Smacky training

I’ve had cats in the past, and most of them have responded better to training than Smacky does. I’ve trained cats to come when I call (every time I called, but never for anyone else in the household, much to their chagrin), to fetch, to sit on my shoulders when I’m walking…

OK, Smacky does do that last one. He’ll jump up on my shoulders when I ask him to and he’s not busy attackin something else. It’s just that, most of the time, he’s attacking something else.

He likes to jump up on the kitchen counter and dragging my dishrag all over the house. I’ll come out of the bedroom in the morning, stumbling around in the dark, half-awake, and step on the damp dishrag. First couple of times it happened I thought I was stepping in some biological waste, but now I just moan “Smacky…” drawing out the final vowell sound in frustration.

At which point, Smacky, who was rolling around on his side and back, stretched out and mewling and hoping for attention since I’ve been mean-spirited-ly ignoring him all night by sleeping, would then take my moaning to be the signal to pounce. On me.

If I was Smacky, I think I would understand a human shouting and yelling and dancing around trying to a) avoid stepping on me, b) keeping my feet out of the way of my sharp claws and teeth, and c) scrambling around looking for the water bottle to mean “Hey, the human doesn’t want me to do this anymore. I should stop.” But, apparently from Smacky’s perspective, a, b, and c add up to: playtime.

I’ve recently begun bribing him with vile-smelling (to me) chicken and liver flavored treats if he would stop biting and scratching me. Unfortunately, I think he has interpreted this to mean, “If I bite and scratch him he will give me treats” so it’s effective in an ineffective way, just reinforcing the behavior I don’t want him to have. Argh.

Smacky is a stubborn learner. Or, actually, he’s an awesome learner but not at learning the things I want him to. Technically I’m smarter than he is so I should be able to train him. But in all actuality, he’s training me.

Allergic to what?

Smacky may have allergies.

He’s got these scratches on his neck and they’re scabbed over. I’ve been treating him for fleas (Frontline works like a champ; no more fleas) thinking that once the fleas are gone he won’t scratch, but still, he scratches and scratches, and, y’know, his claws are both his best friends and his enemy. His wounds weren’t getting any better so I took him to the vet.

When Dr. Bruno examined him, she suggested that he might be allergic, which was news to me. Cats can get allergies? Poor thing. I guess it’s only fair, since I’m allergic to him, but still…

She gave him a cortisone shot and I’ve got to torture him with an antibiotic twice a day, so those of you who see me in person, expect fresh scratches on me for the next week and a half. And not entirely confined to my hands and arms, either.

Smacky returns

Smacky is home!

I got a call around 3:00 PM today. It was a guy, Rob, and he said he’d seen a strange cat hanging around in his backyard, and it might be Smacky. Rob had seen my posters around the neighborhood. Rob lived only a block or two away from my house. I got his address and said I’d be there as soon as I could.

I took off work early, sent an email to my boss telling him I had a personal matter to take care of. The bus was delayed by the bridge going up! Seemed to take forever to get home.

I stopped at my apartment and got some of Smacky’s food, some of his favorite treats, and, yes, one of my old socks. I also grabbed his carrying case.

Got to Rob’s apartment. Rob was in his 20s, thin. Smoking. He let me in. I was probably a bit rude as I walked through the house to the back. But I wasn’t thinking. I was hopeful but not too hopeful.

In the backyard, which wasn’t much more than a strip of land behind the place, Rob tried to point out Smacky. Hard to see an all-black cat in the shadows. But I finally spotted him; he was hiding under some bushes running along the top of a ledge between two neighboring yards.

I called Smacky’s name and saw the little black head perk up and look my way. Called it again, and the cat started grooming himself. I got closer, as close as the fence in Rob’s backyard would let me get, and called Smacky and pulled out some of his treats. By this time, I was sure it was Smacky. He got up and carefully walked along the top of the ledge, stopping once or twice to look at me as if to say, “Is that really you? Where have you been?”

I held my hand out with the treats, and Smacky about attacked them, nipping my hand once or twice in his effort to swallow them whole. I reached out, petted him, and tried to grab him, but Smacky was way ahead of me. By this time he’d finished the treats, and he looked up at me then ran up my outstretched arm and jumped onto my shoulders. He started purring and rubbing his head on my chin. I guess he was ready to come home.

I carried him back towards the house and where I had left his carrying case. Had a struggle getting him in there, until I dumped the rest of his treats inside.

I thanked Rob very much. “I’m really grateful, and can I, I don’t know, buy you a six-pack or something?”

“No, man, it’s OK, I don’t drink…” Rob seemed genuinely glad. “I’ve got cats, too.”

I thanked him several more times and left. Rob’s girlfriend was just coming back and she asked me if that was my cat and I explained that it was, and thanked her some more.

Once home, I let Smacky out. I wanted to beat him for being gone so long but knew that would only confuse him.

He looks fine. The sutures for his operation seem OK, and he doesn’t appear to have any new scars. He’s a bit thinner and lighter than he used to be but that’s normal. He ate a bunch of food and drank some water. He won’t leave me alone — and that’s OK. He did have a scrap of white fur caught in one of his claws. Definitely not his fur. I guess he won that one; even though his nails are trimmed down. Right now he’s sleeping across my shoulders and purring up a storm.

I was so worried. I’m so glad to have him home again.

Still no sign

Still no sign of Smacky.

I put up about 20 flyers all over my neighborhood. I even put them up in the grocery store, the mini-mart, and the coffee shop. If I hadn’t got such a late start I would have gone to the cat hospital and the vet and put up flyers there, too.

Tomorrow I should call the Humane Society and other cat shelters and see if they’ve got him.

Poor Smacky. I feel so bad, like I’ve let him down.

Old Barfy reports

Still no sign of Smacky.

Well, my neighbor, Old Barfy, did stop by tonight to tell me that last night, when he was going through the trash at the townhouses across the street, he did see a black cat that seemed to want attention, but attacked his hand. OB said it looked like a pretty big cat, which doesn’t sound like Smacky (he was only about 9 lb.) but the behavior seems to fit. OB admitted that he doesn’t see too well in the dark, though, and he was probably drunk. Hey, thanks for keeping an eye out, though, Old Barfy.

It’s nice that he’s looking but… y’know… huh. Digging cans out of the trash? Really?

Smacky missing

It’s now been over 24 hours since I last saw Smacky.

I went out for a run yesterday afternoon. The weather was nice, warm, sunny. I’d been inside most of the morning, setting up my new computer, cleaning up the apartment, doing laundry, and playing with Smacky. I wore him out. I’d been in such a good mood all day and he helped. As I told him, he’s got basically two jobs around the house:

  1. Make me laugh;
  2. Catch the bugs.

He was doing great on the first one, not so good on the second one, lazy bastard. I had to catch some of the bugs myself. But I’m not bitter about it.

He was curled up in the computer room when I last saw him. I got up from my desk, went into the bedroom, changed into my running clothes, went outside. I didn’t see or hear him wake up, so I didn’t pay any attention to whether or not he came out of the computer room when I opened the door. I normally watch for him, since I don’t want him outside – especially now that he’s got sutures from the operation earlier this week.

One thing I did that I don’t normally do is left the front door unlocked. I didn’t want to carry my house keys along with my iPod., and I figured I wouldn’t be gone that long.

My run was uneventful and I felt tired and slow. I was only going to go for about 2 miles, just down to the park and back, so I thought I’d push myself and go faster. Ha! That just tired me out.

When I got back, he didn’t come to the door. I called for him, but he’s not a cat that comes when I call him (yet; I always wanted to train him that way). I was tired and sweaty, poked my head in the computer room but he wasn’t there, wasn’t in the kitchen when I got some water, wasn’t in the bathroom while I showered.

That, along with the living room, pretty much is the entire apartment.

I figured he was hiding. But that would be unusual for him. I worried a little bit, then when I was clean and dressed again, I went over the house top to bottom. I opened cupboards, closets. I looked in the washer and dryer with a growing sense of dread and fear (I had been doing laundry; couldn’t he suffocate in there? Could it happen in the time it took me to go for a run and return? Had I left it running?) I looked in the refrigerator and oven.

He wasn’t there.

I can’t think about it even now without feeling stupid and sad and angry. I left the door open and sat in the living room hoping he’d turn up. I kept looking out back, and checking the windows. I would jump up at the slightest squeak or whistle hoping it was him. I walked around the block several times, looking for that telltale black. Oh, who was I kidding? He’d be almost impossible to spot, especially if he wasn’t moving. Like he was asleep. Or. Yeah, stop that.

I’m not close to my neighbors. I tend to keep to myself and don’t talk to them often. They’re, all of them, like me, single older men (I’m not the youngest but close, I think) and mainly they all sit around and drink. They may or may not be employed. The loudest is the one I call “Old Barfy” because, almost every single morning, he’s throwing up, hacking and coughing, in his bathroom. I used to live so that my bedroom shared a wall with his bathroom and his regurgitation would wake me up. I moved, downstairs, primarily to get away from that sound. I can still hear it, faintly, sometimes, but it’s much lessened, like a dog barking in the distance. He’s in his 60s, tanned and bald and thin like leather, with a voice that can cut through steel, sharp and loud. I don’t like him because of all I’ve described plus his manipulative behavior when he first moved in, trying to get me to make his complaints for him to the landlord.

One time, weeks ago, he called out to me in a tone of voice that creeped me out, “That shore is a cute little kitten you’ve got there.” I ignored him. I thought he might try to eat Smacky or something.

I sat for an hour and a half, hearing Old Barfy call out to other folk in the neighborhood, drinking beer on the upstairs walkway with another, quieter bachelor. I couldn’t bring myself to go out there and ask for help from someone I feared and hated.

But as the minutes passed I knew that I had to do everything I could to make sure Smacky got back to me.

I went out and asked Old Barfy if he’d seen my cat. Hardest thing I’ve done in a long time. From the way I’d treated him in the past I had no right to expect any help, but he did, in a small way. He went around to some of the other tenants in adjacent apartment buildings, the ones who already had pets or had kids likely to bring home a stray, and asked them if they’d seen my cat. No one had, but it was a nice gesture. I made sure to thank him.

I’ve made up a flyer that I’m going to post in the neighborhood. I thought about offering a reward. Am I bad that I’m not offering one? Does that reduce the chances of me getting him back? I’m just not made of money. More guilt. I’m sad but I don’t know that what I could afford would be enough to entice a stranger to return a cat.

I’m glad I got Smacky chipped, but I don’t know how well that’s going to work now. I have doubts. Do all vets scan for the chip? Smacky didn’t wear a collar so there’s no outward sign of him being owned and not a stray. Well, no outward sign except for the fact that his claws are trimmed and he’s recently been neutered. Wouldn’t someone notice that?

I’m sad. I have very little hope of getting him back. I feel intense guilt every time I leave the house, to go get food or even take a walk, being sure that he would come back when I’m not around to hear him at the door. I slept most of the night on the couch so I might have a better chance of waking up to his faint, squeaky meow. I left the front porch light on (like he’d notice something like that). I checked out all my windows before going to bed.

And for only the second time since I got him, over 5 months ago, I woke up alone in the apartment again.

Removed

Smacky update:

Smacky’s doing fine. He was a little groggy when I first brought him home, but that only lasted about a half-hour or so. After that, he was all over the place. He made it a point to do all the things that I’ve been training him not to do: jump up on the kitchen counter and the kitchen table; he attacked my feet several times; he chewed on the cords behind the teevee/stereo; pushed around his water dish and spilled water all over. But he didn’t do it with gusto. He just seemed to do it out of a sense of duty, as if he were saying, “Let’s get this out of the way so we can let the healing begin.”

Or something.

I’m exagerating, just a little bit, probably out of guilt. Certainly I hate to be castrated, although mine was always virtual and not actual, so I’m projecting onto Smacky.

This morning he was his normal self, lounging outside the bedroom door when I got up, being underfoot, waiting outside the shower to attack my feet when I got out, and sitting on the bathroom counter waiting to lick up the saline that fell when I put my contact lenses in. Is that strange? Aren’t all cats strange, though? I guess I’m asking if that’s strange for a cat which puts it on a whole ‘nother level.