First publishd May 2018<\/span><\/p>\n
We need to turn our attention to the size and design of \u2018Cat Carriers\u2019 that are used to take cats on car journeys, especially if the purpose of that car journey is to take the cat to the Vet.<\/span><\/p>\n
Remember, it may be one thing for your cat to hide in small spaces at home but they can free themselves when they want to. That same cat can\u2019t free himself from a small cage in a bumpy hot car journey. “Pain is both about the pain you feel and how that pain makes you feel”;<\/em><\/span> usually not amenable to other living things touching you. Once you realise that, you can begin to understand why cats have hated being shoved into traditional cat carriers.<\/span><\/p>\n
I wrote this blog post after sitting in a conference lecture on behaviour and having to bite my tongue (not something I usually do), as the audience was shown how a cat was “trained” to accept its cat carrier. It took the owners and their cat a week but eventually, the cat went into the cage without a struggle. I so wanted to put my hand up and suggest I could have gotten the cat to accept the cage in minutes. Why? Because I would have used a different cage. No one else seemed to notice how tiny the carrier box was relative to the cat. We don’t force our children to wear shoes several sizes too small, nor tie dogs up in harnesses that cramp their movement: yet we constantly want to shove cats into boxes\/carriers that are simply too small. Surprise surprise, the cat doesn’t cooperate – well, fancy that!<\/span><\/p>\n
For many cats, simply changing the style of cat carrier they travel in can have a huge positive improvement on the cat\u2019s behaviour.<\/span><\/p>\n
It is a given that all cats should travel to a vet clinic is a safe carrier of some sort; but I strongly discourage the use of most of the popular traditional cat carriers for my clients. I do so because often I seen adult cats transported to me in the very same cat basket bought when the kitten was first purchased; which was perfect for the little kitten, not so for a fully-grown cat. As a result, you end up at the vet clinic with: a hot, stressed, cramped, often highly painful cat, (sometimes two cats), who has\/have simmered into the Red zone of fear and aggression by the time the carrier box and its inmates get to the Vet clinic. So begets a lifelong tale of woe.*<\/span><\/p>\n
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Instead, I encourage clients to use a small dog basket or transport box; these tend by default to be of a squarer, taller shape so that even a tall cat can walk into it without crouching and can then settle comfortably inside. Most of the dog carry cages have a wider door width which is kinder on the cats\u2019 whiskers as well.<\/span><\/p>\n
Importantly, many dog cages also tend to have air vents or slots on the sides shaped either as circles or portholes, rather than the long narrow vertical slatted slit style seen on many cat cages. I am suspicious that the rows of those narrow slit lines on the cage top-side may create a strobing-light action as the car moves along, by which many cats would be quite distressed.<\/span><\/p>\n
The photograph below shows a 10kg (22lb) large male cat sitting calming in a dog carrier.<\/span><\/p>\n
Some cats love to look out and see where they are going which they can easily do sitting in\u00a0the ‘wire mesh top with solid plastic bottom’ style of\u00a0carry boxes. If the cat is of the type that prefers to hide, then a light towel over 3 sides of the box does the trick.<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n
I was impressed with this version which our clever client kindly allowed us to photograph to display and share with others.<\/a> <\/a> <\/a><\/span><\/p>\n
More on the portable carrier bags* at the end of this post.<\/span><\/p>\n