Lucky you...i socialize rescued cats and kittens for adoption, mostly ferals - i have 3 in the bathroom tonight. But lately we are getting more surrenders from folks who move and can't take them. I also feel great when i find them homes. usually fosters end up with the unadoptables - so i have a few extra than i would like.BrettCullum wrote:I foster dogs at my home. While it's true you grow attached, nothing feels better than handing them over to someone you know will give them a better home. I mainly socialize puppy mill dogs used for breeding or abuse cases. I only do one at a time, and they are small breed dogs.
molly1216 wrote:Lucky you...i socialize rescued cats and kittens for adoption, mostly ferals - i have 3 in the bathroom tonight. But lately we are getting more surrenders from folks who move and can't take them. I also feel great when i find them homes. usually fosters end up with the unadoptables - so i have a few extra than i would like.BrettCullum wrote:I foster dogs at my home. While it's true you grow attached, nothing feels better than handing them over to someone you know will give them a better home. I mainly socialize puppy mill dogs used for breeding or abuse cases. I only do one at a time, and they are small breed dogs.
molly1216 wrote:Lucky you...i socialize rescued cats and kittens for adoption, mostly ferals - i have 3 in the bathroom tonight.
BrettCullum wrote:Cats are too smart to fall for the treat thing for training...
TemporalWisdom wrote:BrettCullum wrote:Cats are too smart to fall for the treat thing for training...
Or they're so stupid they forget the command once the treat is consumed.
BrettCullum wrote:TemporalWisdom wrote:BrettCullum wrote:Cats are too smart to fall for the treat thing for training...
Or they're so stupid they forget the command once the treat is consumed.
Most cats can't be conned into doing things even FOR a treat. It's not forgetting....
How is that related to intelligence? You assume that the animal understands exactly what you want it to do, and what it stands to gain, i.e. approval and/or food. Fine, let's assume that. So? It is then faced with a decision. Does it want what you're offering, and is it willing to do what you ask to get it? If it doesn't do the trick, then either it doesn't understand, or the answer is no.BrettCullum wrote:I didn't contradict myself. I am saying the cats are too smart to do the trick for your approval or for food.
They do form prides. One could argue that an ability to stretch one's definition of "us" and "them" to think of members of another species as "us" evidences a certain kind of intelligence. Not necessarily, but you're the one trying to oversimplify the comparison between canine and feline intelligence.[/quote]BrettCullum wrote:They are not pack animals,
A desire to please or work, or lack thereof, isn't a question of intelligence. It's a question of motivation.[/quote]BrettCullum wrote:and don't have the same simple work desire or a need to please a dog has. They are independent thinkers.
Okay, but now you're talking about your own, limited experiences. You've never known a dog that's as smart as your cat, nor a cat that's as dumb as your dogs? Fine. Let me share my personal experiences. My mom's cat is pretty damn smart. She even responds to images on a TV screen. But one of my sister's cats is dumb as a box of rocks. Totally oblivious to the world around him. And her other cat isn't a great deal smarter (not surprising, as they're brothers).BrettCullum wrote:My cat is wicked intelligent compared to three dogs. She can open doors, plan ambushes that always scare the dogs to holy hell, knows better how to manipulate people, can hide much more effectively, and can read moods better than the dogs. She just seems more thoughtful in all she does.
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