Anonymous wrote:We had a free roaming cat that brought several families mice. When we moved we would get calls to make sure he was ok. He lives indoors now, but if our neighborhood allowed it he’d be outside. Not on topic but another viewpoint. He was once an alley cat - I adopted him once he asked to be a pet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, all these suggestions—motion-activated sprinklers, wolf piss (shudder)—just drive the cats into your neighbors’ yards. They aren’t solutions.
Well...they are for OP depending on how much she cares about that!
That seems to encapsulate the TNR attitude—cats trump people and wildlife and human health concerns.
And, please explain why OP should be dropping $200 on multiple sprinklers and hoses, or spraying her yard and with stinky wolf piss every 10 weeks, or why her neighbors should be doing this, when none of them created the problem.
The woman with the cat colony made this problem and should be paying for her neighbors’ sprinklers.
TNR cats are wildlife and party of an ecosystem
Bullsh*t. Cats are non-native and definitely not part of the ecosystem. Nothing around here evolved to deal with cat predation. Feral/outdoor cats are incredibly damaging to our ecosystem.
Wild cats are part of our human‐made ecosystem. They are nocturnal and catch mice. I'm not talking about irresponsible pet owners who let their cats outdoors. I'm taking about fetal cats, born in the wild and unable to domesticate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, all these suggestions—motion-activated sprinklers, wolf piss (shudder)—just drive the cats into your neighbors’ yards. They aren’t solutions.
Well...they are for OP depending on how much she cares about that!
That seems to encapsulate the TNR attitude—cats trump people and wildlife and human health concerns.
And, please explain why OP should be dropping $200 on multiple sprinklers and hoses, or spraying her yard and with stinky wolf piss every 10 weeks, or why her neighbors should be doing this, when none of them created the problem.
The woman with the cat colony made this problem and should be paying for her neighbors’ sprinklers.
TNR cats are wildlife and party of an ecosystem
Bullsh*t. Cats are non-native and definitely not part of the ecosystem. Nothing around here evolved to deal with cat predation. Feral/outdoor cats are incredibly damaging to our ecosystem.
Wild cats are part of our human‐made ecosystem. They are nocturnal and catch mice. I'm not talking about irresponsible pet owners who let their cats outdoors. I'm taking about fetal cats, born in the wild and unable to domesticate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, all these suggestions—motion-activated sprinklers, wolf piss (shudder)—just drive the cats into your neighbors’ yards. They aren’t solutions.
Well...they are for OP depending on how much she cares about that!
That seems to encapsulate the TNR attitude—cats trump people and wildlife and human health concerns.
And, please explain why OP should be dropping $200 on multiple sprinklers and hoses, or spraying her yard and with stinky wolf piss every 10 weeks, or why her neighbors should be doing this, when none of them created the problem.
The woman with the cat colony made this problem and should be paying for her neighbors’ sprinklers.
TNR cats are wildlife and party of an ecosystem
Bullsh*t. Cats are non-native and definitely not part of the ecosystem. Nothing around here evolved to deal with cat predation. Feral/outdoor cats are incredibly damaging to our ecosystem.
Anonymous wrote:We had a neighbor's cat using my front garden as a litter box. I bought a motion activated pressurized air sprayer and pointed them in the general direction. They blast cold air when someone gets close. Even I jumped, but they don't hurt at all. No more cat poop.
Not sure how many you would need. It is irritating that others think that having a cat means leaving them roam and poop all over the neighborhood, but all I can do is instruct them that my flower bed is not a fun place to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, all these suggestions—motion-activated sprinklers, wolf piss (shudder)—just drive the cats into your neighbors’ yards. They aren’t solutions.
Well...they are for OP depending on how much she cares about that!
That seems to encapsulate the TNR attitude—cats trump people and wildlife and human health concerns.
And, please explain why OP should be dropping $200 on multiple sprinklers and hoses, or spraying her yard and with stinky wolf piss every 10 weeks, or why her neighbors should be doing this, when none of them created the problem.
The woman with the cat colony made this problem and should be paying for her neighbors’ sprinklers.
TNR cats are wildlife and party of an ecosystem
Bullsh*t. Cats are non-native and definitely not part of the ecosystem. Nothing around here evolved to deal with cat predation. Feral/outdoor cats are incredibly damaging to our ecosystem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, all these suggestions—motion-activated sprinklers, wolf piss (shudder)—just drive the cats into your neighbors’ yards. They aren’t solutions.
Well...they are for OP depending on how much she cares about that!
That seems to encapsulate the TNR attitude—cats trump people and wildlife and human health concerns.
And, please explain why OP should be dropping $200 on multiple sprinklers and hoses, or spraying her yard and with stinky wolf piss every 10 weeks, or why her neighbors should be doing this, when none of them created the problem.
The woman with the cat colony made this problem and should be paying for her neighbors’ sprinklers.
TNR cats are wildlife and party of an ecosystem
+1 Beat me to it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have several alley cats (Blue Collar Cats) that patrol the neighborhood, fed by a neighbor. The cats have decided to make their home turf our backyard, and are pooping all over my garden and lawn, and I'm getting really tired of it. My question is, if I set up a litter box for them outside, would they use it instead of my garden? And would more than one cat use the same litter box?
Trap them and drop off at the shelter. Your neighbor never needs to know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, all these suggestions—motion-activated sprinklers, wolf piss (shudder)—just drive the cats into your neighbors’ yards. They aren’t solutions.
Well...they are for OP depending on how much she cares about that!
That seems to encapsulate the TNR attitude—cats trump people and wildlife and human health concerns.
And, please explain why OP should be dropping $200 on multiple sprinklers and hoses, or spraying her yard and with stinky wolf piss every 10 weeks, or why her neighbors should be doing this, when none of them created the problem.
The woman with the cat colony made this problem and should be paying for her neighbors’ sprinklers.
TNR cats are wildlife and party of an ecosystem
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, all these suggestions—motion-activated sprinklers, wolf piss (shudder)—just drive the cats into your neighbors’ yards. They aren’t solutions.
Well...they are for OP depending on how much she cares about that!
That seems to encapsulate the TNR attitude—cats trump people and wildlife and human health concerns.
And, please explain why OP should be dropping $200 on multiple sprinklers and hoses, or spraying her yard and with stinky wolf piss every 10 weeks, or why her neighbors should be doing this, when none of them created the problem.
The woman with the cat colony made this problem and should be paying for her neighbors’ sprinklers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have several alley cats (Blue Collar Cats) that patrol the neighborhood, fed by a neighbor. The cats have decided to make their home turf our backyard, and are pooping all over my garden and lawn, and I'm getting really tired of it. My question is, if I set up a litter box for them outside, would they use it instead of my garden? And would more than one cat use the same litter box?
Trap them and drop off at the shelter. Your neighbor never needs to know.
+1 But if you want to be sneaky, remove the blue collar. Of course it might be chipped, but you don’t need to have cats pooping in your yard and killing your garden.
I’d like to see numbers on what these animals are actually doing in terms of rodent control vs. the damage they’re doing to dwindling bird populations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have several alley cats (Blue Collar Cats) that patrol the neighborhood, fed by a neighbor. The cats have decided to make their home turf our backyard, and are pooping all over my garden and lawn, and I'm getting really tired of it. My question is, if I set up a litter box for them outside, would they use it instead of my garden? And would more than one cat use the same litter box?
Trap them and drop off at the shelter. Your neighbor never needs to know.