Would anyone like a paralyzed cat?
Dec. 4th, 2009 10:41 amhttp://pics.livejournal.com/tripperfunster/pic/0015hh9x/
'Beautiful' was hit by a car (we assume) the day before Halloween. She was missing for two days, which we thought was odd. Normally, she would bound in the house the second we opened the door, but since she's so curious, she would occasionally get locked in the garage, or shed, or wherever, but after checking all those places and finding nothing, we were flummoxed.
Two days later, we found her dragging her little self down our long gravel driveway, mewing the whole time. :(
I took her to the vet, where they did x-rays and stuff, and although her back did not appear to be broken, her hips were, so we were at a bit of a 'wait and see' scenario.
Skip forward five weeks, and one chiropractor visit later, and we have a pretty well healed parapelegic cat. Not that SHE is put off by that at all, of course! She can boogey around pretty well on two legs, and is even PRETTY good at using the cat box (we've been using a cookie sheet with litter on it).
Anyhoo, we've been keeping her in a large dog cage, with a bed, food, water and litter, but that's not really much of a life. I'd just block her in the kitchen and let her live there, but the way our kitchen is made, there is no way to block it off, and we have OMG three sets of stairs in this house! Not good for broken pelvises.
So anyway, I'm not sure what to do. We had been waiting, with the expectation that we would give her some time to recover, and if she didn't get back her mobility, then we would put her to sleep. BUT SHE'S SO VIBRANT AND ACTIVE AND HAPPY that it seems like a crying shame to do that.
Any thoughts? Suggestions? Takers?
She is already fixed!
'Beautiful' was hit by a car (we assume) the day before Halloween. She was missing for two days, which we thought was odd. Normally, she would bound in the house the second we opened the door, but since she's so curious, she would occasionally get locked in the garage, or shed, or wherever, but after checking all those places and finding nothing, we were flummoxed.
Two days later, we found her dragging her little self down our long gravel driveway, mewing the whole time. :(
I took her to the vet, where they did x-rays and stuff, and although her back did not appear to be broken, her hips were, so we were at a bit of a 'wait and see' scenario.
Skip forward five weeks, and one chiropractor visit later, and we have a pretty well healed parapelegic cat. Not that SHE is put off by that at all, of course! She can boogey around pretty well on two legs, and is even PRETTY good at using the cat box (we've been using a cookie sheet with litter on it).
Anyhoo, we've been keeping her in a large dog cage, with a bed, food, water and litter, but that's not really much of a life. I'd just block her in the kitchen and let her live there, but the way our kitchen is made, there is no way to block it off, and we have OMG three sets of stairs in this house! Not good for broken pelvises.
So anyway, I'm not sure what to do. We had been waiting, with the expectation that we would give her some time to recover, and if she didn't get back her mobility, then we would put her to sleep. BUT SHE'S SO VIBRANT AND ACTIVE AND HAPPY that it seems like a crying shame to do that.
Any thoughts? Suggestions? Takers?
She is already fixed!