Cabinet Veterinaire International has an English Speaking Veterinarian!
I found the Cabinet Vétérinaire International on this page: http://www.qype.co.uk/place/553963-Cabinet-Veterinaire-International-Mies# I’m comforted by the fact that I know my cat’s veterinarian is available to us 24/7 and that he speaks English. Personally, I find that priceless.
- Madame Clarkson
Not all Cat Kennels in Geneva Send Home Purring Cats
You’ve scheduled your dream vacation. You’ve packed your favorites, printed your plane tickets, and commissioned your neighbor to talk to your plants while you’re gone. You’ve reserved a spot for your cat in a clean, reputable cat kennel in Geneva. Or have you?
Have you learned the hard way? Have you retrieved your cat, only to find that he or she is thin, glassy eyed, injured, or sick? Or are you just now learning of the differences among cattery kennels near Geneva?
No matter your experience level, there are a number of points you should consider before entrusting your special kitty to the care of any cattery in Geneva.
• A cat cattery near Geneva should be visited prior to leaving for your trip. Use your own senses to test the temperature, lighting, and ventilation. If you’re comfortable, then you’re on your way to choosing reputable boarding kennels and a cattery in Geneva. Cages should have been recently cleaned. Cats should appear to be clean, brushed, and should seem contented. Food and water should be fresh.
• Any cat boarding kennel in Geneva that leaves your cat alone, to his or her own devices, simply isn’t worth the money or the risk. A cat left alone with unlimited access to food and water is susceptible to injury, disease, and emotional trauma.
• Catteries near Geneva that do not provide daily care, including brushing, health monitoring, portioned food, and fresh drinking water, are not providing the basics that your cat needs to thrive.
• A boarding cattery in Geneva that doesn’t have direct, onsite access to the expertise of a veterinarian isn’t as prepared for medical emergency as one that does. When illness or injury befalls a cat, minutes count. When the highest level of professional care is housed within the building, your cat’s chances of recovery are multiplied.
• Cat boarding kennels near Geneva that house multiple cats in each enclosure, or allow cats to roam free among one another, have not taken cats’ inherent nature into account. Cats are not generally accepting of one another, and will fight until dominance is established. No matter if your cat is the bully or the bullied, he or she is likely to sustain injury, and could even fall victim to infection or an infectious disease, like FIV. If your cat is made to share a cage, you can count on your cat being forever changed.
• Cats are not dogs. Often, when dogs are kenneled in a pet hotel in Geneva, open playtime may be offered. If the cattery near Geneva that you’ve chosen offers this for your cat, run like a Cheetah. This practice could place your cat in harm’s way. It holds the possibility to scar your cat for life, both physically and emotionally.
Cat boarding near Geneva doesn’t have to cause you or your cat grief. To the contrary, if you follow the guidelines offered above, you might find a veterinary practice with adjacent boarding catteries near Geneva, like Cabinet Veterinaire International. There, criteria will be met for cleanliness, veterinarian attendance, professional care, and your cat’s need for solitary confinement.
Peace of mind starts with knowing that your loved ones are cared for; especially those without a voice. Ensure that your cat can rest easily, and then so will you.
Look What People Have to Say About Cabinet Veterinaire International
We have collected many stories from our happy clients over the years. We have decided to share these stories with you. Check back often as well be posting an a regular basis.
Geneva is a very international city; just about everyone speaks English. When you are discussing medical issues and treatment with a veterinarian the communication must be clear. Dr. Omaboe is truly fluent in English, he hardly has an accent! It’s comforting to know that we understand each other completely. Searching for animal hospitals Geneva on the internet, I found him here.
- Monsieur Newton
THE MULTI-CAT HOUSEHOLD
When considering bringing more than one cat home, a look into feline social behavior can be helpful. Making an informed and responsible decision is key to the peaceful existence of cats in multi-cat households.
Felines are naturally social within their own family circle, but can happily survive solitarily, as long as basic needs like territory, food, water, shelter, and affection are met. When considering a roommate for your pet, an assessment of her temperament is necessary.
THE ESTABLISHED CAT
If yours is a home with one grown cat, it is likely that she will not welcome a newcomer. If possible, observe her in the presence of other cats. If she hisses, sprays, or displays aggression, another cat in the house is inadvisable. This is not a no-fault predictor as to the certainty of her getting along with the new cat that you choose, but the likelihood is greater. Consideration of like temperaments is also helpful. If your existing pet is easy going, relaxed, and accepting of new situations, the chances of the pairing working is higher. If she is shy and anxious, a playmate is probably not in her best interest. If she is active with a strong personality, she may intimidate another cat.
When considering integration of two cats, it is helpful to know that cats from the same family are most compatible, but otherwise, here are some findings in connection with feline research:
- A grown cat may be more likely to accept a kitten that another grown cat.
- Opposite-sex non-related cats are generally more tolerant of each other than same-sex pairings.
- Of same-sex non-related pairings, the male-male were more successful.
If you decide to introduce a new cat, understand that these animals need to have space within the home to call their own. Dumping the new cat into the established cat’s space is rarely advisable. Supplying a separate space for the new cat and introducing the two in small segments of time while occupying both with food or toys will help them to ease into acceptance of one another. Plenty of food, water, toys, and attention from you need to made available, in separate areas, to both cats, so that they do not feel the need to compete. Play space needs to be divided and spread out so that they each feel that they have ample space to call their own.
If you feel that the integration of the new cat into your home is not progressing successfully – if there is conflict and tension between the two cats – then separate them once again and reintroduce them even more gradually, using the methods outlined above. You may also consider speaking to your veterinarian about the use of pheromones or drugs.
LITTERMATES IDEAL
Cats will most easily benefit from and accept the companionship of another cat if they are littermates, together since birth. If two littermates are not available, the pairing of two very young kittens (under seven weeks old) from separate litters is often successful. Taking two older kittens in at the same time may work, but the older the unrelated cats, the more likely it is that problems may ensue. Felines are generally intolerant if other felines outside of their natural family unit.
LOSING A SIBLING
When littermates are raised together, and one dies or is taken away, the remaining one can be traumatized. It may stop eating or sleeping, may search for its sibling, or cry out for her for months. Understand that this cat will not accept a new housemate under these circumstances, for she is already downtrodden with anxiety, depression, and weakness from a scant diet. The ramifications of introducing a new cat at this time could be significant, and integrating a new cat into the household may never work well.
Whether you own a solitary cat who is happy to rule over her home in monocracy, or a cat who values the social interaction that only another cat can provide, knowing the difference is key to a peaceful existence for you and your cat(s).
Roger Federer and Geneva Cat Veterinarian Speak the Languages of the People
Roger Federer, the victor in the 2009 French Open, speaks more than tennis. In fact, he shares a brilliant trilingual deduction with one Swiss cat doctor.
Mies, Switzerland – June 9, 2009 – The 2009 French Open saw the victory of Roger Federer, a 27-year-old Swiss native and Grand Slam title holder. In his fourth French Open final, he stole the trophy from the grasp of Robin Soderling.
At the close of the winning match, Federer sunk a 127 mph serve and proclaimed his victory in French. What some folks may not know is that he could have effortlessly uttered those words of triumph in German…or English.
That’s because Roger Federer is trilingual, or the speaker of three languages. He hails from Switzerland, which claims not one official language, but several.
And the advantage of Roger’s trilingual tongue? He can reach out to triple the fans, triple the television and radio stations, and conduct triple the press conferences. Not too shabby, even when compared to that big silver cup.
Like Federer, a veterinarian outside of Geneva, Switzerland sees the value in tripling his communication capabilities. Dr. Nortey Omaboe, an animal doctor practicing veterinary surgery for more than 25 years, committed himself to the care of animals, and the hurdling of language barriers, at a very young age.
As a boy, Nortey was on holiday with his family in Sicily. There, he happened upon a litter of kittens. Some were ill, and one was suffering from a severe eye infection. Nortey saw to it that the kittens received attention from a local Italian veterinarian. Though the language barrier made it difficult to communicate with the animal doctor, Nortey did deduct that he needed to administer the prescribed medication, and should house the kittens indoors, to speed their recoveries.
To Nortey’s dismay, his family’s host would not allow Nortey to keep the kittens inside of the home, which doubled as a cheese-making shop. From that tender age, the future doctor vowed to not only offer animals the same treatment afforded to humans, but to simplify communications between doctors and cats’ caregivers.
Dr. Omaboe’s animal hospitals’ successes can be attributed to those early convictions. He treats each cat that enters his veterinary clinic’s doors with the same care that would be offered to his own pets. And, he does it with open communication, speaking German, French, and English.
The doctor sums it up when he says, “If I were not able to speak freely with cats’ owners, then pivotal questions and answers, information and instructions would be overlooked, and cats’ lives would be in peril.”
It has been said that Roger Federer moves like a cat, with stealth and agility. Dr. Nortey Omaboe knows what it takes to maintain the stealth and agility of the model of Federer praise…the legendary pet cat. But more than that, what these two men have in common is the ability to recognize the value in speaking to the people, with a fluent give-and-take that mirrors a tennis ball, lobbed from one player to another, without fault…no matter the playing court.
You can view the original version of this press release here.

