WHEN
YOU'VE FOUND A NEW PET
Basic Cat Training or How Cats
Learn
No, this is not about Kitty Boot Camp! If
training your cat to sit, stay and heel is your goal, perhaps you
should get a dog. If training your cat to adroitly perch himself
over your toilet to do his business is your goal, perhaps this article
is not for you either. This article is for all of us who would be
happy training our cats to just use the litter box instead of our
comforter, closet or shoes. This is for owners who would be happy
training their cat to use a scratching post instead of the stereo
speakers. If you're like me, you admire your cat for being a cat
and you want him to behave as nothing other than a cat, but a well-behaved
one.
Before we start training our cats to do something or to stop doing
something, we need to look at how cats learn. They don't understand
English, they can't read books or attend lectures. They learn by
experience. If the experience is good, they will try to repeat it.
If the experience is unpleasant, they will try to avoid it in the
future. They enjoy raking the furniture with their claws, so they
continue to do it. But it's quite a shock when they stick their
nose in a candle flame, so they won't do that again.
The key to training is to
make sure that whatever you want your cat to do is exceedingly rewarding
and pleasurable. Whatever you don't want your cat to indulge in
must never be rewarding or fun, in fact, it must be unpleasant.
Sometimes we unintentionally
reward our cats for obnoxious behavior. A common complaint is that
the cat pounces on the owner at five in the morning, meowing up
a storm and generally being a pest. What do the owners do? They
get up and feed the cat, play with him or let him outside. Kitty
has learned that his behavior gets him exactly what he wants. Read
more on 5am activity. Read more on rambunctious behavior.
Many owners become frustrated
because they can't catch the cat in the act of the crime, so instead
they show the cat the evidence (usually a wet spot on the carpet
or pieces of shredded drapery) and discipline the cat at that time.
A common training (mal)practice is grabbing the cat, pointing out
the wet spot, then dragging him to the litter box and forcing him
to dig in the litter. What the cat is learning is that being reached
for by the owner is a bad experience and that the litter box is
a torture chamber. It is usually difficult if not impossible to
catch the cat in the act because most cats have already learned
that being caught is bad news.
Reprimands simply do not
work when training your cat. If you catch kitty in the act, he will
only misbehave when you are not around. If you punish the cat later,
he will not associate the reprimand with the crime. In either case,
the misbehavior continues. Some cats misbehave just to get attention
and the attention is enough of a reward to cause kitty to continue
his ways. So what do we do?
If you want to prevent problems
from occurring, or reform kitty of his bad habits, the answers are
the same. Here's a three point training plan:
First:
Stop all reprimands and punishment, no matter what your cat is doing.
Second: Set kitty up to succeed in
performing those behaviors you want her to learn so she can be rewarded.
Third: Set up kitty's environment so
that those behaviors you don't want him to learn are not rewarding.
Let's look at these at little more closely.
1. Stop all reprimands.
Concentrate on making your relationship fun, rewarding, playful
and interesting. Sometimes this change alone will solve your problem.
Cats are known to become overly active and destructive when bored.
Daily play sessions and relaxing massages help calm kitty down.
Cats that feel neglected will often stop using their litter box.
If you schedule regular sessions to give kitty your undivided attention
and to play games with him, even litter box problems can disappear
almost overnight.
2. The most effective
method of cat training is through rewards, so the second step is
setting up the cat's environment so he can succeed. This will give
you the opportunity to reward and praise him for good behavior.
Let's take a look at litter
box training as an example. A cat's physical system is very regular.
If you control the input, you are also in control of the output.
Kitty should be on a regular feeding schedule so he will have a
corresponding regular output schedule. Adjust his feeding time so
you can be present when he needs to go. About 15 minutes prior to
when you know he will need to go, take him to his litter box room.
Because you and kitty are locked in the litter box room, he doesn't
have the option of going on the carpet in the hall or on your bed.
His only choice is the litter box. When he uses it, praise the daylights
out of him! Give him a juicy chunk of salmon or another treat that
is reserved for this wonderful performance. Until you're sure that
litter box training is successful, don't give him free access to
the rest of your home when you know his bladder and bowels are full.
Read more on litter box training.
3. The third step
is setting up the cat's environment so that his misbehavior is not
a rewarding experience. Let's take a look at furniture scratching
as an example. While making kitty's scratching post fun, rewarding
and exciting, the training process also requires you to make the
furniture unattractive as a clawing item. Instead of you telling
the cat to avoid the furniture, let the furniture itself tell the
cat to stay away. It's up to you to find something your cat does
not like. Each cat is different. However, most cats don't like to
snag their claws when scratching, so you might try draping some
netting or tulle over the furniture. Some cats don't like the feel
of aluminum foil or two-sided sticky tape. A mild menthol or citrus
scent repels some cats. Once your cat realizes that these places
are not fun to scratch or sit on, and she regularly has wonderful
times at her scratching post, the problem of inappropriate scratching
will disappear. Read more on destructive behavior.
Maybe you are into training
your cat to jump through a hoop; maybe you just want him to stop
climbing the drapes. Whatever the case, remember that cats learn
best through the use of rewards, praise and positive reinforcement.
Set kitty up to succeed. Set yourself up to succeed with your cat.
It works. And it's a lot more fun when training succeeds for both
of you.
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