Play Behavior in Cats

Cats are intelligent and agile creatures. During play, a kitten or an adult cat makes full use of its surroundings to provide itself with mental and physical challenges. Particularly attracted to moving objects, cats investigate new things on ground level or elevated surfaces alike. Play allows a young animal to practice important life skills without adult consequences. Running, jumping, hiding, and other playful antics could be invaluable later when hunting for food or escaping an enemy.

Play gives you an opportunity to teach acceptable behavior to your cat. Avoid forms of play that encourage a cat's aggressiveness. No cat should learn that it is acceptable and fun to pounce on, grip, bite or scratch any part of a person's clothing or body. Such innocent fun as chasing wiggling fingers or toes under the bedcovers could lead to problems later. The target of a cat's playful attention should be directed away from its human playmate. Introduce a variety of toys for your cat to chase, such as light-weight balls or toys suspended from string or wire. Your cat can simulate attacks without risking injury to anyone.

Young cats often appear to respond to some "phantom" enemy during normal play. The pet may pause as if to listen or look at something and then races away. Some people believe that, during such episodes, the cat is reacting to an imagined object or intruder. It is also possible that the cat is responding to a real stimulus that people cannot detect.

Undesirable Nighttime Activity
Juvenile cats are normally very active, sometimes overwhelming their owners. Young cats tend to be more active during evening and nighttime hours and frequently disturb their owners' sleep. Cats are naturally nocturnal (more active at night) because they have adapted to hunting in darkness.

If your cat is satisfied with the amount of attention and exercise it gets before your bedtime, chances are good that its schedule of peak activity will gradually match yours. If your young cat tends to nap during the day when you are home, wake it up to play.

Though cats frequently seem to amuse themselves when there is no available playmate, they often thrive on additional social interaction with you. To increase your chances of sleeping through the night, play appropriate games with your cat and engage it in other activities it might enjoy, such as brushing, before retiring to bed. Provide a variety of attractive toys to entertain your cat so that it is less likely to awaken you. Once you have gone to bed, consistently ignore your cat's attempts to get your attention and it will eventually stop disturbing you.

Preventing Damage During Play

"Cat-proof' your home by removing or preventing access to valuable or hazardous objects that will attract your cat. Apply screens on windows to prevent accidental falls or intentional escapes. It is normal for cats to investigate elevated surfaces (tabletops, mantel) in its territory. Your valuables may be accidentally destroyed in such exploration, or the cat may destroy objects through playful mischief.

If your cat damages items in certain areas, it may be necessary to close the door to that room. Another option to discourage your cat from returning to an area is to make it an unpleasant place to visit. Strips of sticky tape placed sticky side up are an unpleasant surprise for cats to step on, as are cookie sheets filled with water. If your cat is destructive or harmful with its claws during play, keep them well trimmed to avoid damage.


Play Behavior in Dogs

Puppies begin to play as soon as they can walk. Littermates commonly wrestle and chase each other, pulling on ears or tails. Through play with littermates, pups learn just how strong they are or how to turn circumstances to their advantage.

By the time they are weaned, each pup has formed an impression of its own abilities and social standing within the ranks of littermates. This forms the basis for adult behavior, such as achievement of dominance, in relation to people and other dogs.

Play allows a young animal to practice important life skills without adult consequences.  Running, jumping, hiding and other playful antics could be invaluable later when hunting for food or escaping an enemy. Play is one of the best ways to teach desirable behavior to a pet by setting standards for a lifetime. By tolerating subtle or not so subtle dominance behavior even in young puppies, for example, you may encourage inappropriate social patterns.

Undesirable Forms of Play
Wild and uncontrolled forms of play frequently lead to undesirable behavior in juvenile and adult dogs. Games that encourage chasing and jumping on people promote aggressiveness. Don't encourage your dog to mouth, chew, nip or nibble any article of clothing or part of a person's body, even if it is behaving playfully. Avoid games that arouse your dog's aggressive instincts, such as wrestling or tug of war with any object. 

Forms of play that do not focus a dog's attention on you or reinforce your authority may lead to misdirection of the animal's energies. The results of a dog's unrestricted activity are often undesirable. Also, you lose the opportunity to teach your dog desirable skills.

Obedience Training During Appropriate Play
Ideally, a pet should behave in a calm and controlled manner. The ideal dog should obey you and behave gently toward people under normal circumstances.

Play should incorporate obedience training to provide an opportunity for constructive interaction with a practical purpose. As compared with wild play, controlled play is often more enjoyable for both you and your dog, and tends to inspire more frequent play sessions.

Your dog will enjoy obeying your command to "sit" if this will earn it the right to chase after a ball. Call your dog to "come" as it retrieves the ball and to "sit" again when it returns. Say "drop it" as it gives the ball to you. This is a chance to practice obedience skills and provides the dog additional opportunities to earn your praise.

Housebreaking Your Dog

Dogs, like other meat eaters, instinctively require an area for hunting and within that area, a place for sleeping. These activity zones are referred to as territory .The hunting area is the dog or wolf pack's range, which is shared with other animals. The sleeping area is the den, which is also used as a nest for whelping newborns and as a lair for the pups safety. A den may be a cave, a tunnel or even a hollow log.

The den or resting place, is guarded with vigor. In our homes the dog may consider the entire house or apartment as the den or the den may be simply his small section of it. Certainly a dog house or a dog crate--or anything resembling it--is considered a den. The place your dog rests, his den, is an element in his life that provides comfort and security. Dogs feel best when enjoying the peace and comfort of the den.

However, the crate is much more than a sanctuary. It is an extremely useful tool when housebreaking your dog-- whether he be a puppy, adolescent or adult animal--because his instinct is not to soil his den. A crate is also valuable during periods of chewing since it prevents any household damage. It can be used as part of an overall obedience training program or simply as a way of confining the animal when his behavior is annoying. It can prevent him from getting into trouble whether someone is at home or not.

When you travel with your dog, the crate becomes a portable den providing security, comfort, and safety in a strange place. Depending upon the size, it can fit into the back seat of a sedan or station- wagon. Confined in the crate, your dog cannot stick his head out the window or distract the driver.

Puppies usually accept the crate in a short time if not placed there in anger. Set it up in an area near family activity, such as the hallway or kitchen. Be certain it is away from drafts and direct heat sources. Make it cozy. Place a few toys, a towel or a familiar piece of blanket and an article of your old clothing inside. You can make it more of a dog house by draping something over the top and sides.

The crate should be long enough to permit your grown dog to stretch out and high enough for him to sit up without hitting his head. You can construct a partition for your puppy so there is just enough room to lie down or sit up. It must never offer more space than necessary or it loses its den-like quality. As the puppy grows, increase the space by moving the partition back.

Establish a "CRATE ROUTINE" closing the puppy in at a regular one to two hour interval during the day (His own chosen nap times will guide you) and whenever he must be left alone for up to three to four hours. Give him a safe chew toy for distraction and be sure to remove collar and tags which could become caught in an opening...Do not put water in, since it will only get spilled.

At night, in the beginning, you may prefer to place the crate, with the door lift open and newspapers nearby, in a small enclosed area such as a bathroom, laundry room, or hall; crying/complaining at 5:00 AM is easier to endure/ignore if you know that the puppy is not uncomfortable. Once adjusted to his new life, and if he has no intestinal upset he will soon show greater bowel control by eliminating only once. Or not at all, and may be crated all night in his regular daytime place.

Even if things do not go too smoothly at first---DON'T WEAKEN and DON'T WORRY: Be consistent, be firm, and be very aware that you are doing your pet a real favor by preventing him from getting into trouble while left alone.

The dog's association with the crate must always be a positive one-- never frightening. Some trainers like to place a food reward in the back of the crate before confining the dog inside. This creates a pleasant association with entering. Except at night, a dog should not be crated for more than four or five hours at a time. A crate should never be used as a daily long-hours convenience for a regularly absent owner .

Most dogs accept this useful equipment. Some do not. If your dog proves to be miserable, frantic or hysterical, try leaving the door open. If that fails to do the trick it is kinder to abandon this idea. However, because of its usefulness it is well worth trying.

The Komedy Kennel

Canine Capers

After your humans give you a bath, don't let them towel-dry you! Instead, run to their bed, jump up and dry yourself off on the sheets. This is especially good if it's right before your humans bedtime.

Act like a convicted criminal. When the humans come home, put your ears back, tail between your legs, chin down and act as if you have done something really bad. Then, watch as the humans frantically search the house for the damage they think you have caused (Note: This only works when you have done absolutely nothing wrong).

Let the humans teach you a brand new trick. Learn it perfectly. Then the humans try to demonstrate it to someone else, stare blankly back at the humans. Pretend you have no idea what they're talking about.

Make your humans be patient. When you go outside to the bathroom, sniff around the entire yard as your humans wait. Act as if the spot you choose to go will ultimately decide the fate of the earth.

When out for a walk, alternate between choking and coughing every time a strange human walks by.

Make your own rules. Don't always bring back the stick when playing fetch with the humans. Make them go and chase it once in a while.

Hide from your humans. When your humans come home, don't greet them at the door. Instead, hide from them, and make them think something terrible has happened to you (don't reappear until one of your humans is panic- stricken and close to tears).

When your human calls you to come back in, always take your time. Walk as slowly as possible back to the door.

Wake up twenty minutes before the alarm clock is set to go off and make the humans take you out for your morning break. As soon as you get back inside, fall asleep (humans can rarely fall back asleep after going outside, this will drive them nuts!).

 



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