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My advice is to get her accustomed to it. Show her the brush and let her get familiar. It will calm her down knowing what it is and that its not going ot hurt her
gosh, whe na cat doesn't want to do something, it's such a pain to make her :S so I sympathise. I think you are doing all that can be done (leaving the brush around sounds like a good idea) so I guess all you can do is brush her little by little, as much as she will let you.As for Salem, first question, is he fixed? I am going to assume that he is otherwise that would be your first thing to do Some males tend to be rough and energetic. I also think that you should be persistent in not letting him be rough and see if he learns. Alternatively, maybe there are some hormone sprays that would calm him down? I personally never used them so I can't say for sure
though it is funny to see Miss just..sit on him when she's had it
Quote from: kestral_kitsune on June 06, 2013, 06:21:34 PMthough it is funny to see Miss just..sit on him when she's had itHahaha I would bet on his youth as well. When we got our youngest, she was a ~3 month old kitten (we found her on the street) all she wanted to do was jump on our other two cats and chase them. Needless to say, they were not very amused but our Aska was (and still is) tiny so there was never an issue of other cat's safety. In fact, she's still acting like a kitten and tends to chase the other two around. I hope your little guy learns his boundaries soon