Ideas for dealing with stray neighborhood cats?
We just bought a house and we are moving in in 2 weeks. I have noticed that there are 2 stray cats who hang around the house ALL the time. They walk & sleep on the cars, prowl around and use our yard as a litter box! We have 3 indoor only kittens (all spayed) and I am worried that having these strays around will disturb them and cause them to mark their territory inside the house. I don't want them to feel threatened by these strays. Is there anything I can do to make our yard undesirable to them? Any plants or smells they don't like? If I can't get them to stop coming around I guess I'll have to catch them and take them to a shelter.I asked around the neighborhood to make sure they aren't someone's pets and they definitely aren't. Any ideas on what to do would be greatly appreciated!
Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!
Quote:
Originally Posted by koriani
Labman,
I'm disappointed by your attitude regarding "other people's animals". I too allow my cats to roam. We live in the country but have close neighbors whom also have cats that roam.
I would be very upset if something ever happened to my cats and I realize the "safest" thing would be to keep them in the house. However, I have 6 cats and, speaking from 11+ years veterinary experience as well as a lifetime pet owner, keeping that many cats happy completely indoors is hard to do unless you have a very large home (which, unfortunately, I do not).
I don't mind dogs that roam either as long as they behave themselves and don't kill cats or attack people/children.
I realize not everyone likes animals and they can certainly take action by finding the owners and asking them to keep their pets off of their property. My neighbor has goats which she allowed to roam and they did some serious damage to our property such as walking on vehicles and eating the bark off my prize apple tree.
Once we explained to her the problems, she did endeavor to keep the goats off our property.
Some people CAN be reasoned with... :)
In some cases, however, I do recommend euthanasia. It breaks my heart, but I'd rather see an animal which can't be placed in a caring home put down than thrown out to starve a slow death.
Keschy, I hope you find an equitable solution!
Regards,
I appreciate your response to Labman as it was very well put. I have posts on here and when he replies I feel he tries to make himself out as the expert on all animals for everything the people ask ?'s on along w/trying to make you look like your stupid or stubborn. Hopefully he'll wake up and watch what he writes in response to the posts on here. I'm sure others have been put out by this person. Take care.
Holding our noses thanks to neighborhood cats
I am having the same problem as keschy. I didn't have too much trouble with roaming cats the first three years in this house, but about 6 months ago my yard became cat central. I now have all my neighbors' cats as well as a number whose owners I don't know, and they ALL use my yard as a litterbox. They leave fur and hairballs too and climb on the roof to chase & kill birds. Every week I see one or more new cats. I don't leave food outdoors to attract them.
To mechanicaleden, koriani and the others who have no problem letting their cats roam, I find your attitude irresponsible and hope you would consider the negative effects of letting your animals roam:
1.Every time my sprinklers go off, my entire yard REEKS of cat urine! They use the front lawn as a litterbox too and do not cover their mess there at all. So much for for "burying". You can't even go out there because of the strong odor.
2. I have a pre-schooler. Your animals' poop carries germs and worms and is a health hazard to her and her friends.
3.To top it all off, the cats are now SPRAYING MY HOUSE and when you open the sliding door, the smell of cat urine permeates the indoors too.
4. Roaming pets do not live to a ripe old age. They are predated by dogs & other animals, get hit by cars, get injured in fights, and pick up diseases.
I have a wonderful indoor cat of my own who is now over 15 years old, so please don't think I'm a cat hater. People who really love their animals make sure that they are safe and that they do not become a nuisance to others. My pets, like my children, are MY responsibility, not my neighbors.
For the roamers' owners--Would you be so tolerant if your neighbors' children hopped the fence into your yard and made themselves at home there? How about if they were running around and screaming? Drawing on your house? Climbing onto your roof? Swimming in your pool? Digging up your plants? Eating the fruits in your garden? Relieving themselves in your yard? You would complain or call the cops on them and you would be right to do it.
We are at our wits' end. We have tried coyote urine on and around the fence, but it didn't help, not even for a day. If anyone knows of a reliable repellent, please share it by name or give a recipe if it's a home brew. We've had a very hard time finding any that work. We are ready to use supersoakers or the hose, and frankly, taking them to the ASPCA is starting to look good too.
Sorry for the length of this, but I am tired of people who can't tell the small ones (human or furry) in their care "NO". Nobody gets everything they want all the time or needs to be "completely happy" to have a good life. If you want to let your cats outdoors, put them on a leash and supervise them or provide them with a roofed, fenced enclosure.
Apparently you need to be the only one in authority here
Quote:
Originally Posted by labman
''Letting a dog run loose is illegal in most places and is irresponsible everywhere.'' This quote is from one of the best publications on dogs I have ever read. Unfortunately, being the puppy training manual from a dog guide school, its wealth of information is not available to the general public. There are exceptions, but very few people live where they should let their dog run loose. Cats are less of a problem, but nobody should be expected to put up with the problems I see here. If reasoning with owners if you can identify them, and making your yard unattractive to them doesn't work, I see no problem with sending them to the animal shelter. Owners are responsible for their pets, not the pets for the owners. Try to be as humane as possible to the animals, but go ahead and rid your self of the pests however you have to.
As for ladyandjan, I am not going to return your personal attacks. I have extensive experience, reading, and training from some of the best in the dog area to base my opinions on. What qualifications do you have to base your opinions on?
I was not attacking you. But just to point out that when someone offers an opinion or help you pooh pooh them as being not having any kind of smarts at all. Maybe we do not train dogs but have the knowledge of owning dogs for over 25 years does provide a person with insight in dealing with different things with their own animals. I'm sorry you feel personally attacked but you shouldn't attack others by referring to them as know nothings or stupid in other words. Not everyone knows every thing about every subject but we should all try to learn from one another not put anyone down who might gain more knowledge by the people here who I thought were trying to help one another.
Read closer--not a personal attack
Michelle, my post was not meant as a personal attack on you, gut on the prevalent attitude of pet owners who le their animals roam. It's great that you have the property to let them out (do they actually stay on it?), but most people don't.
I know who owns better than half the visitors in my yard and they are all fixed, but not one is going to keep their cats in, and for sure no one has offered to come and scoop the neighborhood litterbox. Not one of them intends to keep their cats indoors.
I intended only to express my frustration, and until you walk a mile in my mocassins, I wish you would refrain from calling me part of the problem.
Have strays picked up by ASPCA
Okay, so I'm new to this board and will try to refrain from putting my foot in my mouth, BUT, in my never to be humble opinion, I think it's okay to have the ASPCA come and pick up strays. If they are someone's pet and that pet owner takes care of their animals on a regular basis, then wouldn't that pet owner automatically go to the ASPCA to look for their animal when their animal disappears for more than a day? Animals don't get put down or put up for adoption the day they are brought in so as long as the pet owner comes looking for his/her pet within a day or two after disappearing than it's okay. I think this is more humane than allowing them to roam and possibly get hit by a car, get in a fight or be taken away by a stranger. At the ASPCA they'll be safe and fed. My chow got out once after a bath so she wasn't wearing her i.d. collar and was taken to the ASPCA, I got her the next morning safe and sound. Besides, I have problems with a stray cat who has decided to crawl under my house every night. All night all we hear is "Yowwwwwl!" for two weeks now. Not fun when you're trying to keep your 18 month old from waking up every time. We can't figure out how the heck this cat is getting under there, we've closed the entrances and then open them reluctantly for fear she may die under there if not let out. Even if cats covered up their poop, the smell of their urine is ferocious! Don't really appreciate that.
Tootles,
Mom in Cali :eek: