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Cat dilemma



Cheshire Cat

The most curious thing..
If it is still limping tomorrow, definitely take it to the vet
 




METALMICKY

Well-known member
Jan 30, 2004
6,837
PET INSURANCE IS THE WORD.

This big time! Going back a few years a mate scoffed at the notion of insurance. Two weeks later his kitten took a tumble off a work surface and the vet fees were around £700. It's also paid dividends for me as Pet Plan covered my British Blue who has renal failure
 


countrygull

Active member
Jul 22, 2003
1,114
Horsham
OK: for those who may be interested. Persuaded by the wailing females at home and a few concerned NSCers, I took cat to vet last night. Easy enough to catch, dragging himself around the kitchen on 3 legs. Opened up the catbox on the vet's table: the wide eyed cat jumps down from the table and proceeds to meander prettily around the room on all 4 legs!! I'm standing there like a lemon saying `I can't believe it, he really was only using 3 legs......` and the vet is having to apologise to me on the cat's behalf `it's quite common, I've seen this before, they change when they get in here......`. Inspection: clear, injection: expensive, cat: fine. This morning, cat is 100%. Thank you to those who voiced concern for said cat but I shall not be attending the follow up appointment!
 




Manx Shearwater

New member
Jun 28, 2011
1,206
Brighton
If that had been me at the vets, I'd have kicked one of its legs in properly, just to get my money's worth and teach the cat what REAL pain feels like.

You have the cat equivalent of Didier Drogba methinks.
 












Everest

Me
Jul 5, 2003
20,741
Southwick


countrygull

Active member
Jul 22, 2003
1,114
Horsham
Why did you have an injection if the inspection was clear?

It's what vets do. I suspect it's a way they push up their fees, plus justify the visit. (yesterday the injection doubled the cost). I strongly suspect you could take the world champion cat, minutes after winning his third cat world championship, a picture of feline health and happiness; and they would still find a reason to pump something into it. However, if there are any vets on NSC who are willing to argue any different, I will of course be all pointed ears. The vet said yesterday's injection was `anti inflammatory` though I nor she could see any inflammation at all!!!
 
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countryman

Well-known member
Jun 28, 2011
1,893
It's what vets do. I suspect it's a way they push up their fees, plus justify the visit. (yesterday the injection doubled the cost). I strongly suspect you could take the world champion cat, minutes after winning his third cat world championship, a picture of feline health and happiness; and they would still find a reason to pump something into it. However, if there are any vets on NSC who are willing to argue any different, I will of course be all pointed ears. The vet said yesterday's injection was `anti inflammatory` though I nor she could see any inflammation at all!!!

Vets will try to take as much money from you as possible. In my opinion, if the animal is still eating and drinking, it can wait a while.
 




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