{"id":2063,"date":"2015-11-04T07:59:40","date_gmt":"2015-11-04T07:59:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/anartfuldogger.com\/?p=2063"},"modified":"2016-09-28T21:01:06","modified_gmt":"2016-09-28T21:01:06","slug":"9-reasons-why-cats-need-daily-pet-sitter-visits","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/anartfuldogger.com\/9-reasons-why-cats-need-daily-pet-sitter-visits\/","title":{"rendered":"9 Reasons Why Cats Need Daily Pet Sitter Visits\u2014and Not Lose All 9 Lives!"},"content":{"rendered":"
Contents<\/p>
Cats just love doing their own thing, whenever, wherever, all by themselves. Everything seems to be on their own terms. They may be independent, self-sufficient, and can land and stand on all fours, but obviously, they can’t pick up the phone to call you to come over, fix themselves some chow, get their own water, and clean up their own mess.<\/p>\n
You probably think that you can save more than a few bucks by having cat sitting visits every other day or longer, but don’t dare break Murphy’s Law. Anything can and do happen within the 24-hour period. Unless your cat is one of the video game characters<\/a> with unlimited tries and 1-ups, he or she only has one life per lifetime.<\/p>\n Game over. Period.<\/p>\n This is why I recommend a minimum of one daily visit or at least two visits or, better yet, overnight\/live-in sitting for multicat households, senior cats, and cats with special needs.<\/p>\n My colleague Yolanda Nix of Vital Visits lists vital<\/i> reasons why our feline friends\u2014not just pooches\u2014also need some TLC sits<\/a>. She also shows what typically happens during overnight sitting, especially overnight cat sitting<\/a>, one of my specialties.<\/p>\n Yet another colleague, like the majority of pet sitters, agrees that pets need daily visits, and it’s not about the money at all<\/a>!<\/p>\n For safety, once-daily visits also apply to domestic pets other than cats.<\/p>\n Here are more reasons that you simply can’t ignore for daily cat sitting visits:<\/p>\n