You Can Train Your Cat: Secrets of a Master Cat Trainer

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Author: Gregory Popovich

ISBN-10: 0312565283

ISBN-13: 9780312565282

Category: Cats

Since the beginning of time, cats have convinced the world that they are untrainable so they can do whatever they want…but those days are over!  Gregory Popovich is a professional cat trainer who’s trained cats to perform amazing circus-style tricks for television and stage, and he’s about to reveal his most closely guarded secrets so cat lovers everywhere can put an end to the most common problems:\ \ Stop bad litter box habits\ End early-morning howling\ Banish your cat from tabletops...

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Since the beginning of time, cats have convinced the world that they are untrainable so they can do whatever they want…but those days are over! Gregory Popovich is a professional cat trainer who’s trained cats to perform amazing circus-style tricks for television and stage, and he’s about to reveal his most closely guarded secrets so cat lovers everywhere can put an end to the most common problems: Stop bad litter box habits End early-morning howling Banish your cat from tabletops and countertops Prevent begging before mealtime Put an end to destructive clawing Make peace between rival catsAnd so much more, including how to become an expert cat trainer at home and teach your cat to perform Gregory’s favorite tricks, like jumping through a hoop or perching on your shoulders. This fun-to-read book also provides wonderful insights into the mysterious, complex feline mind, explaining why cats do the things they do so we can better understand them and enjoy a closer, more meaningful friendship.

You CAN Train Your Cat\ Secrets of a Master Cat Trainer \ \ By Gregory Popovich \ St. Martin's Griffin\ Copyright © 2009 Gregory Popovich\ All right reserved.\ ISBN: 9780312565282 \ \ \ YOU CAN TRAIN YOUR CAT\ Part ILaying the Groundwork for a Long, Happy Life Together1The Connection Between Humans and CatsThousands of years ago, cats were worshipped as gods. Cats have never forgotten this.--ANONYMOUS \  \  \  \  \  \ The feline we know as the domestic cat or housecat has cohabitated with humans since long before the dawn of recorded time. Whatever it is that sustains the mutual attraction that first spurred this partnership, it has continued to this day. Perhaps the explanation is that humans and cats were made for each other.There is evidence from a genetic study that the direct ancestors of today's domestic cats broke away from their wild counterparts and began living with humans more than 100,000 years ago. The study's coauthor, Stephen O'Brien, chief of the Laboratory of Genomic Diversity at the National CancerInstitute in Frederick, Maryland, remarked about the housecat's special character. "The felidae family is well known as a successful predator--very deadly, very ferocious, very threatening to all species including humankind," he said. "But this little guy actually chose not to be that. He actually chose to be a little bit friendly and also was a very good mouser."Good news for it. The bearlike saber-toothed tiger has been extinct for thousands of years. The clever little housecat is thriving. Estimates indicate there as many as 600 million of these creatures in the world today.A question arises: Who made the first move in the bonding between cat and human? What drew this curious subspecies of feline toward the fires and shelters of human settlements?Knowing the independent nature of cats, it is likely that they initially sought out the company of humans, not vice versa. And what, exactly, did these upright, two-legged, rather naked creatures have to offer their much smaller, four-legged and furry, fellow mammals?The explanation is simple: farms. Early agricultural settlements were infested by rodents attracted by grain stores. The mice and other vermin, in turn, attracted cats. And the cats--being lethal hunters--garnered the gratitude of the farmers. The partnership deal likely was sealed by the cats' openness to establishing permanent residence in the farming communities, partaking of shelter and food offered by human settlers in return for their mouser duties. But we shouldn't ignore two other appealing qualities: the relative ease in caring for pet cats, and cats' affectionate manner toward their human providers.ONCE THE DOMESTIC CAT had made its move to live alongside humans, it has been this unique animal's fate to have been venerated as well as vilified, depending on the period of history.In Egyptian civilization, founded on the grain harvest, the cat gained godlike stature. Many Egyptians owned cats, and when a pet cat died, families customarily shaved their eyebrows in mourning. Cats were mummified and buried in special cemeteries. Killing a cat was a capital offense, even if done accidentally. The sight of a dead cat could cause people to flee from the scene--fearing they'd be implicated in the crime. Egyptians were so fond and jealous of their cats that they sent missions to neighboring lands to buy cats that had been illegally exported. But such programs could not contain the popularity of cats inside any one nation's border; the animal's usefulness in catching rodents, as well as cats' suitability as pets, guaranteed their eventual spread around the globe.The Romans, conquerors of Egypt and much of northern Africa, southwest Asia, and Europe, discovered that cats were more effective at controlling vermin than the ferrets the empire builders had been using. And so the Romans introduced cats throughout their expanding realm. Sailors and traders found cats to be perfect for controlling populations of rats on ships--and so cats traveled the oceans and seas to more distant lands.As in Egypt, cats gained status in many religions. But that proved a liability to this popular pet as Christianity took hold in the Roman Empire. Church officials wanted to abolish paganism. Their efforts made cats a target for a crusade to change people's perceptions about these widely worshipped animals. By the middle ages, the popular perception of catshad shifted from veneration to vilification; common folk considered cats to be cunning creatures, and associated them with witchcraft. Strays were hunted and killed under the belief that they could be used in pagan rites, or even be witches in disguise. The lingering superstition that a black cat brings bad luck stems from this medieval belief. In some locales, the killing of a cat became part of an official public holiday program, to symbolize the banishment of the devil.Throughout the ages, cats have proved useful to humans in numerous ways--including as mousers, companions, and even objects of religious devotion. They also have been targets of superstition.A woman, full of anxiety, approached a well-known dermatologist and asked, "Doctor, is it true that you can make warts disappear forever by burying a black cat in a cemetery under a full moon?""Hmm," said the doctor, adopting a pensive look, chin in hand. "Well, yes. This result would be a certainty--providing the warts were on the cat."Fortunately, such inhumane cruelty is rare in modern times. Today, cats' age-old function as mouse hunters continues in agriculture. Researchers have calculated that in one year, one mouse-hunting cat can save ten tons of grain from mice. Science may have no better substitute as a controller of vermin. But cats' usefulness to humans has extended beyond being rodent killers. Some people ardently believe that cats are psychic.Reports have come from around the globe of cats predicting natural disasters. For example, officials ordered the evacuation of Haicheng, China, in February 1975 following reports not only of seismic activity but peculiarly anxious behavior of cats and other animals. A magnitude 7.3 temblor struck a few days after the evacuation of the city of 1 million. Stories have been recorded of cats hiding or trying to escape the house, or of mother cats dragging their kittens to safer spots, before humans were aware of impending storms, floods, or volcanic eruptions. A legend from World War II (never confirmed by scientific study, as wartime resources were needed elsewhere) holds that cats could predict air raids by their fur standing on end before a siren wailed.But scientific explanations surely can be discovered for why cats may be able to sense incoming aircrafts, earthquakes, or thunderstorms before their human masters know what's coming. In relation to sirens, perhaps cats hear distant sound waves or feel vibrations before we humans do. As for storms, electrical discharges in the atmosphere can send electromagnetic waves that saturate the air with positive ions, and which can act on chemical substances in the brain. (Some people suffer headaches during these periods.) Cats may be more sensitive than we are to these ions. Similarly, cats may be more attuned to gases that emanate from a volcano before it erupts. As for detecting earthquakes, cat paws are very sensitive, and perhaps can feel very slight earth tremors as they build.Whether cats are more sensitive to environmental cues--or actually are prescient--the fact remains they often seem able to sense coming disasters before we humans can.ONE PARTICULAR ROLE in which housecats excel is in their companionship with their human masters--providing their owners sheer comfort and pleasure just by coexisting with them. One possible explanation is that humans are hardwired for parenting, and relate to pet animals as helpless children, tapping into the emotional fulfillment that comes from parenting. Pets also are known to lower their owners' blood pressure. My late mother, who was plagued by hypertension in her latter years, told me that when her cat curled at her feet, her stress dropped and she felt deep relaxation.Dr. James Serpell, director of the Center for the Interaction of Animals and Society, at the University of Pennsylvania, has written that keeping a pet reduces the number of the owner's visits to the doctor, lengthens survival following a heart attack, and wards off depression. \  \ IT IS OBVIOUS TO ME that the ancient bond between cats and humans will continue for the rest of civilization. As founder of the World Famous Popovich Comedy Pet Theater, I have a closer relationship with cats than do most people. My silent communication with cats has allowed me to train them to perform consistently on stage. My connection with cats is very well developed, and I credit this skill to my careful tuning in to these animals' abilities to understand us, and to perceive their environment. Most people are unaware of just how sensitive cats are. I myself continue to be astonished by my own cats' intelligence and sensitivity from time to time.In fact, I've even come to suspect that an intelligent cat can read its owner's thoughts. One day I was working at my computer at the kitchen table, and decided I would skiplunch and continue typing away. I uttered nary a word about this decision. Within seconds, my cat Martin--a small but feisty gray mix--appeared at my feet. I realized he was begging for a piece of cheese from the refrigerator--whose door I had resolved not to open. I'd occasionally given him this sort of treat at luncthime. Sure enough, Martin ran to the fridge the moment I stood up, as if he were expecting the tasty morsel (which he readily received and devoured).Yes, Martin is keenly perceptive. Another example: He hates riding in the car. Whenever my wife, daughter and I prepare to leave the house for a ride and decide to take Martin, he foresees this and disappears--usually under a bed. What is especially odd is that we began using code words about leaving, to avoid alerting him. We even used Russian and French, but the result was the same. Perhaps Martin understands not only simple human speech but its undertones? Or--as I've proposed is possible--could he actually read minds?I've heard countless similar stories from friends. One has claimed that his tomcat can divine his mood even before my friend enters the house. If my friend is in a happy mood, the tomcat will meet him in the hall. If my friend is in a foul humor, his cat is nowhere to be found the moment his master steps inside the door.Is this telepathy? One thing I know for sure is that cats possess powers of perception that demand serious scientific study. Another thing I know is that the strangeness and uniqueness of cats have endeared them to humankind since the beginning of our inter-species friendship, all those millennia ago.The mysteriousness inherent in these wonderful creatures may go a long way toward explaining our love for them.A "Purr-pourri" of Random Cat Trivia* Cats have keener senses of smell than dogs. In the British Army, during World War I, cats were used for early detection of poison-gas attacks in the trenches. On submarines, cats were used to detect gas leaks.* European shorthaired cats are considered the best defenders of grain against rats and the mice.* Cats share a trait with giraffes and camels: They are the only animals that walk first with their left feet, then their right feet.* Cats greatly love fresh air; therefore a window in the house should always be kept open, if possible.* Cats sleep approximately 18 hours a day. Newspapers, with their soft, warm texture, are one preferred surface for cats.* If a cat seems finicky about its food--sniffing it then turning away--consider how long the food has sat in a bowl. A cat's nose performs the role of thermometer.* The darkness of the spots on a Siamese cat's fur depends on the climate in which it lives. In colder regions, the spots are darker. Siamese kittens are born with all-white fur, since the temperature in the womb keeps the spots from growing dark.* A Japanese magazine featured the photograph of a tomcat that had traveled 100 kilometers to return to its masters, with whom he had lived since he was a kitten. After several years, a daughter in the family took the cat with her when she moved to a new home. But the cat disappeared the very day of his arrival at the new place. A year later, he showed up at his old home, filthy, bedraggled, and having lost a kilogram of weight.* Cats can succumb to many illnesses that plague humans, including diabetes, pleurisy, cancer, stomach ulcers, and obesity.* Stress is a known contributor to a number of diseases, and one treatment for lowering stress levels in patients is acquiring a pet cat. Doctors in the United States have prescribed this remedy.* Scientists have found that cradling a cat can lower a person's blood pressure, and temper an angry mood.* Cat lovers may find this shocking, but some people are afraid of cats. This isn't necessarily because of superstition (such as the medieval association of cats with witchcraft and the devil), but because these people suffer from a documented psychological condition: ailurophobia. They may fear getting scratched or bitten, and may break out in sweat, grow short of breath, or even grow hysterical at the sight of a cat.* Those familiar with cats know that when a person consciously tries to ignore a cat, the cat is prone to approach and even climb up on the poor soul. Famous sufferers of ailurophobia even include two men celebrated as great warriors: Julius Caesar and Napoleon Bonaparte.YOU CAN TRAIN YOUR CAT. Copyright © 2009 by Gregory Popovich. All rights reserved.For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010. \ \ Continues... \ \ \ \ Excerpted from You CAN Train Your Cat by Gregory Popovich Copyright © 2009 by Gregory Popovich. Excerpted by permission.\ All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.\ Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. \ \

Acknowledgments xiIntroduction 1Part 1 Laying the Groundwork for a Long, Happy Life Together 111 The Connection Between Humans and Cats 132 Choosing Your Cat: How, Where, Why 233 The Cat's First Days in Your Home 334 Mealtime: What to Feed Your Cat 455 Playing with Your Cat 55Part 2 Cat Training 101 676 The Language of Cats 697 Litter Box Training 838 Bath Time: How to Clean Your Cat 919 Getting Your Cat to Let You Sleep 10710 Teaching Your Cat to Not Damage Furniture 11311 Stopping Your Cat from Biting and Scratching 12112 Breaking More Bad Habits 127Part 3 Advanced Lessons in Cat Training 13713 Cats and Kids Living Together 13914 Bringing an Additional Cat into Your Home 14915 Moving to a New Home 16516 Traveling with Your Cat 17117 Training Your Cat to Do Tricks 18718 Growing Older with Your Cat 209Conclusion: An Afternoon of Comedy Pet Theater 217About the Author 227