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Introducing Your New Dog to Your Other Pets
It's important to have realistic expectations when introducing
a new pet to a resident pet. Some pets are more social than
others. For example, an eight-year-old dog that has never been
around other animals may never learn to share his/her territory
(or his/her people) with other pets in the household. However, an
eight-week-old puppy separated from his/her mom and littermates
for the first time, might prefer to have a cat or dog companion.
If you are introducing your new dog to a resident cat, it is
important to know that cats are territorial and need to be
introduced to other animals very slowly in order to give them time
to get used to each other before there is a face-to-face
confrontation. Slow introductions help prevent fearful and
aggressive problems from developing. PLEASE NOTE: When you
introduce pets to each other, one of them may send
"play" signals which can be misinterpreted by the other
pet. If those signals are interpreted as aggression by one animal,
then you should handle the situation as "aggressive."
Confinement
If you are introducing your new dog to a resident cat, confine
your cat to one medium-sized room with her litter box, food, water
and a bed. Feed your resident pets and the newcomer on each side
of the door to this room. This will help all of them to associate
something enjoyable (eating!) with each other's smells. Don't put
the food so close to the door that the animals are too upset by
each other's presence to eat. Gradually move the dishes closer to
the door until your pets can eat calmly, directly on either side
of the door. Next, use two doorstops to prop open the door just
enough to allow the animals to see each other, and repeat the
whole process.
Swap Scents
Switch sleeping blankets or beds between your new dog and your
resident animals so they have a chance to become accustomed to
each other's scent. Rub a towel on one animal and put it
underneath the food dish of another animal. You should do this
with each animal in the house.
Switch Living Areas
Give your new dog free time in the cat's room(s) while
confining your other animals. This switch provides another way for
the animals to experience each other's scents without a
face-to-face meeting. It also allows the newcomer to become
familiar with his/her new surroundings without being frightened by
the other animals.
Avoid Fearful And Aggressive Meetings
Avoid any interactions between your pets that result in either
fearful or aggressive behavior. If these responses are allowed to
become a habit, they can be difficult to change. It's better to
introduce your pets to each other so gradually that neither animal
becomes afraid or aggressive. You can expect mild forms of these
behaviors, but don't give them the opportunity to intensify. If
either animal becomes fearful or aggressive, separate them, and
start over with the introduction process in a series of very
small, gradual steps, as outlined above.
Precautions
If one of your pets has a medical problem or is injured, this
could stall the introduction process. Check with your veterinarian
to be sure that all of your pets are healthy. You'll also want to
have at least one litter box per cat, and you'll probably need to
clean all of the litter boxes more frequently. Make sure that none
of the cats are being "ambushed" by another while trying
to use the litter box. Try to keep your resident pets' schedule as
close as possible to what it was before the newcomer's appearance.
Cats can make lots of noise, pull each other's hair, and roll
around quite dramatically without either cat being injured. If
small spats do occur between your cats, you shouldn't attempt to
intervene directly to separate the cats. Instead, make a loud
noise, throw a pillow, or use a squirt bottle with water and
vinegar to separate the cats. Give them a chance to calm down
before re-introducing them to each other. Be sure each cat has a
safe hiding place.
Dog to Cat Introductions
Dogs can kill a cat very easily, even if they're only playing.
All it takes is one shake and the cat's neck can break. Some dogs
have such a high prey drive they should never be left alone with a
cat. Dogs usually want to chase and play with cats, and cats
usually become afraid and defensive. Use the techniques
aforementioned to begin introducing your new cat to your resident
dog. In addition:
Practice Obedience
If your dog doesn't already know the commands "sit,"
"down," "come" and "stay," you
should begin working on them. Small pieces of food will increase
your dog's motivation to perform, which will be necessary in the
presence of such a strong distraction as a new cat. Even if your
dog already knows these commands, work with obeying commands in
return for a tidbit.
Controlled Meeting
After your new dog and resident cat have become comfortable
eating on opposite sides of the door, and have been exposed to
each other's scents as described above, you can attempt a
face-to-face introduction in a controlled manner. Put your dog's
leash on, and using treats, have him either sit or lie down and
stay. Have another family member or friend enter the room and
quietly sit down next to your cat, but don't have them physically
restrain her. Have this person offer your cat some special pieces
of food or catnip. At first, the cat and the dog should be on
opposite sides of the room. Lots of short visits are better than a
few long visits. Don't drag out the visit so long that the dog
becomes uncontrollable. Repeat this step several times until both
the cat and dog are tolerating each other's presence without fear,
aggression or other undesirable behavior.
Let Your Cat Go
Next, allow your cat freedom to explore your dog at her own
pace, with the dog still on-leash and in a "down-stay."
Meanwhile, keep giving your dog treats and praise for his calm
behavior. If your dog gets up from his "stay" position,
he should be repositioned with a treat lure, and praised and
rewarded for obeying the "stay" command. If your cat
runs away or becomes aggressive, you're progressing too fast. Go
back to the previous introduction steps. If you cannot get a
handle on your dog's behavior, a good quality training class can
put you back in control of your dog so that your cat can enjoy her
home too! Do not allow your dog to chase ANY small animals. That
will only undermine training your dog to leave your cat alone.
Positive Reinforcement
Although your dog must be taught that chasing or being rough
with your cat is unacceptable behavior, he must also be taught how
to behave appropriately, and be rewarded for doing so, such as
sitting, coming when called, or lying down in return for a treat.
If your dog is always punished when your cat is around, and never
has "good things" happen in the cat's presence, your dog
may redirect aggression toward the cat. Allow your cat to approach
your dog. By all means, allow your cat to walk up and investigate
your dog but watch carefully so that your dog does not attempt to
chase your cat. By allowing this to happen, your cat will gain
trust in you and your dog that nothing bad is going to happen to
her. Your cat will begin to realize that sharing a house with a
dog (who is not allowed to approach her) isn't so bad at all!
Give your dog an outlet for his chase behavior. Teach him to
chase a ball, Frisbee, tether ball or squeaky toy rather than your
cat. Regular exercise can help your dog remain calm around your
cat.
Directly Supervise All Interactions Between Your Dog And Cat
You may want to keep your dog on-leash and with you whenever
your cat is free in the house during the introduction process. Be
sure that your cat has an escape route and a place to hide. Keep
your dog and cat separated when you aren't home until you're
certain your cat will be safe.
Precautions
Dogs like to eat cat food. Eating cat food can cause kidney and
liver problems in dogs because the protein and fat content in cat
food is too high for dogs to digest appropriately. You should keep
the cat food out of your dog's reach (in a closet or on a high
shelf). Eating cat feces is also a relatively common behavior in
dogs. Although there are no health hazards to your dog, it's
probably distasteful to you. It's also upsetting to your cat to
have such an important object "invaded." Unfortunately,
attempts to keep your dog out of the litter box by "booby
trapping" it will also keep your cat away as well. Punishment
after the fact will not change your dog's behavior. The best
solution is to place the litter box where your dog can't access
it, for example: behind a baby gate; in a closet with the door
anchored open from both sides and just wide enough for your cat;
or inside a tall, topless cardboard box with easy access for your
cat.
A Word About Kittens And Puppies
Because they're so much smaller, kittens are in more danger of
being injured, of being killed by a young energetic dog, or by a
predatory dog. A kitten will need to be kept separate from an
especially energetic dog until she is fully-grown, and even then
she should never be left alone with the dog. Usually, a
well-socialized cat will be able to keep a puppy in its place, but
some cats don't have enough confidence to do this. If you have an
especially shy cat, you might need to keep her separated from your
puppy until he matures enough to have more self-control.
When To Get Help
If introductions don't go smoothly, seek professional help
immediately . Animals can be severely injured in fights, and the
longer the problem continues, the harder it can be to resolve.
Conflicts between pets in the same family can often be resolved
with professional help. Punishment won't work, though, and could
make things worse. |