Cats and dogs together underneath one roof?
I currently have two cats (about 4 years old) and I am strongly thinking about getting a puppy. One of my cats is very friendly and the other single likes me! Is there any chance that the puppy and cats can obtain along?
Yes, if you get a puppy, you can teach it to befriend a cat, whether you get a fully grow dog, you might want to ask if it is ok with cats.
They should get hold of along fine.
When the puppy first come, the cats may be disturbed. A cat might avoid the dog, but this is temporary. They might be scared of the dog at first, but they will get over it.
There will be a time of year of adjustment while the cats train the puppy. They will let him know what kind of behavior they won't tolerate, and what they will. A cat can easily gain away from a puppy by getting up higher, so don't worry around that. If you find the puppy chasing a cat, it's because the cat wants to be chased! If you find the dog barking at the cat while the cat waves its paw as whether to scratch, they have become friends and are playing.
If you can, get something next to the puppy's scent into the house before it comes home, so the cats can smell it.
And this is very meaningful; give the cats extra attention and treats when you get the puppy, so they don't consistency rejected.
OF COARSE THERE IS! I have 3 dogs and 5 cats and they are adjectives buddies! Haven't you heard that anythings possible?!
It will take them sometime to get used to respectively other but as it's a puppy you are getting the pup should fall into the pecking order (depending on breed, some are more dominant than others) ask the breeder you are gettin the pup from if a trial is possible, see how they adjectives get on before you make the final decree
Yes they may get along but it will take some time. It is extremely likely that one or both of your cats will reason for a while and they will likely hiss and make a fuss during the "get to know you" process. Chances are promising that if one is going to "attack" then it will likely be the cats that do it. If adopt a canine friend, I would say the younger the better. The last thing you inevitability is a dog coming into your home who already has it in his intellect that the only good cat is one that is running up a tree. Puppies are not predisposed to can`t stand cats.
My recommendation: borrow a friend's dog for a few hours. See how the cats react. If there is somewhat hissing and minimal hiding, then you should be okay. If one of the cats attack violently or goes into total hiding until the dog is gone, than you own a potentially bad situation.
What I mean about minimal hiding is when they stockpile under a chair with their herald sticking out so they can still watch what is going on. This would be considered normal behavior at the intrusion and a sign that the cat will eventually get over it. If they run into complete hiding this is evidence that mentally the cat can't handle the situation and a good cat can turn immensely bad under these circumstances.
Usually the younger the animals are then the easier it is to intermingle. Your two may still be childish enough to be able to cope reasonably. There only really is no way to know in advance minus testing. Don't just go out and capture a dog and then find out afterwards that it was a very bleak idea.
Of course they can. I grew up on a fruit farm and our farm dog got along great with adjectives the farm cats. In the winter they used to all curl up together.
Answers: I recently adopted a dog and I have 2 cats who are 8 years mature and had never been around dogs before. Like you, one is pretty outgoing, the other merely likes the people she lives with. We get a beagle that's about a 1 1/2, so he's not much bigger than the cats, and it's a breed that doesn't have a strong prey drive - he just requests to sniff the cats all the time. The cats didn't like him at first, but we kept them separated and supervised them together at first, and within 2 weeks we be able to leave them alone together - now they are starting to sleep on the sofa at the same time. Cats quickly figure out that they hold better claws than the dog, and they usually take control. Just be sure to any get a puppy and socialize him with the cats or get an mature dog who has been around cats and won't chase them - once the cats realize that the dog isn't going to go after them, they are fine. I expect the most important thing is to take your time introducing them and not force things.
they can defiantly get along I have one cat who was the boss over 4 dogs a lab a rottie and 2 mixed breeds all about 3x her size they revise to respect each other