The reason why stray cats are "not fed" is often because they lack "social training"
"Cats are treacherous ministers, and dogs are loyal ministers; raising cats is not familiar at all, but raising dogs can gain the most loyal partners; in this way, why do you need to spend so much money to raise cats?"
In the early stage of raising cats, I also suffered similar doubts. At the beginning, I was willing to explain to everyone, but later I gave up.
As the saying goes: Summer insects cannot speak of ice.
Everyone has their own preferences and desires, and for most cat owners, they are willing to pursue a peaceful, peaceful, plain and happy life.
However, the biggest difference between a pet cat and a stray cat is whether it is easy to be tamed. "I threw it away after half a year of adopting a stray cat."
In this article, I mentioned a point of view:
Some stray cats can be tamed and are willing to get close to people; there are also some stray cats, no matter how good you treat it, they are like "eyed wolves" and cannot be raised at all.
Indeed, among the friends around me who raise stray cats, only one of them has established a good relationship between the stray cat and the cat.
The other friends lived in their hometowns in the countryside and finally chose to "release" the cats, no longer imprisoning the freedom stray cats pursued.
The reason is that the stray cat adopted by a few friends is very aggressive and catches and bites people whenever they disagree; even the cats are unwilling to let go of chickens, ducks and geese raised in their hometown.
After all kinds of attempts and efforts, my friend finally decided to restore his previous relationship with the stray cat.
If they are hungry, they will have food when they return home; after they wake up with full food, they will go wherever they want to go.
Those stray cats that are not fed well are essentially: lack of social training.
You must understand that the history of cats being tamed by humans has only been more than 100 years.
The time when dogs accompany humans and the time when people are tamed has been thousands of years.
From this perspective, until the pet cats raised at home today, humans still have not completely tamed the cats.
The most harmonious state of getting along with cats is: the cat is docile, well-behaved, sleeps when you eat, and can give people spiritual and life companionship.
Stray cats are easily unfamiliar with their own problems, which is because of their lack of social training.
Simply put, it is: after the birth of a stray cat, it rarely has close contact with humans.
A kitten, even a pet cat's cub, does not contact humans for the first 8 weeks of the cat's life. Then when this kitten becomes an adult, it will still maintain strong aggressiveness.
They are unwilling to contact people, and it is difficult to establish favorable and trust with people, and become "self-self".
Moreover, stray cats have lived in complex environments since childhood, and they have worked hard and difficult to get food.
Even if you take a stray cat home to be kept by you, deep in the cat's heart, it still has this idea:
"It belongs to the outside world, to nature, has its own complete freedom, it does not belong to you, nor does it belong to your family."
When we are training pet cats at home, how can we make the cat more clingy and obedient?
The easiest way is to establish a "master-servant relationship".
What do cats love the most? The answer is: food.
Therefore, the cat should let the cat subconsciously understand that "food is given to me by the cat owner. If I am not good, then there is no food.
Whenever you feed the cat, don't put the cat food in the bowl, but you hold the cat's bowl; let the cat smell the food, but you don't give it to the cat.
When will the cat be willing to follow you and show good feelings to you, and when will the cat feed again?
Only by repeating this behavior, the cat's consciousness can deepen its dependence and trust in you.
But when training stray cats, this method can only assist more, but cannot completely change the personality and genes of stray cats.