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Edited on Fri Mar-31-06 08:51 PM by mike_c
I agree that in your shoes I'd want a companion for Lucy, but it ideally should to be either a kitten or a well socialized adult cat in order get along well with Mittens. In some ways a kitten is the best solution-- after hissing at it and being pissy for a short while, both adult cats are likely to warm to a kitten quickly. On the other hand, I really appreciate your desire to adopt an adult cat instead, but I'd recommend a kitty who's lived in multi-cat households before.
I have five cats and they all get along fine, but with definite cliques and occasional grumpiness despite the fact that all were either young adults or kittens when they joined this household. The females in particular were both only marginally socialized young adults when I acquired them, and they have never warmed to the other cats or to one another (after 5 years or so). Both are standoffish with the other cats, and one is extremely possessive of me, sometimes "guarding" me and chasing the others away if they come too close. On the other hand those two females have developed a mostly ritual avoidance of one another that allows them to co-exist-- even sleep on the bed together, albeit facing away from one another. The males on the other hand were all kittens either born here or acquired at about eight weeks and they almost run in a pack. They often sleep in a cat pile, and they share access to food in the morning when I put out the good stuff. Kittens simply integrate better than adults, especially adults who've learned that other cats are not usually friendly.
The point that I'm making is that there isn't much you can do to influence cat dynamics other than to choose cats from age and group acclimation classes that are most likely to integrate well with your other cats. But I'd definitely do it if I were in your shoes-- Lucy will almost certainly outlive Mittens by quite a bit, and the sooner she's introduced to a new cat, the better.
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