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Bathing a cat, wtf?

33 replies

FrazzleRock · 12/05/2010 19:48

I have just seen someone's pictures of their cats on FB with the caption "after his first bath"
It's never crossed my mind to bath our cat and she's 2.
Am I wrong to think you're not supposed to do this? Or is my cat just scanky?

OP posts:
Surfinia · 12/05/2010 19:50

cats clean themselves. End of.

differentID · 12/05/2010 19:50

I have had to bath my male cat, but not my female.
BEcasue he's a long hair, and long haired fluffy bums and diarrhoea do not mix well.

hogshead · 12/05/2010 19:51

common practice to bath tortoises

ticktockclock · 12/05/2010 19:53

Yes pretty common with longhairs. Short hairs you can do without. It is a good idea to brush regularly though.

MrsL123 · 12/05/2010 20:04

I've only had to bath mine when they've rolled in dead mouse or something equally disgusting - they're four now, and I've only bathed them about three times. Still got the scars to prove it!

mrsfred · 12/05/2010 20:08

was it a MNetter? There was someone on earlier whose cat had arrived home smelling of petrol. She was advised to wash the cat with washing up liquid so it didn't wash and poison itself??

I used to wash my long haired persians if they got dirty bottoms!

girliefriend · 12/05/2010 20:11

umm have had cats all my life and they have only ever had a bath when they have been covered in something that they couldn't wash off! Cats hate being bathed in my experience so it is a mission if you attempt it!!!

FrazzleRock · 12/05/2010 20:28

Not a long haired cat (didn't look like it in the pics) and not an MNer afaik....

I was under the impression it strips them of their natural oils...?

OP posts:
FrazzleRock · 12/05/2010 20:29

In fact, she comes across as a NMer tbh

[disclaimer, she's someone I knew at school, not a proper friend]

OP posts:
mad4mainecoons · 12/05/2010 20:32

i show pedigree Maine Coon cats so they get bathed for a show.

mine hates the actual bath but loves the Hairdryer afterwards she is a sandwich short of a picnic though! .

ElfOnTheTopShelf · 12/05/2010 20:34

I wash my cat; especially after she's been rolling around in a big field with things that frankly stick. She's got really long hair though, and tends to get really claggy. She tends not to mind; just stays still while we bath her.

policywonk · 12/05/2010 20:35

Sorry for long post but I love this

How to bathe a cat:
Know that although the kitty cat has the advantage of quickness and lack of concern for human life, you have the advantage of strength. Capitalize on that advantage by selecting the battlefield. Don't try to bathe him in an open area where he can force you to chase him. Pick a very small bathroom. If your bathroom is more than four feet square, we recommend that you get in the tub with the cat and close the sliding-glass doors as if you were about to take a shower. (A simple shower curtain will not do. A berserk cat can shred a three-ply rubber shower curtain quicker than a politician can shift positions.)
Know that a cat has claws and will not hesitate to remove all the skin from your body. Your advantage here is that you are smart and know how to dress to protect yourself. We recommend canvas overalls tucked into high-top construction boots, a pair of steel-mesh gloves, an army helmet, a hockey face-mask, and a long-sleeved flak jacket.
Use the element of surprise. Pick up your cat nonchalantly, as if to simply carry him to his supper dish. (Cats will not usually notice your strange attire. They have little or no interest in fashion as a rule.)
Once you are inside the bathroom, speed is essential to survival. In a single liquid motion, shut the bathroom door, step into the tub enclosure, slide the glass door shut, dip the cat in the water and squirt him with shampoo. You have now begun one of the wildest 45 seconds of your life.
Cats have no handles. Add the fact that he now has soapy fur, and the problem is radically compounded. Do not expect to hold on to him for more than two or three seconds at a time. When you have him, however, you must remember to give him another squirt of shampoo and rub like crazy. He'll then spring free and fall back into the water, thereby rinsing himself off. (The national record for cats is three latherings, so don't expect too much.)
Next, the cat must be dried. Novice cat bathers always assume this part will be the most difficult, for humans generally are worn out at this point and the cat is just getting really determined. In fact, the drying is simple compared with what you have just been through. That's because by now the cat is semi-permanently affixed to your right leg.
You simply pop the drain plug with your foot, reach for your towel and wait. (Occasionally, however, the cat will end up clinging to the top of your army helmet. If this happens, the best thing you can do is to shake him loose and to encourage him toward your leg.) After all the water is drained from the tub, it is a simple matter to just reach down and dry the cat.
In a few days the cat will relax enough to be removed from your leg. He will usually have nothing to say for about three weeks and will spend a lot of time sitting with his back to you. He might even become psychoceramic and develop the fixed stare of a plaster figurine.

You will be tempted to assume he is angry. This isn't usually the case. As a rule he is simply plotting ways to get through your defenses and injure you for life the next time you decide to give him a bath. But at least now he smells a lot better.

stealthsquiggle · 12/05/2010 20:36

One of ours had to have baths when she was reacting to something or other and we had to bathe her to stop her chewing holes in herself. It was - um - interesting - it took DH and I shut in tiny utility room with all exits barred - and DH bore the scars for some time afterwards.

They are so pathetic and sorry for themselves when they are wet. One of my parents' cats came home after clearly having been beaten up and thrown in a ditch (by other cats) - he was absolutely coated in mud but my DM said he still made her feel like she was adding insult to injury when she dunked him in a (warm!) bath.

mathanxiety · 12/05/2010 20:37

Mine is 16 years old and never once had a bath, but she spends about 80% of her waking hours cleaning and grooming herself. She's a really feisty little cat and if the experience I have getting her into the carrier to take her to the v e t is anything to go by, then I would probably not survive an attempt to bathe her.

MrsvWoolf · 12/05/2010 21:47

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Vallhala · 12/05/2010 23:08

I had to bathe my late ginger cat, Thomas, when I discovered my gentle, cat-friendly collie cross, who had dug a neat hole in the garden, with his paw on the poor confused moggie, trying to bury him!

Thomas did not find bathing any more pleasant than being buried.

I still bear the scars!

DontCallMeBaby · 13/05/2010 08:00

One of mine has had a to have a paw washed on a couple of occasions, having covered it in crap (it WOULD be the more feisty of the two who did this, wouldn't it?) That was bad enough; the thought of scaling it up to the entire cat is terrifying.

I suspect the other one might enjoy it - he will lie under a running tap in the wash basin for quite some time before jumping out and giving himself a shake.

differentID · 13/05/2010 08:07

I found that trying to use the sink results on more damage to myself, as furball can push off more easily. I now fill the bath instead. Much better. He just stands there wailing piteosly until it's over.

FrazzleRock · 13/05/2010 08:18

So the general consensus is, if they have long fur they need bathing.
Well, hers don't!
PW -

OP posts:
marriednotdead · 13/05/2010 08:25

Love this thread, has a cat years ago that became the bastard child of Edward Scissorhands and Freddie Kreuger when I tried to give her eardrops. Where did you find that policywonk- me & ds reading through tears

fishinabucket · 13/05/2010 09:41

i live in syria and the staff who live on the property (its like a smallholding) have a cat. they bath her every week in the fountain. its a family affair. there is much dunking of the cat and hilarity. i was the first time i saw them at it, but the cat seems not to mind at all and loves the drying part.

the cat has now had kittens and they are about 6 weeks old now i suppose. woke up this am to see them all at the fountain 'introducing' the kittens to water..........i have to say the kittens were not very enthusiastic.

policywonk · 13/05/2010 12:46

's good isn't it married I read it years ago (can't remember where) and of course now it's been immortalised on the internet.

CMOTdibbler · 13/05/2010 12:49

I've never bathed a cat. Cannot start to imagine what cat3 would do to me if I tried it

OrmRenewed · 13/05/2010 12:50

Bath! My god, I'd need a suit of armour including metal gauntlets to even get my cat in the bathroom

catinthehat2 · 13/05/2010 12:59

Down with baths!

We don't do water!

CATS SAY NO!

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