That's why I had welding gloves to put ours in the pet carrier for vet trips. And insurance that covered transfusions. Never owned another Siamese.
/johnny
I don’t know what my crazy Mary is, just a gray domestic. She ALWAYS knows when the carrier is for her.
By the time we get to the vet, they are more worried about me than her.
I guess it’s all the blood seeping through the clothes on my arms, legs and thighs.
>>That’s why I had welding gloves to put ours in the pet carrier for vet trips. And insurance that covered transfusions. Never owned another Siamese.
I’ve never had a Siamese. I’ve had three Himalayans, which can have a Siamese temperament or a Persian temperament, but you never know which cat it will be.
We are living with our second Siamese. Both have been big lovable babies without a mean bone in them. Our little half-Siamese guy can be a terror though.
Both neutered males though, no idea how a spayed female Siamese is to live with. Wife prefers male kittehs.
My wife brushes our Siamese cat’s teeth every day, without even having to hold her paws. We have four of them. They are never any trouble at all, males or females. The oldest is 17 years old. These cats are much gentler than other breeds of cats—unless they have been abused. I’ve had Siamese cats since the mid-1950s—every one of them gentle, with adults and children—somewhat like golden retrievers, my favorite breed of dog.
Truthfully, if you have a cat you are going to bleed. It comes with the territory.