Why Does My Cat Drink Dirty Water?
by: Larry Chamberlain
You know that cats should always have a supply of water,
especially if you are feeding them dried food. There on your nice
clean kitchen floor is a bowl of nice clean fresh water, in a nice
clean bowl.
What does your cat do? Maybe gives the bowl a sniff and walks
away from it, or just ignores the bowl completely, as if water
were the last thing a self respecting cat would consider drinking.
"Okay", you think to yourself, "Kitty just isn't
thirsty at the moment". But then later, you happen to spy
your cat busily lapping up stale water from a puddle in your
garden as if it was nectar.
Cats are self-reliant, independent creatures, but surely your
cat is not going to turn its nose up at the nice clean water you
provide, just to let you know it can survive without you? After
all, kitty does not reject the food you provide even though it is
perfectly capable of catching mice.
No, the answer is not your mouser's independence. Tap water is
usually treated with chemicals, often chlorinated strongly enough
for a cat to smell it. Cats noses are far more sensitive than
human noses and many cats find this chemical odor very offensive.
Stale water in puddles and pools has a far more attractive smell
are far as a cat is concerned. Puddles may be full of rotten
vegetation and microbes, but cats find this organic soup very
tasty.
As well as the off-putting odor of chemicals in tap water, cats
find the smell of detergents repugnant. So, because you diligently
clean your cat's water bowl in the interest of hygiene, the
detergent that you use deters your cat from drinking from it. You
use the same detergent to wash your cat's food bowl, why then,
does your feline friend eat heartily from the bowl, and not be
repelled by the smell of the detergent? This is because the aroma
of the fish or meat is stronger than the smell of the detergent.
With the water bowl, the combination of the two unpleasant
smells, the chemicals in the tap water and the detergent, means
that your cat will only quench its thirst from the water bowl if
there is no better smelling option to be had.
So, what can you do? You need to rinse your cat's bowl more
thoroughly than you would a plate for a human. Remember feline
noses are far more sensitive than ours, every trace of detergent
needs to be rinsed off. Secondly, let the water from the tap stand
for a while before putting the bowl down for your cat, this will
allow the chemicals to dissipate.
These two things should have kitty drinking happily from the
dish, unless, of course, kitty has got so used to drinking from
puddles it just can't kick the organic water habit!
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About The Author
Larry Chamberlain
If you have a pet related web site and you wish to
reproduce the above article you are welcome to do so,
provided the article is reproduced in its entirety,
including this resource box and live link to http://www.best-cat-art.com.
Cat art posters, art prints, cat calendars and cat
collectibles. Great cat gifts for yourself or your cat
loving friends.
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