How to train cats? Cat Training
Preface
Training dogs is quite common in daily life. Dogs have high intelligence, enjoy pleasing their owners, and enjoy following orders. But cats have a rebellious personality, they are free and independent, and it seems impossible to use the word 'training' for cats. Cats are more loyal to themselves and only do what they love. What parents need to do is how to guide cats to achieve the desired effect. How to train cats?
Cat training: The most efficient way to train cats is to use strict reward and punishment measures to create conditions for them to launch. It knows that what it does will be rewarded with delicious snacks and enjoy the owner's caresses, and it also knows that what it does will be severely punished. As for its behavior, it requires the owner to guide it slowly.
Cat training can start when they are 2-3 months old, and mature cats are much more difficult to train than kittens because many behaviors have already become fixed, and changing bad habits is also a long process. Cats aged 2-3 months are not only easy to cultivate emotions, but also relatively strong in receiving information.
You need clear and concise commands, such as when a cat is doing something you are not allowed to do. You can scold them harshly and say no to cats. Over the long term, cats will have a certain understanding of the word 'not'. They know that when they are doing something, their owner will say no and scold them severely.
Other things you want your cat to do, such as shaking hands. You can shake hands with cats, then lift their hands and place them in their palms, and feed them their favorite snacks. Continuously reinforce your commands and actions, and give appropriate rewards. Cats will understand your meaning. Hungry cats are easier to train and have stronger learning motivation. Training for about 10 minutes each time is enough, otherwise the cat will get bored and anxious.
The above introduces the training techniques for cats. But in fact, cats have different personalities. Some cats are willing to accept their owners' training, while others are very resistant to training performance. Don't force cats to accept your commands, as long as they can integrate into family life and have fun with us. For cats undergoing training, one should also have enough patience. Sometimes it's not that cats are unwilling to do it, but they don't know how to do it.

