Is this a normal cat and dog thing? My cat used to do this all the time.
[QUOTE=Mitsudigi;42752892]Is this a normal cat and dog thing? My cat used to do this all the time.[/QUOTE]
My cat used to do the same thing, but only during the times I used to place a pillow on the chair while I was changing the bedsheets. I just figured that for the cat this must be like, softness overload, and it'd do stuff like this, kind of like when you lie down on a bed whose sheets have a high thread count.
Also (and I learned this the hard way), you need to assess the level of friendliness/trust you have with your cat if you are tempted to rub its tummy when it does extremely adorable stuff like this. A lot of kitties, even my own pet cat, does [I]not [/I]like it's tummy scratched. :v:
[QUOTE=Mitsudigi;42752892]Is this a normal cat and dog thing? My cat used to do this all the time.[/QUOTE]
i think it's from boredom. i noticed lone cats and dogs tend to play with their tail more but cats and dogs that have others to socialize and play with don't seem to do this quite as much.
It's just learning how to hunt and survive and whatnot. That's why animals "play", isn't it?
[QUOTE=DrasarSalman;42758738]It's just learning how to hunt and survive and whatnot. That's why animals "play", isn't it?[/QUOTE]
domesticated animals play as adults too even though playing would probably be wasted energy in the wild.
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.