from mum now will perhaps ease any separation difficulties they might have suffered when Pot goes in January to start her new life... but I must say, I do miss hearing their dual purring....
But all this has made me think more about the changes that are still to come... and of missing Pot.
Im doing all I can to ensure she goes to a wonderful new family...but during these wonderful weeks she has been MY kitten...(well, Noodle's & mine!). Once she is reserved though and the reservation fee is paid, even though she will still here for another 4 weeks she will no longer be mine.
This has to mark the first part of my letting her go completely physically and emotionally.
I know there will be tears..... The plan is that Prune will have moved in with us a few days before hand. Coming when Pot is still here will I hope ease her acceptance by Noodle since Pot and Prune are about the same age.... I am hoping Noodle may just think she has another kitten she had somehow forgotten about.
Im also hoping that when Pot leave, her disappearance wont be so noticable for Noodle because she now will have Prune.
Of course having Prune will give me my new baby to love and bring her own joy...but I cant help but to think about how much letting Pot go and her departure will hurt . And thinking about what action if any, I can do to manage it.
Friends have asked me right from the beginning when I told them of my decision to breed from Noodle how I will feel about letting her kittens go.... True, I'd hoped and anticipated that there would be a litter of kittens (kittens in plural!) which would have meant that the love Pot has had would have been shared..... perhaps her being a lone kitten, and one I have had to hand feed, has served to intensify the bond?
I'd hoped for a solid black kitten in the litter allowing me the solace of keeping one from the first litter born to my cattery....but Pot is not the colour I want for my cattery's future and so there is no viable reason for me to keep her. I am a breeder and my work is to breed beautiful kittens and to sell them. Simple as that. And yet it isnt simple at all.
Of course I love her and would love to keep her. And I do love her. And I will feel sad.
I will though be happy too. So happy (and proud) that I have produced such a gorgeous and healthy little pure Sphynx girl from two happy and healthy parents. Happy because I know without shadow of doubt that she is going to be a delight her new family.
I think of her future family and Pot being to them everything that Noodle is to me and as I do so and reflect on my adoration of Noodle and my pride in her having been a fantastic mum, my heart squeezes and swells with love. To think that Pot will give this gift to her new family feels fantastic.
This is what I am doing this for.
It's kind of hard to believe how much has changed since that Friday in October when Noodle needed veterinary help right at the end of her pregnancy with the end result of one small kitten instead of the litter I'd been expecting and hoping for.
Her kitten was so very tiny, she seemed to me so fragile... a tiny warm bag of flesh and bones who was so helpless and yet had all the instincts to find a nipple and to feed.
I was anxious... would this kitten make it? Would Noodle be a natural mum and manage the demands having a kitten now placed upon her?
Terrified hands that needed to hold this kitten and somehow give her milk on day 3 when she was still not suckling well enough and was now growing weaker... and the difference it made when I did! How quickly those few feeds I supplemented day and night combined with hot flannels for mum changed the outcome.
Seeing this little kitten double in size before my eyes was incredible. Then the surprise of seeing her eyes wide opened when I had expected to see her eyes slowly open over a couple of days! Marvelling at the strength in those limbs and watching the first wobbly and teetering steps that are now so confident that running, jumping and climbing are no problem at all.
The anxieties I felt about feeding solids... worrying was I getting in right and the fear when she refused the pouched food I'd stockpiled during Noodle's pregnancy ready to feed a ravenous litter of kittens. Making up batches of dry food that needed to be soaked for hours before it was soft enough to feed to her which had some success. Then the rapid acceptance and delight in her when I admitted defeat with using commercial food and instead bought a freezer full of raw food. I didnt mind too much because I had planned to introduce to Noodle to BARF after she had finished lactating anyway so this was no hardship really. I will donate the left over food to Cats Protection).
Weaning with Gusto.
(mushed Dry Food)
The amazing success of weaning was of course followed by her needing to use the litter tray rather than for mum to clean her up....and I felt so glad when the first twice she got it right. I couldn't belive my luck. Swiftly followed by disappointment when she decided not to use it after all... and then finding a way to help her to work it all out so that we were both happy.
If my kitten was healthy before, the introduction of the raw food diet was like having put into her a couple of Duracell batteries! Now she was motoring; becoming the precocious and cheeky little lady that will be so hard to say goodbye to in a few weeks time.
Now she was feeding and littering it was time for her to have her first bath.... she is so small still that I could do this in the bathroom sink! She didn't seem to mind it too much either!
Finally, since she no longer needed 24hour assistance, I decided to relocate the cat nursery moving it out of my bedroom and taking it downstairs. I took the cage down (jenga) and set it up along with a large fabric pet play pen so I can contain her.
The downside of this move is two fold. The first is that Noodle is in heat again ( the second time since the birth) and is very, very noisy - And secondly in her now being in a quandary....she has always slept with me since she came.... so now she is feeling pulled in two directions - her duty as a mother and being with her kitten, against her wish to be with me (and to be given the attention she feels she needs with these hormones going crazy in her).
So a downside (perhaps) is that the move has put an end to the night time hours of mother - daughter snuggles. It may even have stopped Pot" from nursing on her at all. This is OK because Pot doesn't need mother's milk any longer but it is kind of sad. This separation from mum now will perhaps ease any separation difficulties they might have suffered when Pot goes in January to start her new life... but I must say, I do miss hearing their dual purring....
But all this has made me think more about the changes that are still to come... and of missing Pot.
Im doing all I can to ensure she goes to a wonderful new family...but during these wonderful weeks she has been MY kitten...(well, Noodle's & mine!). Once she is reserved though and the reservation fee is paid, even though she will still here for another 4 weeks she will no longer be mine.
This has to mark the first part of my letting her go completely physically and emotionally.
I know there will be tears..... The plan is that Prune will have moved in with us a few days before hand. Coming when Pot is still here will I hope ease her acceptance by Noodle since Pot and Prune are about the same age.... I am hoping Noodle may just think she has another kitten she had somehow forgotten about.
Im also hoping that when Pot leave, her disappearance wont be so noticable for Noodle because she now will have Prune.
Of course having Prune will give me my new baby to love and bring her own joy...but I cant help but to think about how much letting Pot go and her departure will hurt . And thinking about what action if any, I can do to manage it.
Friends have asked me right from the beginning when I told them of my decision to breed from Noodle how I will feel about letting her kittens go.... True, I'd hoped and anticipated that there would be a litter of kittens (kittens in plural!) which would have meant that the love Pot has had would have been shared..... perhaps her being a lone kitten, and one I have had to hand feed, has served to intensify the bond?
I'd hoped for a solid black kitten in the litter allowing me the solace of keeping one from the first litter born to my cattery....but Pot is not the colour I want for my cattery's future and so there is no viable reason for me to keep her. I am a breeder and my work is to breed beautiful kittens and to sell them. Simple as that. And yet it isnt simple at all.
Of course I love her and would love to keep her. And I do love her. And I will feel sad.
I will though be happy too. So happy (and proud) that I have produced such a gorgeous and healthy little pure Sphynx girl from two happy and healthy parents. Happy because I know without shadow of doubt that she is going to be a delight her new family.
I think of her future family and Pot being to them everything that Noodle is to me and as I do so and reflect on my adoration of Noodle and my pride in her having been a fantastic mum, my heart squeezes and swells with love. To think that Pot will give this gift to her new family feels fantastic.
This is what I am doing this for.
6 weeks & playing with mum!
Friday, 1 December 2017
So much progress.....
Wow! I can't believe its been so long since I posted an update. So much has been happening.
Mainly what's been happening is under the heading of Weaning - Pot ..
I wanted to use a BARF diet having read the great things said about it and instinctively felt it was the most natural food type. However by the time I'd made that decision it was time to mate Nood
Before Noodle was mated I had left it too late to get her onto raw food which was a shame as it was a plan I had made to use it for her kittens.... the fact that making the change even in the earliest days after mating was considered dangerous to do made me rethink pretty much everything.
Finding out that I needed to keep Noodle on her normal commercial diet throughout her pregnancy and also throughout her entire lactation I chose to use the Hills Science plan diet, just changing it back to the kitten dry that she had had throughout her first year of life and that I knew I could trust.
Since she would not be able to change to raw until after her litter had gone I realised this presented an issue with weaning her coming kittens on to it - how would I stop her eating it, and yet have it available to them.
Added to this I felt a degree of uncertainty of using raw food for delicate babies before I had gained user experience as well as a worry about how or if prospective would relish a new kitten they bought being on a raw food regime.
I decided there and then I needed to rethink my plans regarding their weaning and because buying in larger quantities is more cost efficient, in preparation for the weeks ahead, knowing Noodles food needs would increase as her pregnancy progressed and then to produce plenty of milk for a hungry litter I bought a few kilos of dry food as well as several boxes of pouched kitten food too.
Come weaning time... and as a complete novice I was rather nervous to begin.
From about week 3, alongside the dry food always available to her, I also began introducing pouched food to Noodle in addition to her normal dry food diet. The idea behind it was that wanted her baby to see her eating it, and to become intrigued not only by its 'appetising' aroma but also by watching Mum eating.
However, Pot would not under any circumstances accept, lick or go near the pouched food bowl. Noodle didnt mind and happily kept eating it as it was offered. When we got to the beginning of week 5 when weaning must begin in earnest I knew I needed to step it up a gear...
Since pouches were rejected I tried mushing up the dry food with hot water, allowing it to become soft and wet enough to be slushy. This met with Pot's approval and she would now consider tucking in... as long as it was warmed before being put on the table.
In week 6, we were still only accepting small amounts of the mushed dry food and still refusing point blank to try the pouched. Not great progress if I was to get her to the stage where she would be acquiring all nutrition independant of mum.
Additionally, the mushing of the dry food was not ideal as it takes some hours to be ready so needed planning and management. Mushing enough to ready when needed and to satisfy but not so much as to be wasting lots of food. How would I get her to a place if we continued like this where I could confidently hand her over with a simple to manage food plan?
One evening, thinking I could hear Noodle having a snack from her bowl I looked down and was surprised to see it was Pot who crunching away at the kibble. Who would have thought those tiny, admittedly sharp, teeth and jaws could crunch away at the dry food? OK, I know she recognises the smell as being food for her but if it takes so many hours to get soft imagine how hard it must be for such tiny jaw bones and muscles!
I considered I may have to wean the pouches in... mixing some into each batch of mushed dry until she would accept it....
As all this is going on, at the same time I am talking often to other breeders who have experience in order to gain guidance and tips and sharing progress and pictures with my most prominent prospective buyer.
As we emailed and I sent updates and photos... I described the foods Pot was eating (and those she wasn't) . I asked my might-be owner how she would be feeding long term i(f she decides to buy her) and was delighted to learn that she had a mind to use a BARF diet... which got me thinking.....
Prune, the new girl I am purchasing is around the same age as Pot is and she is being weaned on raw food and loves it. Because she will be on raw I will have to buy some in...
I need lots as my plan too is to get Noodle on it finally.
With Christmas and the bank holiday closures come along shortly as well as the Christmas delays, it made sense then to get a supply into my freezer right now... and then I thought, well since Pot is most likely going to be onto it when she is purchased, why not get her on it now?
And this is what we have done - and it has begun so well.
Having had so many refusals of other food I tentatively offered her a dish in which was a spoon of raw food that Id made slacker with some warm previously boiled water. to take the chill off.... I gave her a sniff... and her head popped up... mmmm interesting!
She came closer to sniff in the bowl......
I dip in my finger coating it with the meaty goo....and hold the tip to her nose.... she licked... and kept on licking... lowering my finger her tongue follows me into the dish... ta-dah! She was eating like a Ninja.
She filled up (or so I thought) and walked away.... Mum went to look .....but it was unfamiliar to her. She backed off when Pot came back for second helpings.
Pot took several more mouthfuls, then walked away again. This time mum seemed all set to polish it off herself... but wait.. no.... what is this? Why, it's Pot back for more!
The same raw food was equally well received for breakfast today too! And, as I write I am listening to the chomping sounds of both Mum and her daughter tucking in to their own bowls of raw food, this time given it without water to loosen or warm it.
Im am overjoyed!
Mainly what's been happening is under the heading of Weaning - Pot ..
I wanted to use a BARF diet having read the great things said about it and instinctively felt it was the most natural food type. However by the time I'd made that decision it was time to mate Nood
Before Noodle was mated I had left it too late to get her onto raw food which was a shame as it was a plan I had made to use it for her kittens.... the fact that making the change even in the earliest days after mating was considered dangerous to do made me rethink pretty much everything.
Finding out that I needed to keep Noodle on her normal commercial diet throughout her pregnancy and also throughout her entire lactation I chose to use the Hills Science plan diet, just changing it back to the kitten dry that she had had throughout her first year of life and that I knew I could trust.
Since she would not be able to change to raw until after her litter had gone I realised this presented an issue with weaning her coming kittens on to it - how would I stop her eating it, and yet have it available to them.
Added to this I felt a degree of uncertainty of using raw food for delicate babies before I had gained user experience as well as a worry about how or if prospective would relish a new kitten they bought being on a raw food regime.
I decided there and then I needed to rethink my plans regarding their weaning and because buying in larger quantities is more cost efficient, in preparation for the weeks ahead, knowing Noodles food needs would increase as her pregnancy progressed and then to produce plenty of milk for a hungry litter I bought a few kilos of dry food as well as several boxes of pouched kitten food too.
Come weaning time... and as a complete novice I was rather nervous to begin.
From about week 3, alongside the dry food always available to her, I also began introducing pouched food to Noodle in addition to her normal dry food diet. The idea behind it was that wanted her baby to see her eating it, and to become intrigued not only by its 'appetising' aroma but also by watching Mum eating.
However, Pot would not under any circumstances accept, lick or go near the pouched food bowl. Noodle didnt mind and happily kept eating it as it was offered. When we got to the beginning of week 5 when weaning must begin in earnest I knew I needed to step it up a gear...
Since pouches were rejected I tried mushing up the dry food with hot water, allowing it to become soft and wet enough to be slushy. This met with Pot's approval and she would now consider tucking in... as long as it was warmed before being put on the table.
In week 6, we were still only accepting small amounts of the mushed dry food and still refusing point blank to try the pouched. Not great progress if I was to get her to the stage where she would be acquiring all nutrition independant of mum.
Additionally, the mushing of the dry food was not ideal as it takes some hours to be ready so needed planning and management. Mushing enough to ready when needed and to satisfy but not so much as to be wasting lots of food. How would I get her to a place if we continued like this where I could confidently hand her over with a simple to manage food plan?
One evening, thinking I could hear Noodle having a snack from her bowl I looked down and was surprised to see it was Pot who crunching away at the kibble. Who would have thought those tiny, admittedly sharp, teeth and jaws could crunch away at the dry food? OK, I know she recognises the smell as being food for her but if it takes so many hours to get soft imagine how hard it must be for such tiny jaw bones and muscles!
I considered I may have to wean the pouches in... mixing some into each batch of mushed dry until she would accept it....
As all this is going on, at the same time I am talking often to other breeders who have experience in order to gain guidance and tips and sharing progress and pictures with my most prominent prospective buyer.
As we emailed and I sent updates and photos... I described the foods Pot was eating (and those she wasn't) . I asked my might-be owner how she would be feeding long term i(f she decides to buy her) and was delighted to learn that she had a mind to use a BARF diet... which got me thinking.....
Prune, the new girl I am purchasing is around the same age as Pot is and she is being weaned on raw food and loves it. Because she will be on raw I will have to buy some in...
I need lots as my plan too is to get Noodle on it finally.
With Christmas and the bank holiday closures come along shortly as well as the Christmas delays, it made sense then to get a supply into my freezer right now... and then I thought, well since Pot is most likely going to be onto it when she is purchased, why not get her on it now?
And this is what we have done - and it has begun so well.
Having had so many refusals of other food I tentatively offered her a dish in which was a spoon of raw food that Id made slacker with some warm previously boiled water. to take the chill off.... I gave her a sniff... and her head popped up... mmmm interesting!
She came closer to sniff in the bowl......
"What is this you are offering me?".. "Do I like it?"
I dip in my finger coating it with the meaty goo....and hold the tip to her nose.... she licked... and kept on licking... lowering my finger her tongue follows me into the dish... ta-dah! She was eating like a Ninja.
She filled up (or so I thought) and walked away.... Mum went to look .....but it was unfamiliar to her. She backed off when Pot came back for second helpings.
Pot took several more mouthfuls, then walked away again. This time mum seemed all set to polish it off herself... but wait.. no.... what is this? Why, it's Pot back for more!
The same raw food was equally well received for breakfast today too! And, as I write I am listening to the chomping sounds of both Mum and her daughter tucking in to their own bowls of raw food, this time given it without water to loosen or warm it.
Im am overjoyed!
'Pot tries raw food for the first time' |
24 hours later...... |
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