It's definitely a throwback to nursing behavior. Both my young cats did it when they were babies. They are almost 11 months now; Marie has mostly outgrown it, but Ellie still does it every day.
She takes it a step farther, though; not only does she demand to suckle on my forearm, but I have to...
My other feral, Little Mama, disappeared right at the same time Sylvester decided to come in. I'm afraid something awful must have happened, bad enough to kill her or make her run away, and to make him want to come inside. My heart is aching for her.
Thanks! More good news--Sylvester is FelV- and FIV- negative, his fecal smear showed no parasites, and his blood work showed no significant signs of disease.
He does have some indicators of chronic, low-grade inflammation, probably due to chronic diarrhea; so we'll start him on metronidazole...
UPDATE: Sylvester's former owner just called and said she had decided to let me keep him. So he is now in his forever home! Thanks for your good thoughts and good advice
A miracle happened today! One of the two little cats who have been living in my backyard decided it was time to come in out of the cold.
For two months, he has been shy as could be, running whenever he saw me. Yesterday, he was still running--but when he reached a "safe" distance, he turned...
I have been feeding one feral for about 7 months, and a second cat is now coming to eat every day. Unfortunately, a coyote started showing up two nights ago. (I am using a trail cam to monitor what goes on, so I'm pretty sure it's only just started coming around.) How can I scare off the coyote...
Can you video what she is doing and post it? Maybe some of the experts on here could tell something from seeing it. (I sometimes even shoot video to show the vet.)
I'm wondering if the reason it happens most when Zoey has been sleeping might be because that's when her stomach is empty. That...
I am so sorry poor Zoey is having this setback! I don't have any authoritative advice to offer... but my instinct would be to temporarily separate the kittens and try to get Zoey into a quiet, dimly lit place where she can calm down and feel safe. Maybe in the bedroom with you? I also would...