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| The Late Night Cafe (non-food/cooking discussion) A general forum to discuss all non-food/cooking related topics. |
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#1
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| My husband and I are going away for the weekend and I've asked a lady in the building to watch our cats for 3 days. Come to find out, she is the neighbor who is the resident cat sitter. So I asked her what she charges and she said, "You give me whatever you think is right". I HATE THAT! I don't want to under or over pay her. I remember seeing an ad for pet sitting that charged $15/day. I did a search online and $12 - $15/day seems to be the standard for 30 minutes of their time and the transportation to your home everyday. They will also bring in your mail and water your plants. I was thinking to pay her $10/day b/c no travel is involved. It would take her about 60 seconds to walk to my apartment from her apartment. We don't need any plants to be watered since we will only be gone for 3 days and we don't need her to bring our mail in. Also, my cats don't know her and won't be looking for any affection/attention from a stranger. One of them is plain scared of new people so she will never even see him unless she hunts for him under the sofa what to speak of trying to brush or pet him. To scoop out their litter box, dish out their food, and change their water takes 5 minutes, if even that. So am I being reasonalbe in paying her less than the average? |
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#2
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| I paid the daughter of a co-worker $65-$75 for one calendar week to feed my cat twice daily. The sitter was given the "run" of my apartment, also: she could watch tv and feast on any leftovers in the fridge. I gave her a bonus of a $12 bottle of wine as an added incentive. |
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#3
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| We usually just use friends and then bring them a gift from wherever we were, or we will have that person over for dinner to thank them. Often times, for short trips we even forgo the pet sitter. The ferrets and the cats do well for about 3 days with extra food. You figure you feed them Friday before you leave, and then they only have to fend for themselves until Sunday night usually. An extra bowl of water and food should take care of it. And besides, you have extra loving animals when you get back!!! |
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#4
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| Thanks for the info. koko, With our old pet sitter, it was a friend of mine who hated her roommates. So she would stay the weekend and enjoy our apt. I stocked up the fridge with all her favorite foods. She didn't even want money. It was that much of a treat for her. So I'd buy her a gift. I wish she didn't move! My cats loved her! Pete, I wish my life was that simple. I feed my boys a raw organic diet. It mimics live prey as if they went out and killed it themselves in nature. So I can't leave food out for them. Granted tigers will bury prey underground and keep it to eat later, but being that I have parquet floors and tile, my cats don't have that option. Their food dries out if it's out for too long. There are those times where they leave a chunk behind and later that night, it's pretty dried out. Also, it wasn't until recently that if we leave them overnight (NEVER for longer than that without a sitter!), that they held grudges. We would be gone for a day (mind you, not skipping any meals as they eat once a day) and we could come back to some very angry cats. They would tip over whatever wasn't too heavy. Laundry basket get tipped over, pillows pushed off the sofa, plants knocked over. And one of the brothers would make a face and snub us. Not letting us pick him up. He'd make his body "heavy" and ignore us for at least a day. He would warm up to us after much butt kissing and massages (his weakness). They don't like being left alone b/c they're emotionally needy snugglers who will follow us around the house for attention. But the last time we left them overnight, they were just fine. It's been at least a year since we've gone away and will be leaving them for more than a day so we'll see how the 3 day separation goes. We may come home to more of that grudge holding. |
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#5
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| A friend of mine pays 10$ per day, for one daily visit. She has two cats and one likes to go out.
__________________ When I get a little money, I buy books. And if there is any left over, I buy food. - Desiderius Erasmus |
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#6
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| We leave our 3 alone for as long as 5 days, with-out any problems...but I understand yours have a special diet....boy that makes it hard! When we go longer I only use my Mom since they are scared of strangers too. I always give her $100. (that's usually for 7 days but she only has to come by 3 times to check on them). I kind of think $10. for a non-family non-child watcher isn't really worth their time and attention. Oh, one time my dad forgot and left a table lamp on...that's a huge mistake because we once had one knocked over (thank god I was home) and it started to smoke from the heat. Personally, I would be heart broken if anything happened to one of them while I was away. So even though your going to have a sitter I'd suggest leaving an extra key with someone as a back up so if your person lost your key or something crazy you'd be covered. We still leave TONS of food and water out...just in case couldn't you put some dry food out?
__________________ "Bakers are born, not made. We are exacting people who delight in submitting ourselves to rules and formulas if it means achieving repeatable perfection", Rose Levy Beranbaum |
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#7
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| If we go away for more than 2 days I have someone come over and check on my aquariums. I have saltwater fish that need to be fed twice a day with frozen brine shrimp so there are no "vacation cubes" or anything like that. So with 3 fish tanks and a cat(the cat would be just as happy if we threw him outside to fend for himself, but with people around he will come in the house) we usually pick up a nice gift or give them $10.00 a day for the time and effort.
__________________ What a relief! To find out after all these years that I'm not crazy. I'm just culinarily divergent... |
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#8
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| When I visit my son whose cat doesn't get along with mine, I take my elderly cat to board at the Cat Vet just a few blocks away. This way I know she receives all the attention she needs and I can visit her, too. Their basic charge is $10/day plus extras for any medication she may need. I realize that those with younger cats may feel that staying at the vet's is too confining for them. Most elderly cats are very sedentary, and mine seldoms strays from the heating pad I keep for her. I also feel that for any cat with health problems, the continuous oversight is beneficial. |
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#9
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| My job involves frequent traveling, so I have a pet sitting service on call. They charge $15 per day for one visit, $25 for two (dog owners tend to require 2 visits). The sitters live in a couple of parts of the city, so they can do a fair amount of traveling to get to their customers' houses. Based on that, something like $10 sounds reasonable for a person that (a) lives in your building, and (b) says "Oh, just pay whatever you think is reasonable." If your neighbor is doing this as a business, or even as a money-earning sideline, it's up to her to negotiate a price that she thinks is fair. Do any of you who run a restaurant post "Oh just pay what you think is reasonable" on your menu? I do happen to be seriously prejudiced against the "pay what you think is reasonable" pricing approach. I see it too often when traveling, and it is used because the businessperson trying it expects that the traveler will overpay just to avoid being thought cheap. |
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#10
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| We have 2 dogs and 4 cats. We need to be out of the house for (likely) 10 days. We offered $100 for the entire time - and thought we were being generous! One of our dogs needs meds 2x a day for seizures. (Doggie Phenobarb.) All but one of our cats goes outside and it will be warm enough when we go that if they are left outside overnight, it wouldn't be an issue. I guess it's "what the market will bear." Ideally, we'd like someone to live here for the time we're away but so far, no takers. (We have DirecTV which would be incentive...people around here have lame cable or lousy reception.) |
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#11
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| Quote:
Does the cat enjoys the aquarium Peach?
__________________ When I get a little money, I buy books. And if there is any left over, I buy food. - Desiderius Erasmus |
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#12
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| My cat is from Sun Valley and definately has a Sun Valley attitude. He doesn't meow, he merely looks at you as if you as if you might be intelligent enough to know what it wanted. As for the aquariums, he looks at them but it seems as if he is picturing my Naso Tang in a nice hazelnut crust, with a light Beurre Blanc....but never sushi.......
__________________ What a relief! To find out after all these years that I'm not crazy. I'm just culinarily divergent... |
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#13
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| Got a cat sitter for a week, 3 long-haired cats, $100/week. She came twice a day, even turned on the radio. Grooming was included and she even vacuumed!! That was 1990...
__________________ K «Money talks. Chocolate sings. Beautifully.» «Just Give Me Chocolate and Nobody Gets Hurt.» «Coffee, Chocolate, Men ... Some things are just better rich.» Last edited by Kimmie; 05-04-2002 at 11:37 PM. |
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#14
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| My cat likes television, shows with birds or fish. She can watch TV for 45 minutes, if she likes the show. I used to tape bird shows for her but stopped cause she was getting addicted, would sit in front of the TV and miaw until I put in her tape.
__________________ When I get a little money, I buy books. And if there is any left over, I buy food. - Desiderius Erasmus |
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#15
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| Off topic: Any suggestions for tempting my aged cat to eat? The last day or so she has been off her feed - literally. I have given her cyproheptadine which is supposed to stimulate her appetite, no success. She has eaten some baby food that I have hand fed her. I tried a a bit of specially cooked pork and even a bit of sausage (she tends to like spicy foods). Half and half, no luck. She's 19 and always a picky eater. I give her subcutaneous fluids to compensate for her failing kidneys and have increased the amount somewhat to be sure that she at least does not dehydrate. Any sure fire treats out there? |
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