Interior Decorating
Cat Owners
Interior Decorating for Cat Owners - Protecting Your Pet
Part 2: Protecting your pet
If you own a cat, then designing the décor of your home
will require taking several precautions in order to protect your
pet from harm. Glass items should be avoided both because they are
easy to shatter, and because fragments of glass can then become
embedded in your cat's skin. Other items to avoid are those that
have sharp edges, spikes, or that have small pieces which can break
off and be swallowed.
You should also consider whether any object you bring into your
home would be unhealthy if eaten by the feline. These items may
include plants, flowers, and scented candles. Cats are fairly self-sufficient,
as well as intelligent, however they are also curious, and you do
not want to give them any easy method for hurting themselves.
Cats are fascinated by string, as part of their inherent instinct
to kill snakes. This fascination may carry over to electrical wires.
If you catch your cat attacking or playing with electric cords you
should stop them immediately. This is a very dangerous problem that
can not only result in the cat electrocuting themselves, but also
in causing a fire. If your pet persists in this problem, one way
to protect your wires is to wrap them in duct tape. This will make
them harder to break through and less appetizing for a cat to chew
on. There are also many natural sprays which have specially formulated
smells that will cause a cat to avoid an area in which it is sprayed.
Curtain cords hold much the same fascination that electrical wires
do, and they can also be a danger from strangulation. If you have
rope that dangles too far from your curtain, the cat may attack
it, causing it to tangle. If the cat becomes caught in the tangle
itself, it can be very dangerous. Long hanging cords should be tied
up out of the cats reach, or cut so that they do not dangle where
a feline can reach them.
The level of caution you should use is based upon your individual
cat. Monitor your pet and your home, and change your setting as
necessary. Always use caution when bringing a new object into an
area, and be certain you don't introduce anything which can be harmful
to the cat. Mostly, just use common sense and try to remove any
obvious hazards to where they can't be reached.
Joey Lewitin is one of the authors that adds helpful home decor
resources to the site http://pebblez.com/information/home-decorating-idea.html
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