Choosing Your First Loving Cat Pet Parental/Guardian Advice For Your Child

"If the child receives an allowance consider having some of the allowance goes to feeding and care of the pet cat – teaching financial responsibility"

Choosing Your First Loving Cat Pet

Parental/Guardian Advice

For Your Child

  1. Are You the Parent/Guardian

and Your Child

Ready for Your Pet Cat’s

Potential 10-20 Year Daily Long-Life

  1. Parental/Guardian Advice to Child wanting a Pet Cat

Children get excited holding a kitty.  As a parent/guardian you must emphasis to your child before purchasing a cat:

  • When the child’s pet cat comes into the house care and responsibility begin immediately. This new member of the family is not a novelty that wears-off and can be ignored.
  • Your pet cat must be fed at the same times every day.
  • Your pet cat’s water bowl must be cleaned and filled everyday with fresh water.
  • Children must fully understand, and not underestimate, the daily cleaning of the litter box.
  • Depending on your breed of chosen cat, grooming required will vary in time required.

Children will learn responsibility/understanding that a pet cat is a non-negotiable daily care routine even when the child is busy, tired or just not in the mood.

  1. Parent/Guardian Must Teach their child that Pet Cats have Boundaries and Feeling
  • Cats are a living animal, not a play toy, and a member of the family requiring personal space and respect.
  • Cats must be handled carefully and gently – or your pet cat may painfully scratch a handler in self-defence.
  • Children must be taught to watch/observe for signs of discomfort and/or stress.

These actions will build empathy in children and avoid potential defensive bites and scratching for an upset pet cat.

  1. Parent/Guardian must Emphasis that Daily Play/Attention is Necessary for a Happy/Healthy Pet Cat
  • Children must understand that playing with a pet cat takes time every day.
  • Ignoring a pet cat can lead to boredom
  • Ignoring a pet cat may lead to destructive behaviour such as scratching furniture, ripping curtains, chewing of shoes.
  1. Parent/Guardians must Emphasis that they are a Safety Net for the Child’s Pet Cat
  • It is the child’s responsibly to cleanup in house accidents.
  • It is the child’s responsibility for pet cat’s outdoor activities.
  1. Parent/Guardian Consideration if the Child Receives an Allowance
  • If the child receives an allowance consider having some of the allowance goes to feeding and care of the pet cat – teaching financial responsibility

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