{"id":971,"date":"2024-04-11T14:50:16","date_gmt":"2024-04-11T04:50:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/catloversfestival.com.au\/?p=971"},"modified":"2024-06-20T10:33:08","modified_gmt":"2024-06-20T00:33:08","slug":"meet-the-cat-training-legend-catmantoo","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/catloversfestival.com.au\/blog\/2024\/04\/11\/meet-the-cat-training-legend-catmantoo\/","title":{"rendered":"Meet the Cat-training Legend – CATMANTOO"},"content":{"rendered":"

<\/h3>\n

Heard of the cat-video-making guy who almost broke the internet?<\/h3>\n

That guy, CATMANTOO, is coming to the Brisbane Cat Lovers Festival to teach us hoomans that it\u2019s easier than we think to train cats and show us how to put a harness and leash on our furry friends and take them walkies! HARNESS and LEASH?! WALKIES?! Is he SERIOUS?!<\/p>\n

We caught up with CATMANTOO between cat-tricks, from his hometown of Coolangatta, and fired some questions at the Californian-born professional animal trainer\/behaviourist, who clearly loved working with Aussies Olivia Newton John and Mel Gibson so much, he became an Aussie citizen!<\/p>\n

Meet the myth-buster with an impressive 1.1 million Facebook followers<\/a>, who\u2019s living proof that cats can not only be trained, but they can also become skateboard-riding internet sensations…<\/p>\n

Q. Hello, CATMANTOO! How are you today? Purring along?<\/strong>
\nA. Hello! I\u2019m doing fine, thank you.<\/p>\n

Q. Good to hear. You sound happy. What makes a cat happy?
\n<\/strong>A. It\u2019s the simple things… Eating, sleeping, doing zoomies, and getting ear scratches.<\/p>\n

Q. Let\u2019s start with the elephant in the room – your name! Your parents named you Robert Dollwet and you have rebranded as CATMANTOO. Please explain?
\n<\/strong>A. I started out as a dog trainer in the US Air Force, trained dogs for 40 years, but I\u2019m a CATMANTOO! This was a purrfect name for starting a social media channel to help cats and cat parents all over the world.<\/p>\n

Q. Why did you want to encourage cat owners to bring their cats indoors?<\/strong>
\nA. A long time ago, I had a cat called Quiz, short for \u2018Quizno\u2019s Subs\u2019, a fast-food chain in the US. I named him that because he just walked up to me in a parking lot near the sandwich shop. He was an indoor\/outdoor cat. I believed the myth that cats needed to roam to be happy, then he got run over by a car. I came to learn that outdoor cats have a much shorter lifespan; only two to five years. For me, this horrible incident, in combination with these terrible statistics, dispelled the myth that cats need to roam to be happy. This motivated me, when I moved to Australia, to start a channel for educating people about all sorts of cat things, and spreading the word about the many dangers cats face roaming outside, unsupervised.<\/p>\n

Q. In just one word, describe your level of excitement knowing you\u2019ll be talking to 10,000 cat lovers across the weekend at the Brisbane Cat Lovers Festival?
\n<\/strong>A. 10,000? Terrified! No, I\u2019m excited to be back after being part of the Melbourne show several years ago.<\/p>\n

Q. You\u2019re appearing at our first ever Cat Lovers Festival in Brisbane, alongside your 11-year-old Domestic shorthair\/Tabby called Didga (pron. Did-ja), short for Didgeridoo, which we hear you play. Impressive! As well as being known as the Super Kitty Skateboarder, Didga\u2019s an ambassador for shelter cats. Tell us more.
\n<\/strong>A. Didga is living proof that cats from animal shelters aren\u2019t \u2018damaged\u2019 goods. Every rescue cat just needs a loving guardian to show it how to reach its full potential. My hope is that Didga\u2019s success inspires other people to consider fostering and adopting a cat.<\/p>\n

Q. At the Cat Lovers Festival, we strongly believe every homeless cat deserves the opportunity to find a loving, well-suited fur-ever home and family. Why do you think people should consider fostering?
\n<\/strong>A. It\u2019s always a good idea to foster a pet because it alleviates the overcrowding rescue centres face. It also allows you to \u2018test drive\u2019 the animal to see if its compatible with children and the rest of the family. If it\u2019s not compatible, the rescue centre can find another foster family, and give the cat another chance to find its forever home.<\/p>\n

Q. You\u2019ll present a talk in Brisbane called \u2018Teaching A Cat Is Easier Than You Think\u2019 in which you\u2019ll share a one-minute training technique for helping cats learn better, and make training easier and more fun for fur parents. Clearly, you\u2019re an expert, but was there a trick you found hard to teach Didga?
\n<\/strong>A. Three tricks stand out for me as presenting the biggest challenge. They were: the forward roll; the trust fall, where Didga fell backwards into my arms without flipping over onto her feet, which every cat instinctively does when falling; and \u2018hippy-jumping\u2019 over a dog while riding a skateboard! It took us a year and a half of repeating my one-minute method to first perfect these three tricks, then get them on to film \u2013 without getting me in the shot, which presents challenges of its own!<\/p>\n

Q. You\u2019ve been quoted as saying Didga has a \u2018very high food drive\u2019 and this helps you with your training, more than her breed, age, or any other factor. Being a superstar, she\u2019d be forgiven for having rockstar \u2018rider\u2019 dietary requirements, like Axl Rose\u2019s square melons, or Van Halen\u2019s M&Ms with the brown ones taken out. What\u2019s her favourite food?
\n<\/strong>A. Didga jumps at the chance to have kangaroo mince. You just need to find something healthy your cat loves. Unlike dogs, the almost exclusive \u2018primary reinforcement\u2019 for cats is food. Because we\u2019re giving cats treats, and in some cases lots of them, it\u2019s imperative the food is healthy and high value.<\/p>\n

Q. What’s the most important piece of advice you have for cat owners who want to teach their cats new tricks, stunts or behaviours? Please don\u2019t say, \u2018just buy a GoPro and watch the magic happen\u2019! We know you\u2019re very safety conscious so where is the \u2018line\u2019 between \u2018try this\u2019 and \u2018don\u2019t try this at home\u2019?
\n<\/strong>A. Know your cat\u2019s limits. Don\u2019t force them. Short training sessions are best. For the best results, watch my tutorials.<\/p>\n

Q. Didga has a Guinness World Record for doing the most tricks (24) in one minute. How did this come about?
\n<\/strong>A. There was already a dog with a Guinness World Record for doing the most tricks in a minute, so they called me up to see if Didga could go for the cat\u2019s equivalent world record.<\/p>\n

Q. Which of Didga\u2019s tricks do people ask her to perform the most?
\n<\/strong>A. The high-five! It\u2019s a relatively easy trick to teach a cat and I\u2019ve trained Didga to give high-fives to strangers. People always freak out, calling over their friends or kids to get a high-five from Didga, too.<\/p>\n

Q. You\u2019re taking to the stage at the Festival to demo how you train cats to use a harness and leash for outdoor adventures. Where do you even start with this (apart from ordering chain-mail gloves quick-smart)?
\n<\/strong>A. In the house! Lots of patience. And remember: your cat is not a dog.<\/p>\n

Q. Your LinkedIn page lists \u2018Pet Sitting\u2019 as one of your many skills. Does this mean your clients come home from their holiday to find their British Shorthair skateboarding, and their pug giving the cat piggy backs around the house?<\/strong>
\nA. It did at one time but that was in the past when I offered a program to either take a dog into my home for a month, or stay at the owner\u2019s home while they were on holiday. Before hiring me, they would ask if the dog will still listen to them if I’m doing the teaching. I\u2019d explain that a vision-impaired person doesn\u2019t teach a seeing eye dog. A professional trainer does the training, then works with the new owner to teach them how to keep up the training. Once the dog is taught, it’s much-much easier to then teach the owner, then the more they follow the advice and practice, the more the dog will listen to them. It was a very popular service that lasted more than 25 years. Today, I work part-time as a mobile service for animal training, here on the Gold Coast.<\/p>\n

Q. You have the CATMANTOO channel on social media. Your most-watched video on YouTube, which has had 23 million views, is: \u2018World\u2019s Best Skateboarding Cat! Go Didga Go!\u2019 Do you think this will be your \u2018magnum opus\u2019\/the best work you\u2019ll produce, or do you see yourself making Internet-breaking videos and tutorials for another 40 years?
\n<\/strong>A. Time will tell, but they say if you love what you do you\u2019ll never work a day in your life. I\u2019ll keep making videos as long as Didga is happy. She\u2019s 11-years old so I\u2019ll probably rely more on CGI [computer-generated imagery] versus her doing physical acting. I\u2019ll gravitate to making more tutorials so I can pass on the skills I\u2019ve learned these many years. I uploaded some on Youtube, with many more on my Patreon page – a subscription page with over 65+ training posts.<\/p>\n

Q. You look after arguably one of the world’s most famous cats on social media. How did you manage to attract over 1.1 million followers on Facebook, and what has that done to Didga’s ego?
\n<\/strong>A. The strategy I found most effective to grow our social audience was simply sharing my cat\u2019s talents using good videos with good music. It didn\u2019t take long at all. It went viral so fast it was wild. My computer came alive with messages from people from all over. It was overwhelming. In terms of Didga\u2019s ego, she hasn\u2019t changed at all, and I\u2019ve tried to stay humble.<\/p>\n

Q. Next year will mark your 40th year in the animal-care business. You\u2019ve gone from training police dogs in the US Military, to becoming a professional animal trainer in Malibu and working with the rich and famous and their pets, to becoming an animal-behaviourist for the television and movie industry! There\u2019s a theory going around that what we role-play as children, we eventually become as adults. Does this ring true for you? Did you grow up teaching your house-cats tricks?
\n<\/strong>A. Ironically, I didn\u2019t have a close connection with domestic pets growing up, apart from wanting to be a Herpetologist, studying cold-blooded reptiles and amphibians. I joined the military and thought it would be fun to train military dogs. It turned out I had a knack for it. I realised this because my military dog kept winning competitions.<\/p>\n

Q. Can you teach old cats new tricks?
\n<\/strong>A. Cats or dogs of any age can learn to do tricks, so it\u2019s just a myth that \u2018you can\u2019t teach an old dog new tricks.\u2019 What is true is that it\u2019s harder to break bad habits in animals which are older, just as it is in humans. At any age, we can learn something new. It may take a bit longer, and more commitment, but we can learn. Breaking our habits or addictions, which are sort of similar to most behavioural issues in our pets, takes longer to unlearn. As an animal behaviourist, our approach is to replace the old, undesirable habit with something desirable. Now, just like humans, animals can have relapses. You can stop the addiction, but the behaviour may come back If you aren\u2019t constantly managing their actions. The bottom line is, the higher the food-drive the cat has and the more knowledgeable you are about training techniques, the easier it will be for your cat to learn all sorts of things.<\/p>\n

Q. If you could deliver one message to every cat lover in Australia, what would it be?
\n<\/strong>A. Come to the Cat Lovers Festival when we visit a city near you. Or subscribe to my YouTube channel or become a Patron on my Patreon page – shameless plug LOL!<\/p>\n

Q. Finally, why should cat lovers come and see you at the Brisbane Cat Lovers Festival?
\n<\/strong>A. There\u2019s not only me to see at the Festival! There are tonnes of great reasons to come along, including talks from Dr Katrina and Jackson Galaxy, and there\u2019ll also be lots of shelters with cats up for adoption, after the Festival. So, come along and meet Didga, ask me questions, and get training tips for cool tricks and outdoor adventures so your cat doesn\u2019t spend its days just sitting on the couch. It\u2019ll be fancatstical!<\/p>\n

SEE CATMANTOO AT THE CAT LOVERS FESTIVAL IN BRISBANE<\/h3>\n

CATMANTOO and Didga will be appearing on the WHISKAS\u00ae<\/strong> Stage<\/a> at the 2024 Sydney Cat Lovers Festival, Sydney Shougrounds, on Saturday 24 and Sunday 25 August 2024.<\/p>\n

CATMANTOO & DIDGA THE INTERNET SENSATION, AT A GLANCE:<\/h3>\n

Facebook 1.1m Followers<\/a>
\n
YouTube 233k Subscribers<\/a>
\n
Instagram 394k Followers<\/a>
\n
Patreon Tutorials<\/a><\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n