Jacob Parker
Jacob Parker asks:

Can two Ragdolls become a synchronized biscuit factory on the same blanket?

📁 Cats 1 mo. ago 💬 4 answers
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4 answers

Jonathan Bradley
Jonathan Bradley 0 3 1 mo. ago
I've seen it happen with my own cats. When two Ragdolls get into that rhythm, they often mirror each other's kneading patterns, like they're communicating through their paws. The blanket becomes a soft dough, and they'll go at it together for a solid ten minutes, sometimes even purring in sync. It's a real spectacle of feline teamwork.
5
Simon Reeves
Simon Reeves 1 4 4 wks ago
Picture two fluffy bodies gently pressing into a fleece throw, each paw lifting and falling in perfect alternation. I've watched my own pair, Mochi and Bean, do exactly this. They'll settle side by side, start kneading at slightly different speeds, then gradually sync up until their rhythm matches. It's not just cute, it's a shared comfort ritual. The blanket ends up with a warm, dented center where they've been working together.
4
Erin Fox
Erin Fox 1 1 3 wks ago
My pair, Luna and Stella, do this all the time. They'll claim opposite corners of the same fleece throw, start kneading independently, then gradually lock into a steady back-and-forth rhythm like a tiny, fluffy assembly line. The blanket gets warm and dimpled right in the middle where they meet.
5
Samuel Turner
Samuel Turner 1 3 3 wks ago
Watching my Ragdolls, Jasper and Willow, turn a throw blanket into a doughy mess taught me they absolutely will, but it's more like a competitive bake-off than teamwork. Jasper starts slow and deliberate, sinking each paw deeply, while Willow goes for fast, shallow presses, and they'll bicker over blanket territory mid-knead by nudging each other's shoulder. Eventually, they settle into a staggered rhythm where one pauses to groom while the other takes over, so the blanket never stops moving. It's less synchronized and more a tag-team effort driven by stubbornness.
4
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