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BS: Cat Deterrents

jimlad9 17 Feb 07 - 05:14 AM
John MacKenzie 17 Feb 07 - 05:47 AM
GUEST,Bainbo at work 17 Feb 07 - 05:53 AM
jonm 17 Feb 07 - 06:16 AM
Georgiansilver 17 Feb 07 - 06:43 AM
Jean(eanjay) 17 Feb 07 - 07:04 AM
JennyO 17 Feb 07 - 08:25 AM
John MacKenzie 17 Feb 07 - 08:30 AM
Bee 17 Feb 07 - 08:33 AM
Jean(eanjay) 17 Feb 07 - 08:41 AM
JennyO 17 Feb 07 - 08:46 AM
Bee 17 Feb 07 - 08:49 AM
JennyO 17 Feb 07 - 09:07 AM
Greg F. 17 Feb 07 - 10:24 AM
SINSULL 17 Feb 07 - 10:39 AM
Bee 17 Feb 07 - 10:47 AM
MaineDog 17 Feb 07 - 10:53 AM
Sorcha 17 Feb 07 - 11:01 AM
terrier 17 Feb 07 - 11:05 AM
Sorcha 17 Feb 07 - 11:13 AM
Ron Davies 17 Feb 07 - 02:10 PM
Ron Davies 17 Feb 07 - 02:20 PM
SharonA 17 Feb 07 - 04:41 PM
Greg F. 17 Feb 07 - 06:38 PM
Jean(eanjay) 17 Feb 07 - 06:42 PM
bubblyrat 17 Feb 07 - 06:51 PM
Jean(eanjay) 17 Feb 07 - 06:53 PM
Greg F. 17 Feb 07 - 10:51 PM
Ebbie 18 Feb 07 - 03:13 AM
jimlad9 18 Feb 07 - 04:40 AM
JennyO 18 Feb 07 - 05:54 AM
GUEST,leeneia 18 Feb 07 - 07:57 AM
GUEST,Bruce Michael Baillie 18 Feb 07 - 09:21 AM
Bee 18 Feb 07 - 09:40 AM
jimlad9 18 Feb 07 - 10:06 AM
Greg F. 18 Feb 07 - 10:19 AM
Bee 18 Feb 07 - 10:52 AM
jimlad9 18 Feb 07 - 11:37 AM
Bee 18 Feb 07 - 12:19 PM
jimlad9 18 Feb 07 - 12:24 PM
Greg F. 18 Feb 07 - 06:34 PM
terrier 18 Feb 07 - 07:09 PM
Bee 18 Feb 07 - 07:33 PM
Gurney 19 Feb 07 - 02:29 AM
Georgiansilver 19 Feb 07 - 03:11 AM
Michael 19 Feb 07 - 06:00 AM
Georgiansilver 19 Feb 07 - 07:08 AM
jimlad9 19 Feb 07 - 09:19 AM
Greg F. 19 Feb 07 - 10:12 AM
GUEST,karen philipp 22 Apr 08 - 12:37 PM
bankley 22 Apr 08 - 01:31 PM
Ebbie 22 Apr 08 - 02:35 PM
mouldy 23 Apr 08 - 04:40 AM
GUEST,dianavan 24 Apr 08 - 12:45 AM
Amos 24 Apr 08 - 01:20 AM
GUEST,Windsor Knot 24 Apr 08 - 05:18 AM
Thompson 24 Apr 08 - 05:33 AM
John MacKenzie 24 Apr 08 - 05:45 AM
Rapparee 24 Apr 08 - 09:39 AM
Rapparee 24 Apr 08 - 09:42 AM
Bee 24 Apr 08 - 10:01 AM
jonm 24 Apr 08 - 10:10 AM
Amos 24 Apr 08 - 10:21 AM
Rapparee 24 Apr 08 - 10:26 AM
GUEST,Dicky Bow 24 Apr 08 - 10:28 AM
Bee 24 Apr 08 - 11:07 AM
Becca72 24 Apr 08 - 01:40 PM
Bee 24 Apr 08 - 02:36 PM
Little Hawk 24 Apr 08 - 02:54 PM
John MacKenzie 24 Apr 08 - 02:58 PM
Donuel 24 Apr 08 - 03:12 PM
John MacKenzie 24 Apr 08 - 03:21 PM
Becca72 24 Apr 08 - 03:46 PM
Bee 24 Apr 08 - 06:03 PM
Bee 24 Apr 08 - 06:05 PM
katlaughing 24 Apr 08 - 06:10 PM
Rapparee 24 Apr 08 - 09:18 PM
Bee 24 Apr 08 - 10:44 PM
GUEST,Mare 19 May 08 - 08:11 PM
GUEST,snow drop 11 Sep 08 - 11:52 AM

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Subject: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: jimlad9
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 05:14 AM

CAT LOVERS STOP READING HERE !!

Can anybody suggest a way of persuading thos most obnoxious of creatures the cat to
crap (defecate to autolycus,autocyclist or whoever else has been told by his mum that he is clever,awwwww!. I know him as moped, more pedantry) in their owners gardens and not mine

I have had limited success with small bottles of Ammonia buried about the garden....Its fun to see them get a sinus full and run like hell looking skywards, I award extra points if they then run into a tree,fence or anything solid.

A neighbour Bob*, acquired a caustic gel from his place of work and smeared it along his fences that the moggies use for access to his garden. After 10 seconds the effect is amazing. The verminous creatures can be seen trying to lift all four paws simultaneously from off the fence.Bob calls it 'Cat on the Moon'.

* Not his real name.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 05:47 AM

I find Daz to be a good cat detergent, I recommend the extra spin cycle to make sure the cat is properly done. A swift run through the mangle afterwards may be necessary too!
G ¦¬]


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,Bainbo at work
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 05:53 AM

I can't offer any explanation for this, but a two-litre plastic lemonade bottle, half-filled with water, and laid on its side frightens them away. It sounds stupid, and it sounds like it shouldn't work, but it does.

Maybe it's the movement, or the reflection of the water, or maybe it conjures up some ancient race memory of sabre-toothed tigers being water-bombed to death. Who knows?

Good point: It's not cruel. (Although that may prove a disincentive to you, jimlad).

Bad point: You've got a two-litre plastic lemonade bottle, half-filled with water, lying on its side in your garden.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: jonm
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 06:16 AM

Having recently extended my house, I now have a patch of gravel where once there was tarmac. Next door's cats (five I believe) think it's a litter tray.

I don't mind the cats themselves - they get out of the way as I reverse and I haven't squashed one yet - but after a week there was a whole supermarket carrier of shite to clear up and gravel strewn everywhere.

I bought a bottle of smelly green gloop and spread it over the gravel once cleared and tidied. The local pet store recommended it but I cannot recall the name and have thrown away the empty bottle. So far, six days and no turds.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Georgiansilver
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 06:43 AM

If you live in the UK...go to Focus or other large DIY store which covers gardening and get a tub of 'Scat-a-cat' which is a granular repellent and is safe for kids and pets.....definitely keeps the cats away....


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Jean(eanjay)
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 07:04 AM

I've heard about the bottle of water trick before and apparently it does work although I haven't tried it myself. I've also heard something about a bit of hosepipe left on the lawn looking like a snake!!!!! I've tried the gel that is sold in pet shops - I got the strongest version to make sure and it did work; it is also not unkind to the cats. I bought my mother a battery operated device that made a high pitched sound only heard by dogs, cats, etc. although when my son visited, it had to be switched off because he could hear it!
The frustrating thing for me is that when my son was back living with me with his litter trained cat she used to come running back into the house to use the litter tray!


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: JennyO
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 08:25 AM

A few years back, the bottle of water on the lawn thing was all the rage in Sydney, but as I understood, it was supposed to keep dogs away. Never heard of it for cats. Anyway, it looked really silly, with every second house having a 2 litre bottle or two of water lying around in the front yard. But at least they all looked equally silly. At some point, the custom seemed to die out. Maybe it didn't work, or maybe people got sick of their front lawns looking silly.

We have two cats, who find a discreet corner to do their "business", then cover it up. I don't think I've ever found a cat turd lying around in the garden - not even from the occasional visiting cat. Am I just lucky?


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 08:30 AM

Maybe they use next door's dunny Jenny!
Giok


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 08:33 AM

Probably not just lucky, but maybe it has to do with what's available. I've never had cat poo in my garden; they use the woods where there is soft material to scratch up and shelter from predators while they are personally occupied.

Jimlad, the caustic gel thing is sick. Really.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Jean(eanjay)
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 08:41 AM

Yes, I agree about the caustic gel but there is a gel that is safe and available from petshops. It has a sort of perfumed smell and I think it may be that that puts the cats off.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: JennyO
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 08:46 AM

You might be right, Bee. There are lots of nice leafy private corners in my garden. I've actually seen the cats a few times just as they are finishing. They are very particular about the covering up process. Cats are generally very clean. That's why I was rather surprised that jimlad had a problem. Looks like he just hates cats. They probably hate him too.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 08:49 AM

I've observed that cats will torment people who don't like them.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: JennyO
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 09:07 AM

Q.E.D.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Greg F.
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 10:24 AM

Shoot the cats. Then the owners.

Don't have to hate cats to hate cleaning up someone else's shite.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: SINSULL
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 10:39 AM

Orange peels and a large dog.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 10:47 AM

Greg F. Couldn't you talk to the owners first?

I understand this is a mostly urban problem, but even when I lived in a city and had a garden, I didn't have much trouble. Most people kept their cats indoors.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: MaineDog
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 10:53 AM

woof!


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Sorcha
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 11:01 AM

I have been buying some granulated stuff called Ropel for the front lawn. It works. I finally read the ingredients. Clay cat litter, thyme oil and peppermint oil. Gee, why am I buying this stuff? I could make it. The oils are easy to buy and not expensive. Doesn't harm any plants or people, just makes the critters do their business elsewhere.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: terrier
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 11:05 AM

Large signs "CATS KEEP OUT", if that don't work, get a Terrier. They're quick and efficient and don't eat a lot.They'll also keep your garden free of all other rodents. Unfortunately, they dig ruddy great holes in every bit of lawn they can find. But you can't have everything going your way, can you..... *BG*


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Sorcha
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 11:13 AM

No, terrier. They just go round to the back gate where the Only Cats Can See It sign is that says:

Sucker Here. She'll feed you if you stay long enough.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Ron Davies
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 02:10 PM

Jan says that tiger or lion poo works great. Tiger is recommended by expert gardeners--so she says. Zoos will either give you or sell you a bag.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Ron Davies
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 02:20 PM

Jan says the way to do it is to put it around the perimeter of your garden or around the patch of garden to be shielded. She's done it herself-- (in Bradford on Avon)-- and it works. (She had over a dozen cats living in the house 2 doors over ---and she had tried every other so-called deterrent). She says this idea was being pushed by gardening programs, wildlife experts, and zoos. Bristol Zoo kept running out.

There was a waiting list for it.

She says Alan Titmarsh announced one spring that one of the local zoos had run out---and at the zoo there was a sign saying "No Tiger Poo Available".


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: SharonA
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 04:41 PM

Jimlad9, why shouldn't we cat lovers read your thread? It's not as if we don't have the same problem with our own pets in our own (and other people's ) gardens! We love 'em, but we know they're not perfect.

I was listening to NPR (National Public Radio) last weekend and heard a couple of tips about safe cat-repelling during a program about gardening. Of course the host reviewed the usual repellent sprays with animal uring in them, but he was rather dismissive of them. However, he had two specific recommendations:

The first suggestion was to lay chicken wire across the entire flower bed and then cover it with a THIN layer of soil. This is supposed to prevent a cat from pooping there because its instinct is to dig deeper than that in order to make a hole to poop in (and also to cover it well). The plants, of course, are supposed to come up in the holes in the wire. The disadvantage of this, according to the program's host, is that the wire eventually rusts and has to be replaced. I imagine that if you're growing a large enough plant, the size of the holes in the wire could be too restrictive.

The other suggestion had me guffawing madly! It is a product called The ScareCrow. It's a water sprinkler that's motion-activated, PLUS once it detects the movement, it actually turns itself in the direction of the moving creature and then sprays a burst of water at it! This keeps you from over-watering as you might do with a regular sprinkler... and gives you the satisfaction of watching the thing swivel around to take aim at the offending cat, and watching the cat leap vertically into the air in surprise.

Most cats have enough intelligence that they will only need to be squirted once or twice before they decide to go poop someplace else that's drier. However, you may get the occasional thick-coated cat that doesn't mind getting wet (in which case, see the chicken wire plan).

Here is a link to the product: The ScareCrow Motion-Activated Sprinkler

Good luck, Jimlad9, and thanks for being concerned enough to seek a solution to your problem that won't harm the kitties.

Sharon


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Greg F.
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 06:38 PM

Greg F. Couldn't you talk to the owners first?

No point- they're obviously irresponsible & obliovious. Do you suppose they think their cats' crap disappears into thin air?


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Jean(eanjay)
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 06:42 PM

I'm not sure what the owners could do anyway - cats have minds of their own.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: bubblyrat
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 06:51 PM

I now have a mental image of a street,in which there are many houses and many cats .The gardens of these houses are protected, variously , by half-filled lemonade bottles,caustic jelly,subterranean chicken-wire,sonic repellors,motion -sensitive sprinklers,and liberal quantities of Tiger-Turds.........All except one,whose owners have gone abroad for 6 months. Then they come home--------


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Jean(eanjay)
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 06:53 PM

I like it!


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Greg F.
Date: 17 Feb 07 - 10:51 PM

I'm not sure what the owners could do anyway...

Well, they could keep the damn things indoors, provide a litter box, and clean up their own shite instead of fobbing it off to be someone else's, problem, no?


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Ebbie
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 03:13 AM

My cat too runs for the litter box when he comes inside. He was born in Juneau- where the soil is almost always wet- so maybe he is not acquainted with loose soil.

I rather like it- at least I know he's not getting into trouble with the neighbors.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: jimlad9
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 04:40 AM

A serious point folks.The shortage of birds,voles and other creatures indigenous to our country is being blamed on the immigrants from the jungles of SE Asia the cat. There was a valid purpose for keeping cats hundreds of years ago when rats and mice abounded but now?

Who would keep a selfish,disdainful,unhygenic animal like a cat. We have two Beagles,Matthew and Duncan, who seem to be in league with the neighbourhood felines and appear to encourage the buggers to shit in my garden.,but I get companionship and unswerving loyalty ( well the younger one swerves now and again ) from them


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: JennyO
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 05:54 AM

Jimlad9, how do you know that the shit you are finding belongs to cats? It might belong to your dogs.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,leeneia
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 07:57 AM

jimlad, probably nothing is going to work.

When you come across some cat poop, do one of two things. 1) Pick it up on your trowel and heave it into the owner's yard 2)If the owner's yard is too far away, cover it with soil and let soil bacteria deal with it. That's their job, and they're good at it.

The energy you save can then be devoted to reading the artful lies in garden catalogs.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,Bruce Michael Baillie
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 09:21 AM

...I'm not against cats meself but I always find a lustily hurled King Edward (potato, not a cigar!) makes them go away pretty sharpish, just throw it near them to frighten them (you don't have to stove the poor buggers innards in!)


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 09:40 AM

Jimlad, I can't find the link right now, but at least one study of cat atrocities on the bird and small mammal populations was found to have been grossly exaggerated. Certainly cats, and particularly feral cats, hunt, but by far the most efficient decimators of small wild creatures are humans. Check the number of migrating birds killed by tall lit buildings, the number of small mammals and ground nesting birds killed by agriculture and forestry practices, for example - tolls far outstripping even the most exaggerated accounts of cat predation.

It's alright to dislike cats, it's understandable to get angry about cat poo in your garden, or cats hunting under your bird feeders, but let's not blame cats for all the ills of mankind.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: jimlad9
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 10:06 AM

JennyO

You don't have to be a poo-ologist to tell the difference between canine poo and feline poo.

leeneia

I have collected the debris in a bucket and taken it down to the cat-owners garden,her cat has returned and done Mega-craps here ever since.
Also the crap-happy buggers bury it and I usually find it sticking and stinking on my hands when planting and weeding.

Bee
             ................"lets not blame cats for all the ills of mankind"........Yes we can it would give the USA a rest


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Greg F.
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 10:19 AM

one study of cat atrocities on the bird and small mammal populations was found to have been grossly exaggerated

Even if true, one study being 'exaggerated' hardly means that cats have little or no impact. Most who have studied the problem agree that they certainly do.

But ya see, the "Animal Rights" crowd are interested only in the "rights"[sic] of those particular cute, furry DOMESTIC animals that they selectively deem worthy- cats, dogs, horses & the like.

They don't give a tinkers about those they deem "unworthy" or "less worthy" -e.g. rodents, most small wild animals, reptiles &c.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 10:52 AM

Greg F., I am not an animal rights cute-fuzzy person. I am a supporter of the Canadian seal hunt, which pretty well leaves me right out of that arena. I don't like seeing critters vilified for being the small end of a problem.

When I was a kid, my grandparents' farm had a dozen or more barncats. They killed many rodents and some birds, including swallows and bobolinks, which were the most common birds on the farm. Fast forward thirty years: my grandparents stopped farming and all the cats were destroyed. The barn fell in a windstorm; no more swallows. There were still lots of Bobolinks, until the hayfields, formerly harvested once, after the bobolinks had fledged, were rented out and fertilized to get two crops a season. The bobolinks nests were destroyed by the early harvest. Haven't seen one on the property since.

Along with the bobolinks went mice, voles, snakes, etc., and that was just a small farm. Consider how much land is under the industrial plough these days and maybe you can stop worrying about the cats. Or not. I'm just sayin'.

cat friendly stats

This is a cat friendly site, but has some interesting comments, in particular regarding a study about the relative health of cat-caught birds and window-killed birds.

http://noblepower.com/reference/wind-power-statistics.html

The above link is windfarm stats, comparing bird kills on windfarms to other kills, and includes the following:

Percentage of birds killed in the US annually by housecats: 10 percent
Erickson et al., 2002, Summary of
Anthropogenic Causes of Bird Mortality.
Percentage of birds killed in the US annually by collisions with windows and buildings: 55%

I wanted to find some stats on agriculture and forestry. but if there are any, they are buried in bird flu articles, of which there are thousands.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: jimlad9
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 11:37 AM

On a lighter note,well at least from the perspective of the 'non-cat lovers lobby'.

A few years ago it was the fashion to decorate the walls of our houses with Hessian (Sackcloth) wall coverings .Friends of ours both worked and their cat had access to the house via a cat-flap. They arrived home one evening to find 'Misty' 18 inches from the hall ceiling having got it into its head to run up the hessian covered wall. Having reached it destination it then found it could not retract its claws and thus hung suspended for at least 6 hours.
I did not Laugh (Honest !)

Once again a while ago some other friends owned a Siamese tomcat. My wife and I went to dinner at their house one evening and found that the cat was lying in its basket near the fire and was moaning gently. It was explained that the poor bugger had been separated from its 'goolies' earlier that day and was not feeling too frisky, Coincidentally when my wife had me to the vets for the same procedure I lay in a basket next to the fire moaning though not gently for days .
Meanwhile later thar evening with the meal over we were sat enjoying a Bushmills or two when the cat,obviously feeling better crawled out of its basket,inspected the site where once its 'nuts' had been then proceded to start climbing over my outstretched legs. Now as luck would have it (bad luck) its claws entered an inch at least into my flesh and I reacted by involuntarily moving my feet. Sadly as I did this I caught 'Samsons' tenderest parts causing him to yell like a bloody Banshee and shoot across the room and up the curtains until his head hit the ceiling.
Once again I did not laugh( Well not until I got home any how.)


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 12:19 PM

Jimlad, I fear I would have laughed on both occasions, given there was no lasting harm to the cat (barring loss of 'goolies'). Although if your friends have a cat with one inch long claws, they should have a licence for harbouring a cougar in their home.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: jimlad9
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 12:24 PM

Bee

I forgot to tell you it weighed 120lbs,had stripes and 6 inch long fangs.


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Subject: RE: Cat Deterrents
From: Greg F.
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 06:34 PM

The barn fell in a windstorm; no more swallows... There were still lots of Bobolinks, until the ... nests were destroyed by the early harvest. Haven't seen one on the property since.

But, ya see, they weren't dead- they simply moved on to appropriate habitat elsewhere.

Yes, indeed! I agree. Farmers & humans of all types kill critters. Yes, wind farms do indeed kill birds. As do lighthouses, tornados, hawks and probably the Four Horsemen into the bargain as well.

None of the above, however, changes the documented evidence that free-ranging cats unnecessarily kill substantial numbers of critters - not only birds - and that cats are a substantual constituent part of an admittedly larger problem.

PS: I don't dislike cats. I have cats, fer chrissake. But with pets- ooops! Excuse me - COMPANION ANIMALS - also come certain responsibilities that too damn many people shirk.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: terrier
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 07:09 PM

Our she cat, Socks,named for obvious reasons,during Summer would sit on a convenient stable half door and nonchalantly pick off the swallows as they flew through the doorway to their nests inside the stables. Using her tail as a counterbalance she could easily reach up with her paw to do the dirty deed, until one day, Storm, our Irish Draft Cross was loose in the yard; seeing socks' tail waving around was too good a chance to miss. She picked Socks up by the tail and triumphantly walked off gently swaying her head from side to side. Who says equines don't have a sense of humour. Although Socks had no lasting ill affects from her ordeal, I've not seen her sitting on a stable door since. How's that for a Cat deterrent. Get a HORSE.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 18 Feb 07 - 07:33 PM

Yes, Greg F. Many pet owners are assholes.
Yes, cats kill critters, and thank heavens for that, otherwise we'd be overrun with squirrels here. The two years between cats resulted in us having to re-insulate over the garage, fish a trapped weasel out of a wall, trap an endless stream of deermice and house mice, and we still have a bat problem (the cat's just six months old).


We will continue to disagree on the issue. I think cat predation is an overblown 'problem' which takes attention away from far more serious killers. You seem to think I'm an 'animal rights raver' or something (at least, you've implied it twice now), which suggests you haven't actually read my posts (re: bobolinks, for example; the first batch didn't migrate to a suitable place, (and again missing the point, there are no suitable habitats left for them in NS at least because farming practices changed), because the daft things don't: they suicide on the nest.

Perhaps we should stick to talking about music. ;-)


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Gurney
Date: 19 Feb 07 - 02:29 AM

I used to work for a firm that made that granular cat repellant. Atapulgite/cat litter, Isopropyl Alcohol, and ???? What was it??


No-one will ever stop cats going where they want to. Their territory goes to where some other cat attacks them, and it does not even recognise man-made boundaries. They will shit in anything that they can use to cover up the deposit (if Mummy taught them right) and that is useful as a boundary marker.

If you don't feed them and you have no loose cover, they will just pass through without bothering you.
It is dogs that really shit all over the place. Never in the same place twice, and much more of it than a cat.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Georgiansilver
Date: 19 Feb 07 - 03:11 AM

The 'Scat-a-cat' granular really has worked for my premises.....I was truly fed up with having to clean up after cats...now I don't have to!


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Michael
Date: 19 Feb 07 - 06:00 AM

Locally, Starbucks (Paht!)give away bags of coffee grounds which someone collects for me (it's supposed to deter slugs). I have noticed that cats keep off where I sprinkle it.

Mike


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Georgiansilver
Date: 19 Feb 07 - 07:08 AM

Sodium Chloride (common salt) is good for slugs...it dissolves them.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: jimlad9
Date: 19 Feb 07 - 09:19 AM

FIAT built a car assembly plant near here. It had totally automated assembly line controlled by contact switches.
When the plant was up and running a fault was discovered which was instead of the components,doors in this case,arriving in sequence at the requred location the door sections arrived in multiple random numbers. It took days to locate the problem which was due to the works cat attacking the flexible extension pieces on the contact switch at the previous assembly point.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Greg F.
Date: 19 Feb 07 - 10:12 AM

...cats kill critters, and thank heavens for that, otherwise we'd be overrun with squirrels...

Attack of the fifty foot squirrels!! AAAIIIEEEeeeeeeeeeeee!!!
Talk about an "overblown problem". Fix the holes in your buildings and you won't have a squirrel OR a bat problem. I'd have thought you'd welcome the weasel- they eat mice, you know.

an endless stream of deermice and house mice
An indoor cat should take care of these very nicely, thank you.

You seem to think I'm an 'animal rights raver'

Fascinating- you know what I think! Ever consider joining up with the CIA's remote imaging project?

and again missing the point, there are no suitable habitats left for them in NS at least because farming practices changed

Ah, but then, you see, I don't have your gift of mind reading, and you didn't say that. (Always assuming you've surveyed all NS to identify bobolink habitat.)

And now, after a word from our sponsors,back to the music ;>)


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,karen philipp
Date: 22 Apr 08 - 12:37 PM

we have so many cats in our neighborhood that it is a constant battle keeping things cleaned up. they poop on the lawns and do not cover it.

we have a neighbor that feeds the cat and it draws more wild life too
an opossum!!!

i am at the public library i as of yet have an e-mail soon

dry horseradish then watering will set off the smell
they don't like it black pepper and red pepper flakes help too

it is the owners that need to get thier act toghther
karen


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: bankley
Date: 22 Apr 08 - 01:31 PM

as long as they don't shit in your headphones,
then it's time to get out the BB gun


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Ebbie
Date: 22 Apr 08 - 02:35 PM

"There was a valid purpose for keeping cats hundreds of years ago when rats and mice abounded but now?"

"Yes, cats kill critters, and thank heavens for that, otherwise we'd be overrun with squirrels here. The two years between cats resulted in us having to re-insulate over the garage, fish a trapped weasel out of a wall, trap an endless stream of deermice and house mice, and we still have a bat problem (the cat's just six months old)."

I am in full agreement with the sentiments expressed and implied above. There are reasons that we are not over-run with varmints. Have you ever seen an underground rat 'city'? Fascinating and precise but not pretty in its implications.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: mouldy
Date: 23 Apr 08 - 04:40 AM

I wish I'd had a cat a week or so ago, then the rats that dug up the floor in my shed might have gone away instead of me having to spend a lot of money on poison. It's the hazard of living in a rural area - it seems every time an old building gets taken down I end up with rattus rattus moving in!

I am planning on getting a kitten in a few months - my first - and hope it will get on ok with the dog, who is not aggressive towards them as yet.

Andrea


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,dianavan
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 12:45 AM

I have a plant called Rue that is really stinky and cats hate it. When I plant, I harvest the tips of the Rue and sprinkle it around the freshly dug soil. In other areas (if I run out of Rue) I simply put stakes in the bed or cover it with chicken wire. Cats don't seem to bother the soil if the plants are established. They seem to prefer the freshly turned soil. When you buy starts from the nursery, they often put them in a black plastic tray that is sort of 'netted' on the bottom. Turn it upside down to protect small beds of seeds.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Amos
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 01:20 AM

Publishing the names of their johns acts as a cat deterrent in some neighborhoods...


A


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,Windsor Knot
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 05:18 AM

A .22 is an excellent deterrent.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Thompson
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 05:33 AM

I'm surprised at the 'joking' cruelty expressed by some posters here. But maybe it's useful; I'll know who not to talk to, and who to keep away from.

Jimlad, the first thing to do is to clear your garden of cat shit, because it's obviously currently recognised by cats as an ok place to defecate.

(Usually this means an area that isn't any other cat's territory.)

Keep it clear, and water well so that the inviting smell dissipates. Scatter some cayenne wherever there had been shit, to cover up the smell.

Now, if you don't mind a little work, get chicken wire and put it down just under the soil. Cats cover their shit, and they dislike catching their claws in this wire.

The ScareCrow sounds great.

That page of statistics didn't open for me, by the way, Bee.

Jimlad, while the cats using your garden as a toilet may be the local pusses, they may also be feral. If you have a population of feral cats, you could call your local humane society or SPCA, and with any luck they'll capture and neuter the cats, gradually putting an end to the problem.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 05:45 AM

Cat's kill thousands of songbirds and small mammals.
Owning a cat is a responsibilty taken too lightly by many people.
They think cats are the ideal pet for those who are out at work all day, and fit their back door with a cat flap, and blithely leave the animal free to roam, and kill anything it can get hold of.
People who do this, are totally irresponsible, and are causing the unnecessary deaths of so many small creatures.
A responsible cat owner, does not have a cat flap fitted.

G

Cat facts


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Rapparee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 09:39 AM

Coyote urine. You can buy it in stores that sell hunting stuff. Put a few drops here, a few drops there.

Bloodmeal will also work with some animals.

But a live trap and trip to the local animal shelter always seems best to me.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Rapparee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 09:42 AM

I have no sympathy for those who dump their cats and dogs and let them go feral. Farmers and ranchers don't want them and won't take them and the animals suffer and (usually) die, sometimes in a long and painful process. I pity the animals, but as for those who dump them, well, "do unto others...."


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 10:01 AM

Thompson, the link is a year old - resurrected thread here.

Giok, your link: it's a UK study, and I note it contains several very good suggestions for reducing cat predation. I note it makes no comparison to the percentage of small mammals and birds that are killed by human building, farming, motor vehicles, and other behaviours (like highrise windows, habitat destruction (particularly but not restricted to the places they migrate to for the winters), insecticide use in agriculture, etc.) Studies like this (or the way it is presented) bother me, because they seem like an attempt to suggest that all would be well with wildlife if people got rid of their evil cats, so we can decide it's the cats/cat owners who are at fault and all the other destructive behaviour of humand can go on apace and have no effect.

It's a UK study. My cats are in rural Canada, in at night to avoid their becoming a prey item of coyotes or bobcats (pretty sure that's who got my last kitty), don't travel off the property further than next door, are invaluable in keeping rodents and other critters out of my house, and don't poop in my garden because they have an established outdoor location in the woods they like to use.

Do they kill the occasional bird? Yes, they do, but not often and it's usually a junco, one of the most common and numerous birds around here. Much more dangerous to birds are the goddamned sport fishermen who think herons, loons and mergansers and other fishing birds are competition, and try to get away with shooting them even though it is illegal. I'm presently engaged in yet another springtime battle with a few local examples of this clutch of knuckle-walkers to keep them from killing these birds.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: jonm
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 10:10 AM

I posted on here back in February 2007, when the green gloop I spread on my gravel was about a week old.

Last month, I noticed the cat cr@p was back and bought another bottle (they seem to be commonplace in pet stores round here) and started the process again. Seems like good value for money.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Amos
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 10:21 AM

You could try your own urine, too.

Works for racoons.


A


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Rapparee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 10:26 AM

Especially if you don't see the raccoon you're applying it to.

It seems to me that you have to differentiate between cats in urban and rural environments. Dogs too for that matter, although there you're talking about a different animal with a different temperament.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,Dicky Bow
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 10:28 AM

I have heard that Windsor Knot is a cat lover.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 11:07 AM

When do you run out of ties and cravats, Guest?


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Becca72
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 01:40 PM

Everytime I look at this thread title I see "cat detergents".


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 02:36 PM

'Cat detergents'... are there any, magic ones like you see in dishwasher ads? Snowball can't stay clean or unmatted for more than half an hour. I just spent twenty minutes pulling old raspberry twigs out of his fine long pantaloons and plumy tail. That's after drying and brushing him when he came in soaking wet earlier. His 'armpits' are already matted up again.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Little Hawk
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 02:54 PM

Shave Snowball. The new svelte, trim look of your shaved cat will astound you.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 02:58 PM

You need a monkey Bee.

G


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Detergents
From: Donuel
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 03:12 PM

Are the cat detergents for cats or is the detergent made from cats?


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 03:21 PM

It's a short step from catsup to catsoap.

G


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Becca72
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 03:46 PM

Please note the cat in the video is (or was) Siamese. I suspet that is a big reason it tolerated the humiliation of being washed by a monkey. :-) Mine are part Siamese and we think that's why they love the water.

If cat detergent is made from cats, what is baby oil made from?


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 06:03 PM

Oh no, Giok, they'll think i'm the one who stole that poor little monkey from the Cherrybrook zoo! And..."catsup to catsoap"....!!!


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 06:05 PM

Oh yeah... the stolen monkey story... poor little guy.

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080423/monkey_stolen_080423/20080423?hub=SciTech


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: katlaughing
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 06:10 PM

Bee, there are a couple of grooming sprays on THIS PAGE which can be used daily and are supposed to help with tangles and matting.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Rapparee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 09:18 PM

Or cat food. Or dog food. And what is angel food made from? How about devil's food? If you ate some angel food and then some devil's food would they cancel each other out, like pasta and antipasto?


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: Bee
Date: 24 Apr 08 - 10:44 PM

Thanks, Kat - maybe I'll try something like the grooming spray... time for a trip to town, I think.


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,Mare
Date: 19 May 08 - 08:11 PM

I work very hard in my garden and to think that I have to deter a cat that isn't even my own problem pisses me right off...I like all animals and it isn't the cats fault that their owners are complete twits and can't take care of them....Jeeze...Would you get a dog and let it runs where ever it wants?
There should be a a course for people who get cats and brag that they are outdoor cats and don't bother them at all...Hello...They are bothering your neighbor...
Get a grip cat owners and yes it is cat shite in my garden....
The scientist was busy so I got my neighbors kid to check it out and sure enough it's from a cat...Really do you see dogs crawling through your garden to crap in there...

Kudo's to you cat owners who are responsible..


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Subject: RE: BS: Cat Deterrents
From: GUEST,snow drop
Date: 11 Sep 08 - 11:52 AM

im fed up with cat poo in garden back and front, one neighbours cats shit in my back garden, and my other neighbours cats shit in front. my solution is to bag it and put it by there front door, or throw it into there garden where they can tread it in.


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