Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Similar situation also happened to my friend while she was traveling - their cat didn't show up for meal time twice in the row, and there was no way he could escape outside. I searched that house top to bottom. Nada. Cat showed up in unfinished basement of the neighbors two doors down - imagine neighbors surprise when they saw a kitten walking up the stairs from the basement.
That is wild! How did she get to their basement?? Is it a connected townhouse?
Anonymous wrote:Similar situation also happened to my friend while she was traveling - their cat didn't show up for meal time twice in the row, and there was no way he could escape outside. I searched that house top to bottom. Nada. Cat showed up in unfinished basement of the neighbors two doors down - imagine neighbors surprise when they saw a kitten walking up the stairs from the basement.
Anonymous wrote:When we first brought our kittens home, they loved to hide inside the sofa. Not under the sofa ... inside. They'd crawl underneath and find (or create) a hole in the lining material, then climb up inside the frame.
They always came out eventually. They want to feel safe, and enclosed spaces like that feel safe to them. Chasing them was counterproductive, just made them climb deeper into the frame. They came out when they were darned well ready to come out, and not a moment before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's inside the house - shell show up eventually. Just keep it quiet and listen. I would actually keep doors closed so it's not running from one place to another, and put food out in most likely space.
And "funny"story from me - our cat somehow got into the AC vent on the floor and was stuck there. We discovered her almost 24 hrs later because kids heard her meowing under the floor in their bedroom. We had to cut through ceiling and vents themselves in the middle of the night to get her out.
Getting stuck in the vent this time of the year will be the worst case possible. If cat can't turn around and hot air blowing in his face will certainly kill the cat.
More likely is that the car is under a sofa or somewhere in the closet.
But seriously, I certainly hope so. I don't know why people think stuck in the vent is funny. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's inside the house - shell show up eventually. Just keep it quiet and listen. I would actually keep doors closed so it's not running from one place to another, and put food out in most likely space.
And "funny"story from me - our cat somehow got into the AC vent on the floor and was stuck there. We discovered her almost 24 hrs later because kids heard her meowing under the floor in their bedroom. We had to cut through ceiling and vents themselves in the middle of the night to get her out.
Getting stuck in the vent this time of the year will be the worst case possible. If cat can't turn around and hot air blowing in his face will certainly kill the cat.
Anonymous wrote:If it's inside the house - shell show up eventually. Just keep it quiet and listen. I would actually keep doors closed so it's not running from one place to another, and put food out in most likely space.
And "funny"story from me - our cat somehow got into the AC vent on the floor and was stuck there. We discovered her almost 24 hrs later because kids heard her meowing under the floor in their bedroom. We had to cut through ceiling and vents themselves in the middle of the night to get her out.