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CATS WITH NORTHERN DOGS
By: Gary Wynn Kelly
M
ost northern breeds of dogs are natural predators, but many can
and do learn to live with cats successfully. While many dogs have
learned to live with cats while the dog was a puppy, some have also
learned to live with cats when they, the dogs, were already grown.
If you have cats, and want to have a northern breed dog, there are
many factors to consider. Perhaps the most important is your cat.
Has your cat had experience with other dogs? What kind of
experience? Is your cat "dog smart"?
A dog smart cat is one of the most important ingredients in
teaching any dog to live successfully with a cat. A cat that sits
still, and sets limits on what it will tolerate from an uncertain
dog can be precisely the best teacher for an inexperienced dog in
regard to successful cat-dog relations.
A cat that runs from dogs is much less likely to be successful in
adjusting to a dog. It still might be done, but will take more
work, as the cat must learn not to run when confronted with, or in
the presence of, a dog. To learn this, the cat must experience a
measure of security first, and learn that it can control the
behavior of the dog.
If your cat is dog smart, and has had years of successful
experience with a previous dog,or with other dogs, then bringing in
a new dog has the possibility of success.
First, find out if the dog you wish to adopt has any cat
experience. If possible, find out if the foster home has noted any
response of the dog to cats. This might happen naturally on walks
with the dog. When the dog is walked, does it react to cats? If
so, how does it react?
If the foster dog ignores cats, that is best, as the dog will
quickly learn to live with cats in most instances. If the dog is
extremely curious, or cautious, then careful handling may result in
a successful relationship with a cat. If the dog is aggressive, or
out of control around cats, then it may be an uphill mission to
ever contemplate bringing the dog to successful relations with
cats. A careful evaluation of any dog is in order if you own a
cat, and wish to adopt a dog.
If the best case exists, you have a dog smart cat, and wish to
adopt a cat tolerant dog, then the introductions are usually easy.
Let your cat go to a favorite hiding place when bringing the dog
into the house. Walk the dog ON LEASH, through the house, giving
it plenty of opportunity to smell the cat's odor in each room.
Have the dog spend time in a room of your choice, with you.
Remove the dog from that area of the house, and let the cat come
into that room. Give the cat time to check out the odor of the dog.
If the cat and dog both seem indifferent or simply curious about
one another, try a careful introduction. This can be done in
several ways: if your dog is small, and you are absolutely certain of your
ability to control the dog completely, and only if this is so, then
allow your cat to be in a room where it can retreat to a safe place
NEARBY--without having to run. Bring the dog into the room slowly
and under your control, while the dog is ON LEASH. Stand a few
feet from the cat with the dog beside you on a short leash. Give
them time to watch each other, and the dog time to sniff the odor
of the cat.
If the dog seems to be reacting well, and if the cat is still calm,
permit a closer approach. IF the dog remains calm, or mildly
curious, and the cat is only watchful, then let them continue
examining one another. The cat will usually start establishing
boundaries by vocalizing, assuming an aggressive posture, or even
hissing. If the dog backs down, or turns away, then successful
relations are underway in most cases.
If the new dog reacts aggressively, or inappropriately, then
correct the dog, making it clear that this cat is yours, and very
special to you. I suggest even petting the cat while admonishing
the dog to treat the cat as a friend. I have introduced several
dogs--usually naive ones--to cats this way, and had them become cat
tolerant, or even cat friendly.
I define cat tolerance as a condition where the dog mostly ignores
the cat. The dog may even pretend the cat is invisible, or not
present when it is in the same room, or has walked by the dog. I
usually train my guide dogs to do at least this much.
The cat friendly dog learns to have a cat as a companion, and may
even curl up with such a cat, or treat it as a friend. The cats
often warm to this relationship. My father had an older dog who
had cataracts. As she lost vision, the two cats would take her out
at night to do her duties. One cat would walk ahead of the dog on
each side as though guiding her by their presence. They would
remain nearby while she completed her evening rituals, then escort
her back to the door. In turn, when the dog barked at something
during the daytime, the cats would take cover immediately, and
clearly depended on the dog to protect their territory.
My sister defines a third term--cat reverent. She feels that this
is the only appropriate relationship of a dog to a cat.
In the cases of dogs who are not known to be cat tolerant or cat
friendly, I recommend that people take a more conservative approach
to introducing the dog and cat to one another. In the most
desirable of circumstances, it is best to have the dog and cat live
separately in the house; each to his or her own area, for days or
weeks, until they have each had ample opportunity to absorb the
fact that another animal does live in the house, and will always be
around. As each of them gets used to the other's scent, each
learns to ignore it. When the dog can come into a room recently
vacated by the cat, and not sniff every area where the cat has
been, then there is a possibility of introducing them slowly.
One method of introduction in such a case is to crate or kennel the
dog. I crate train all my dogs, and a dog safely confined to a
crate is one that cannot hurt a cat. If the dog you are
introducing to a cat has learned to accept a crate, and shows some
sign of being able to be around a cat without barking or growling
aggressively, then an introduction can be done by crating the dog
in the favorite room of the cat while the cat is absent.
After the dog is safely crated, and quiet, permit the cat to return
to that favorite room. If the cat enters the room, give it time to
explore and check out the confined dog. It is often helpful to have
had the crate in that room for a day first, so the cat can be used
to the crate, and the smell of the dog in the crate in advance.
If the dog remains calm, and the cat can explore the crate, perhaps
even sitting on top of it, without eliciting bad reactions from the
dog, then the two of them are starting to develop tolerance. Repeat
this exercise regularly for a week or so.
Even if the dog does react by making sounds, or becoming excited,
let the exercise continue for a few minutes each day. Start by just
permitting a couple of minutes, then extend it to 5 minutes, then
10, and finally after a few days to 30 minutes.
When your dog can remain under control in the crate for 30 minutes
at a time with a cat in the room, your dog is developing tolerance
to cats.
I sometimes suggest doing the exercise in reverse when the cat is
crate tolerant. I suggest crating the cat, and let the dog smell
the crate, examine it, and be in the room with it, in the presence
of the owner, but not able to harm the crate or cat in any way.
This will only work if the cat consents to be crated. In cases of
young dogs who are full of energy, this approach works more
successfully than with a dog crated.
Some cats are stressed by being crated, and it may be a good idea
to spend a month or more successfully teaching your cat to accept
a crate before adopting a dog. This approach is also recommended
for cats that have the bad habit of running from, or in the
presence, of a dog.
Dogs are natural predators, and the running of a small animal flips
the equivalent of a switch in the brain of the dog. The result is
a biochemical sequence of events that can be very unfortunate for
the cat. The dog that sees a cat run can, unless well trained to
inhibit the reaction, have a biologically programmed reaction to
chase and attack the cat. In most instances, this is unfortunate
for the cat, but can also be dangerous to the dog. Once a dog has
a pattern of chasing running cats, it is almost impossible to
successfully train the dog to live with cats safely, unless one is
an expert in the training of dogs, and feels it is very important
to teach the dog a different behavior. All dogs can eventually
learn, but some require more resources and effort than is
justified.
When your cat can be in the same room as the crated dog with both
resting comfortably, or the dog resting in the room with the crated
and safe cat, then it is possible to expose them more and more to
one another. I suggest having the dog crated at night, perhaps in
your bedroom, and the cat in the same room. This can be done for
several nights, and usually will work out well for them to get used
to one another. When this seems to be happening, then try
introducing your dog to the cat as I described previously--with the
dog on a SHORT LEASH--and the cat in a room where it is near
safety, should the cat feel safety is required. Sometimes, this
can be a high counter--perhaps a kitchen counter--with the top of
the refrigerator nearby. Not that I believe that cats should ever
be on a kitchen counter, but this is a helpful illustration.
The one rule about cat and dog relations is that in most instances,
the cat controls the success of the effort. If your cat decides to
accept a dog, then it is definitely possible to teach the dog to
tolerate the cat, unless that dog has been permitted to be a cat
killer previously. If your cat decides not to accept the dog, then
it is probably not worth the effort to adopt the dog.
If you own a dog already, and wish to adopt a cat, it is best to
determine that the dog is cat tolerant or cat friendly first. If it
is not, then please, consider your pet's feelings before requiring
it to accept another relationship that can be stressful.
Sometimes this is essential, as in the case of a relative coming to
live in your house. The relative may be bringing a cat along. This
is most successful when the cat, at least, is used to dogs. If not,
the chances are that the cat will leave, so it may be best to place
the cat prior to having the relative moving into your home, unless
your dog is extremely cat tolerant already, and the cat has no
reason to fear dogs.
Most dogs who have no experience of cats, and cats that have no
experience of dogs, can be taught to live with one another. This
may not be true with all dogs, but is certainly true of most
northern breeds, who have strong pack alliances, and will extend
them to include cats if you make it important for them to do so.
Copyright 1999 by Gary Wynn Kelly for the Central Coast Northern Dog
Rescue. This document may be reproduced so long as it is not modified or
altered, and credit is given to the Central Coast Northern Dog Rescue.
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