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Hayley S asked in PetsCats · 9 years ago

Pregnant cat problems?

Okay so my cat is pregnant I have never been through anything like this and I need help is there anything I should no or advice. Mostly I want to know what she will start to do a lot the week of delivery?

And should I keep my 4 month old kitten (also a girl) away from her?

3 Answers

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  • 9 years ago
    Favorite Answer

    Hello, I totally understand your questions i had the same ones when my cats got pregnant. I do not run a cat breeding place or anything, I moved to a area that had a million stray cats, and they all came to my house! They were not fixed so they all got pregnant but at different times. The time that she will deliver but the deliver in 60 days, so if you the exact time or close time then just count! I don't think there is any need to keep the kitten away from her, all my cats were in the same area, but only when she has the little baby's that's when you take the kitten away. My cats all delivered at night time when i was asleep, and Nothing happened for example ( any baby problems, look up on the internet). I hope I was Helpful! I hope the baby's are healthy and happy! Thank's! :):):) <3

  • Anonymous
    9 years ago

    Yes, you will want to keep the 4 month old kitten away from her. Give her a private room or closet if you can, she will be making nests, in clothes baskets, etc, she will be taking more naps, eating more, etc.

    I don't understand why your cat is having kittens, unless you are breeding show cats, and if this is your first experience in that, you should have asked a LOT more questions and not from yahoo folks, sorry.

  • ?
    Lv 4
    5 years ago

    BS that your physician instructed you. If you put on a couple of disposible gloves you'll effectively scoop the muddle pan. I was once pregnant and wiped clean ALL the muddle pans as my ex did not wish to do it in any respect - his angle was once "its your cats, you handle them". As lengthy as you wash your arms after scooping, you do not have a factor to fear approximately. Most of the solutions above are shopping the "scare procedures". And BTW you'll prefer up toxiplasmosis from consuming uncooked meat quicker then scooping muddle pans of a cat!

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