Get Fit with Kitty Calisthentics
Now that summer is coming to a close, it’s time to to get back into your regular fitness regimen. With the help of the stunning Oriental, Kaze, our friends at Pets.com have some fitness tips to share with you and your cat.
Help Your Cat Get Fit With Kitty Calisthenics
By: Pets.com
Is your tabby getting thick in the midsection? Are chewing and swallowing her only exercises?
A cat’s sedentary lifestyle can often result in obesity, a condition which can lead to hip, back, shoulder or knee injuries, cancer, diabetes, heart disease, and heat stroke.
Apart from limiting your cat’s food intake, what else can you do to combat this problem? The answer is a simple one: kick your cat’s activity level up a notch by having her exercise on a daily basis.
Exercise? A cat? Sure. But not in the same way you might a dog. Your cat is a more independent creature, and must be motivated in different ways if she is to raise her level of activity.
Food is an effective motivator for teaching new behavior to a cat. Small treats can be used to get her moving. To raise your cat’s food drive, put her on a regular feeding schedule instead of free feeding or leaving food down all day. Doing so will program your cat to be hungry at specific times, a key in teaching her any new behavior.
So you’ve put your cat on a regular feeding schedule, and she’s famished at dinner time. What next? Put her hunger to work. The following are ways to get your cat moving prior to dinner time:
Stair Climbing
Get your cat to climb a flight or more of stairs several times each week by sporadically relocating her food dish. Place her meal at the top or bottom of a flight of stairs, depending on your home’s layout. To get to it, she must climb or descend. If she has trouble locating her dish, try moving it up just a few steps at first, eventually placing it as far away as possible.
Random Placement of Treats
Leave small treats in various locations around the home to condition her to explore more. Put one atop the fridge, one beneath the sofa and another beside your television. Eventually, searching will become a regular calorie-burning activity for her.
The Recall or ”Come”
Have you ever owned a cat who would rush to the kitchen upon hearing the whir of an electric can opener? Without knowing it, your cat had learned to come on cue. To teach your cat to ”Come,” try this:
Buy a child’s “clicker” toy or a clicker pet training tool. Next, with her close by, place her dinner down immediately after clicking the toy several times. Do this at each meal for two weeks. Then, with the cat in another room, try clicking the toy several times. The cat, now conditioned to think food is coming, should come running. When she does, reward her with a treat. Having her come on command will get her running whenever you want, in hopes of getting food. This of course burns calories.
These next activities use motivators other than food to get your cat moving:Playing With Toys
Cats love to chase moving objects. You can get your cat moving by enticing her with various toys, including:
- Teaser wands
- Mouse toys
- Balled-up newspaper
- Wind-up toys
- Toys suspended from a string
- Balls
- Feathers
The object is to keep your cat moving for at least 10 minutes. Have these sessions several times each day for best results.
Companionship
A great way to keep a cat active during the day is to provide her with company – like another cat. A willing feline partner will encourage play and stimulate her mind. They will romp and chase each other, keeping activity levels high.
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[PHOTO CREDIT: Kaze of The Cats P]
Don’t forget! You can leave a comment on this post for an entry in The Cat’s Meow’s giveaway of a custom oil painting of your cat by Linden Alley.


Is your tabby getting thick in the midsection? Are chewing and swallowing her only exercises?
Get your cat to climb a flight or more of stairs several times each week by sporadically relocating her food dish. Place her meal at the top or bottom of a flight of stairs, depending on your home’s layout. To get to it, she must climb or descend. If she has trouble locating her dish, try moving it up just a few steps at first, eventually placing it as far away as possible.








Go Kaze!!! Wow!
I love to climb stairs! If there are stairs around, even one, I’ll climb it to the top, then come back down if there’s nothing at the top I want. But I’ll just climb stairs to climb them!
I like to climb up to the top of the bathroom door and sit on it. My sisters can’t get up there, which makes me the king!!!
Jumping on counters was my favorite!!!
Playing is my #1 most favoritest thing to do in the whole wide world!!!! I would do ANYTHING to catch a toy (as you can see!).
Karen, thanks for reminding me that I need to get back into photogrpahing her playing, she truly is amazing. And I really need kicks in the butt to stay up on the important things in life- not law books, those are dry and dull
.
A little crinkly catnip toy will get me running every time, even if I have to skate on my back hocks to get there!
If we all moved like Kaze, we wouldn’t need those tips!
It’s payday! Time fur sum new toys!
Great tips…..and Kaze looks fabulous!
Great ideas. I do seem to be getting a bit flabby around the middle.
Bat cat on attack!
My cats seem to make their own cat trees: bed, window sills, counter, tables, tv, computer monitor, file cabinet, and, if I don’t stop them, my keyboard.
Go Kaze! That’s the way to get that bug! MOL
Grate sugjeshtuns…but we don’t want owr food taken away and given at certain times. We want food all the time. Maybe will werk on this exercise stuff.
I wish i had moves like that
My babies chase each other up and down the stairs at top speed!
Thankfully Onyx has Tortilla Soup, a usually willing play pal. Both of them stay quite active and don’t weigh more than about 9lbs each, even though I free feed them.
a couple of ideas to keep kitty moving, cats need active play for exercise.