Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Install an eye hook on the outside of the door. The hole can easily be filled with putty and covered with a little paint when you are done. Cheap and effective.
My thought exactly. Also make sure to put a huge sign ( or caution tape or duct tape or...) making it clear that the door is not to be opened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can a friend keep her for a couple of days? Or maybe Rover?
Rover boards dogs, not cats. Maybe because cats hide?
Anonymous wrote:Crate?Anonymous wrote:This cat can open bedroom and bathroom doors with the type of lock we have. Management has scheduled three days of work next month. They are not consecutive or we would board. She injured her nose during short lockups in the hard carrier to go to the vet. I bought a soft sided kennel online. She shredded through the netting in four hours. What other options exist?
Crate?Anonymous wrote:This cat can open bedroom and bathroom doors with the type of lock we have. Management has scheduled three days of work next month. They are not consecutive or we would board. She injured her nose during short lockups in the hard carrier to go to the vet. I bought a soft sided kennel online. She shredded through the netting in four hours. What other options exist?
Anonymous wrote:Install an eye hook on the outside of the door. The hole can easily be filled with putty and covered with a little paint when you are done. Cheap and effective.