Virginie & Chewie (GA)
Member Since 2022
Hi everyone - not a diabetes-related question (yet), but I figured with so many cat people in one place, maybe someone would have experience training a deaf kitty.
My 16 yo lady Mew has lost her hearing over the past few years, and is definitely on the slow side (physically and mentally - I love her to death but she has never been the sharpest tool in the shed). She sleeps VERY hard since she can't hear a thing. I have even vacuumed right by her face when she was sleeping and she never woke up. Turning the lights on doesn't wake her up either.
Long story short, I bought a timed feeder for when we have to be out of town for a few days. The pet sitter will come in the morning and evening to feed and medicate, but I need her to be able to eat between meals. Normally, as her work-from-home valet, I bring her food wherever she is during the day. With a hearing cat I would train them with the sound of a little bell or something, but I can't do that with her.
I'm planning on closing doors to the bedrooms when we travel so she has fewer places to sleep and therefore will be closer to the feeder when it opens (I don't mind if the other cats snack from it too, it's big enough to put a good amount in there).
Any ideas how I could train her to look for that feeder when she is hungry? I am going to start by bringing her snacks to her in that feeder, then I think I'll bring her the closed feeder right before it opens and stay with her to make sure she sees it contains food, but not sure what else to do?
My 16 yo lady Mew has lost her hearing over the past few years, and is definitely on the slow side (physically and mentally - I love her to death but she has never been the sharpest tool in the shed). She sleeps VERY hard since she can't hear a thing. I have even vacuumed right by her face when she was sleeping and she never woke up. Turning the lights on doesn't wake her up either.
Long story short, I bought a timed feeder for when we have to be out of town for a few days. The pet sitter will come in the morning and evening to feed and medicate, but I need her to be able to eat between meals. Normally, as her work-from-home valet, I bring her food wherever she is during the day. With a hearing cat I would train them with the sound of a little bell or something, but I can't do that with her.
I'm planning on closing doors to the bedrooms when we travel so she has fewer places to sleep and therefore will be closer to the feeder when it opens (I don't mind if the other cats snack from it too, it's big enough to put a good amount in there).
Any ideas how I could train her to look for that feeder when she is hungry? I am going to start by bringing her snacks to her in that feeder, then I think I'll bring her the closed feeder right before it opens and stay with her to make sure she sees it contains food, but not sure what else to do?

