My first question is that Saul, per the vet's recommendation, has not started insulin yet. I will be testing him over the next two weeks and see if his levels continue to go down or not, in that case he'll be put on insulin.
Should I test at the same time each day to compare or at different times? I intend to do a curve in a couple weeks but in the meantime, should it be before or after he eats? I know it spikes after eating so maybe I should test them to see it at its highest?
My other question is that thus far we have not been able to let my SO's dog around Saul. He gets along wonderfully with my other cat who is 19 and moves very slow, but he's far too interested in Saul for comfort. I feel terrible that Saul is essentially stuck in my bedroom 22 hrs a day. He doesn't do well in a crate or outside by himself so a crate and rotate type thing won't work.
I have a few ideas in case they can never be together. Including getting a nice cat tree for my room, putting a cat door in the screen window and letting him have access to a kenneled portion of the backyard. Any suggestions of other ways to make the "cat room" more interesting, please let me know!
Do you think a cat can have a decent quality of life in such a circumstance? I will continue to work with the dog and Saul but there's a distinct possibility they will never be able to be around each other.
Should I test at the same time each day to compare or at different times? I intend to do a curve in a couple weeks but in the meantime, should it be before or after he eats? I know it spikes after eating so maybe I should test them to see it at its highest?
My other question is that thus far we have not been able to let my SO's dog around Saul. He gets along wonderfully with my other cat who is 19 and moves very slow, but he's far too interested in Saul for comfort. I feel terrible that Saul is essentially stuck in my bedroom 22 hrs a day. He doesn't do well in a crate or outside by himself so a crate and rotate type thing won't work.
I have a few ideas in case they can never be together. Including getting a nice cat tree for my room, putting a cat door in the screen window and letting him have access to a kenneled portion of the backyard. Any suggestions of other ways to make the "cat room" more interesting, please let me know!
Do you think a cat can have a decent quality of life in such a circumstance? I will continue to work with the dog and Saul but there's a distinct possibility they will never be able to be around each other.