Bringing a kitten into your family is exciting and a responsibility we are honored to help with. At Cherry Knolls Veterinary Clinic in Centennial, we focus on calm, positive visits and tailor timing and care to your kitten’s lifestyle and needs. Because one size does not fit all, we will personalize timing and treatments after examining your kitten and discussing options that match your situation, priorities, and budget.
Bringing Your Kitten Home
The first days at home shape how your kitten experiences the world. A calm, gradual introduction builds confidence and reduces anxiety.
- Set up one quiet room with a litter box, water, food, a bed, and a few toys before your kitten arrives.
- Open the carrier in that room and allow voluntary exploration at your kitten’s own pace.
- Sit nearby, speak softly, and let your kitten approach you on their terms.
- Expand their space room by room over several days as confidence grows.
- Keep the first week calm and limit visitors.
- Schedule your first vet visit within the first week. Call (303) 779-1170 to book.
At-a-Glance Vaccine Schedule
This schedule builds strong immunity step by step. If your kitten is starting late or has missed a dose, we will design a catch-up plan based on age.
Age / Visit | Vaccines and Preventives | Notes |
8 weeks | FVRCP #1 (feline herpesvirus, calicivirus, panleukopenia) Deworming Flea and tick prevention | Fresh stool sample test available for parasite screening. |
12 weeks | FVRCP #2 FeLV (Feline Leukemia) #1 Deworming and flea and tick prevention | Stool follow-up available. FeLV is strongly recommended for all young kittens. |
16 weeks | FVRCP #3 (final kitten booster) FeLV #2 Rabies Deworming and flea and tick prevention as needed | Final core kitten booster. Sometimes given at 18 to 20 weeks based on risk. Rabies required by law. |
5 to 6 months | Spay or Neuter Microchip (if not already placed) | Discuss timing and pre-anesthetic bloodwork at the 16-week visit. |
12 months after 16-week visit | FVRCP booster Rabies booster (as applicable) FeLV booster for at-risk cats | Annual wellness exam and fecal test recommended. |
Notes on the Schedule
- If starting late, we will design an age-based catch-up plan.
- Ask about split visit vaccine appointments for additional safety or if your kitten has a history of vaccine sensitivity.
- FeLV and FIV testing: we may test at intake and before or around the FeLV series when practical. Retest 60 days after any possible exposure.
- Ask about our Kitten Wellness Bundle for bundled preventive care with payment plan options available.
Spay or Neuter: Why and When
Spaying or neutering helps reduce roaming, spraying, fighting, heat cycles, and the risk of certain reproductive diseases. We recommend the procedure at 5 to 6 months of age, though we may advise earlier or later in specific cases.
We offer pre-anesthetic bloodwork to identify hidden issues early and improve safety and recovery. Consider adding a microchip at the same time if not already placed.
Home care includes pain control as directed, an e-collar if needed, activity restriction for 10 to 14 days, and monitoring the incision for swelling, discharge, odor, or changes in appetite.
Nutrition and Feeding Your Kitten
Kittens have high energy and protein requirements to support rapid growth. The right diet during the first year sets the foundation for long-term health.
- Feed a kitten-specific, complete and balanced formula until 9 to 12 months of age.
- Including wet food supports hydration and urinary tract health. Aim for at least 50 percent high-quality canned kitten food as a starting point.
- Small, frequent meals support growth. 3 meals daily for young kittens transitioning to 2 meals by 4 to 5 months.
- Introduce new foods gradually over 7 to 10 days to avoid digestive upset.
- Avoid cow milk. Always provide fresh water.
- Limit treats to 10 percent of daily calories.
- Consider puzzle feeders or timed feeders to add enrichment to mealtimes.
- If your kitten has a health condition, we may recommend a therapeutic diet tailored to their needs.
We help you set daily calorie targets and track body condition at each visit. Bring any feeding questions to your appointment.
Parasites: What to Know
Intestinal parasites are common in kittens, including roundworms, hookworms, tapeworms, and coccidia. Signs can include diarrhea, vomiting, a pot-bellied appearance, and slow growth. Kittens can acquire parasites from their mother, the environment, fleas, or prey.
Can parasites affect people? In rare cases, yes. Good hygiene, regular deworming, and prompt litter box cleaning help protect everyone in the household.
Deworming and Stool Sample Checks
- Deworming schedule for kittens: every 2 weeks until about 12 weeks, then monthly until about 6 months.
- Adult cats: indoor cats yearly fecal; outdoor or hunting cats every 1 to 3 months, or fecal every 3 months with targeted deworming.
- Stool tests detect parasites even when no signs are present and confirm that treatment worked.
- First-year fecals: plan 2 to 4 tests (intake, post-deworming, and again by 6 to 12 months).
- Consistent flea control helps prevent tapeworm infections.
Heartworm Advisory (Travel Related)
Heartworm risk varies by region. If your kitten came from or will travel to an area where heartworm is prevalent, ask us about testing and monthly prevention. We will tailor timing to your travel plans.
Home Hygiene
- Scoop litter daily.
- Wash hands after handling litter or soil.
- Keep play areas clean.
- Pregnant individuals should avoid litter box duty.
Litter Box Success
- Provide one box per cat in the household plus one extra.
- Place boxes in quiet locations away from food and water.
- Use unscented, low-dust clumping litter for kittens over 12 to 16 weeks.
- Use non-clumping litter for younger kittens or those who mouth litter.
- Depth: about 2 to 3 centimeters.
- Box length: approximately 1.5 times your kitten’s body length.
- Scoop daily and wash the box monthly.
- Move boxes gradually if relocation is needed. Abrupt moves cause accidents.
- Praise elimination in the correct spot. Never punish accidents.
Socialization and Cooperative Care
Kitten Gentling (Cooperative Care)
Building positive associations with handling during kittenhood makes veterinary and grooming visits far easier throughout your cat’s life.
- Sessions of 30 to 60 seconds, 1 to 2 times daily.
- Gently handle ears, gums, paws, tail, and collar or harness area.
- Touch, then treat.
- Practice exam positions: chin rest, standing, and side lie.
- Leave the carrier out at home with treats inside to make it a safe, familiar space.
- Introduce different surfaces and sounds gradually and calmly.
- Stop the session immediately if you see flattened ears, tail swishing, crouching, growling, or hissing.
Introducing Your Kitten to Dogs, Cats, and Children
- Start with scent swaps: exchange bedding between pets before any direct meeting.
- First visual introductions: use a baby gate or carrier. Dogs should be on leash.
- Keep sessions short, calm, and supervised.
- Watch body language from all animals and pause if stress signs appear.
- Provide vertical spaces and separate resources for cats throughout the home.
- Supervise all interactions with children and teach gentle, calm handling.
Play, Enrichment, and Safety
Play is essential for physical development, mental health, and bonding. Build daily play into your kitten’s routine.
- Use wands, toy mice, crinkle balls, and laser pointers to engage natural predatory instincts.
- Never use hands or feet as toys. This teaches biting and scratching people.
- Remove broken toys immediately.
- Avoid leaving string, yarn, ribbon, or tinsel unsupervised. These are linear foreign body hazards.
- Provide cat trees and scratching posts to support climbing, stretching, and natural nail maintenance.
- Daily play sessions build confidence and reduce destructive behavior.
Foreign-Body Ingestion Hazards
Kittens are attracted to small, stringy, and sparkly objects. The most common hazards include string, yarn, ribbon, hair ties, rubber bands, tinsel, sewing needles, and small toy parts.
Watch for vomiting, drooling, pawing at the mouth, loss of appetite, hiding, or signs of abdominal pain.
Do not pull visible string from the mouth or rectum. Do not induce vomiting unless directed by a veterinarian. Call us immediately at (303) 779-1170.
Holiday and Household Hazards
The following are toxic to cats and should be kept out of reach:
- Lilies (all parts, including pollen and water in the vase, are highly toxic to cats)
- Essential oils (many are toxic, especially tea tree, eucalyptus, and citrus oils)
- Human pain medications including ibuprofen, acetaminophen, and aspirin
- Onions, garlic, leeks, and chives
- Chocolate and caffeine
- Xylitol (found in sugar-free products)
- Open flame candles (fire hazard and inhalation risk)
- String, ribbon, and tinsel (ingestion hazard)
If you suspect your kitten has ingested something toxic, call us at (303) 779-1170 or contact the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center at (888) 426-4435.
Grooming Basics
- Bathing: not usually needed for most kittens, but helpful for long-haired cats. Use a kitten-safe shampoo and warm water.
- Brushing: short, frequent sessions help build trust and prevent mats. Long-haired cats need daily brushing.
- Ears: check weekly and clean only with a vet-approved ear cleaner. Contact us if you see dark debris, odor, or redness.
- Nails: trim small amounts frequently and reward calm behavior throughout.
- Teeth: start early with cat-safe toothpaste and a soft brush or finger brush. Daily brushing is the most effective way to prevent dental disease.
Centennial Area Health Notes
The following conditions are relevant for kittens in the Centennial, Colorado area:
- Upper respiratory disease: sneezing, nasal or eye discharge, and reduced appetite. Common in kittens from shelters or multi-cat environments. FVRCP vaccination provides core protection.
- Ear mites: watch for head shaking, scratching at the ears, and dark debris in the ear canal.
- Ringworm: presents as patchy hair loss or crusty skin lesions. Contagious to people and other pets.
- Intestinal parasites: roundworms, hookworms, tapeworms, and Giardia are all common in Colorado. Regular deworming and stool testing are essential.
- Outdoor and hunting risks: cats with outdoor access face additional exposure to fleas, ticks, and diseases carried by wildlife. Ask us about prevention tailored to your cat’s lifestyle.
Low-Stress Vet Visits
- Use a sturdy top-opening carrier with familiar bedding inside.
- Leave the carrier out at home permanently so it becomes a normal part of your kitten’s environment.
- Apply a pheromone spray to the carrier 15 to 20 minutes before travel.
- Practice short car rides before the first appointment.
- Ask us about pre-visit calming medications for anxious cats.
- Prefer to wait in your car? Let us know when you arrive and we will escort you directly to a cat-friendly exam room.
When to Contact Us
Call us at (303) 779-1170 if you notice any of the following:
- Poor appetite or refusal to eat for more than one meal
- Repeated vomiting or diarrhea
- Sneezing, nasal discharge, or eye discharge
- Coughing or difficulty breathing
- Lethargy or a significant change in activity level
- Signs of pain or hiding more than usual
- Any change that concerns you
Trust your instincts. Kittens can decline quickly and early contact leads to better outcomes.
Pet Insurance
Pet insurance helps manage the cost of unexpected illness or injury. When comparing plans, review:
- Reimbursement percentage (typically 70 to 90 percent)
- Annual limits and per-incident caps
- Deductible structure (per incident vs. annual)
- Waiting periods for illness and accidents
- Pre-existing condition exclusions
- Direct payment to the clinic vs. owner reimbursement options
- Pre-approval requirements for major procedures
Providers offering coverage in Colorado include Trupanion, Pets Plus Us, and Fetch. Many families also set aside a monthly savings fund as a complement to insurance. We are happy to discuss your options at your kitten’s first visit.