Saturday, February 14, 2015

Yet another try

After months of trying to get Basti in the box by means of the microchip cat flap, I had to admit defeat. We got as far as closing the lid on her after she had jumped in and letting her get out through the cat flap by herself but that usually freaked her out anyway. We needed to find a way to make her go through the flap by herself but something seemed off. Like it wasn't working properly. We started making plans to try and adjust the cat flap so that it could be plugged in, in stead of working on batteries. We would then try to cover the sensor so that the scanner would work constantly and we hoped that this would make it easier for the scanner to pick up on Basti's chip. Up until that point, Basti has to stick her head in almost all the way, and she wasn't going for it.

Blinky checking it out
My husband was trying all sorts of options to change from batteries to an outlet situation but the voltage was giving him a hard time. At one point I suggested contacting the manufacturer of the cat flap to see if they could help and when I went to the website of the manufacturer, we saw another product they had come up with; the Surefeed. https://www.sureflap.com/en-gb/pet-feeder/microchip-pet-feeder

From the moment I saw it, I was almost sure that that would be a much simpler solution so we bought it. Of course, I had to change everything at the same time. We put the feeder on top of the box; we turned the box 90 degrees so it would take up less room in the living room and we changed the brand of petfood again... I tend to do stupid things like that. Blinky was very interested from the get-go and had no problems with the change...Basti on the other hand was not amused and initially wouldn't cooperate
Basti eating from the Surefeed.

A couple of things were annoying her. The noise of the lid opening and closing freaked her out. Plus, having the curved sensor above her head, wasn't something she particularly liked. I had also positioned the feeder so that she couldn't see if my other cats were coming up to her so she would look up every 2 or 3 seconds to see what was going on and that didn't work. After a week or so, I changed the box back to its original setting and put the feeder in such a position that she would be able to look into the living room and see every cat that would try to approach. That seemed to do the trick and she started  to get less freaked out. About a third of the time, she still doesn't stick her head in far enough to open the feeder but during the rest of the day, she does and it opens by itself. Every time that happens, we praise the living daylights out of her :-)...She still wants me or my husband  nearby when she eats (a tricky side effect from when she wasn't eating and I dragged the food to her and stayed while she ate) but I'm having high hopes!

2 comments:

  1. Hi Petra!

    This is a really interesting feeder - although I can imagine also having problems to get Lucy to eat from it. We went for a much more low tech wire cage to stop our dog from eating the cat's food, but then we don't have other cats.

    Can imagine your other cats are wondering why Basti gets special food!

    Lisa.

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    Replies
    1. Hi Lisa!
      It's ironic...we do not have a dog but we call the red monster you see in the photo a 'dog' :-)..He's really the only reason we need to protect the food. He'll steal food from the counter right in front of our noses, if he gets the chance. Literally! I would have loved to go for a low tech solution but with a tomcat that can open almost anything he puts his mind to and a 'problem cat' who only knows that staring at a familiar human usually does the trick, this was the only option.
      The good news is that with everything back in the normal position, Basti's actually getting the hang of it. We've caught her getting food by herself, without us being present. It's a matter of being patient, and I'm sooo bad at that :-)

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