Anonymous wrote:If it is leaving dead mice in your yard that means it loves you. They only do that for people they have real affection for.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pets are still animals and having a pet doesn't mean that they stay indoors 24 hours a day (see dogs, walking).
Then walk your damn cat and clean up after it. I would have no qualms about taking a trespassing cat to the humane society.
that's psychotic to think you would do this before just speaking to the cat's owners about how it affects you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cats are animals. Keeping them indoors 24 hrs a day is cruel. Unfortunately they can't read property boundaries and do climb fences. But not everybody is like you. We love our neighbor's cat to pieces and it makes my kid's day when the neighbor cat comes to visit us (and she's always rewarded with some petting.)
This is not a fact. It is your opinion.
There are major consequences to letting cats roam. They kill native bird populations and the cats themselves are vulnerable to coyotes, foxes, cars/traffic, disease.
It is cruel to allow pet cats to roam.
My fat outdoor cat has killed zero birds, yet I've seen black rat snakes strangle and kill plenty of baby birds in their nests! Where's the outcry?? People should keep their black rat snakes indoors or on leashes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cats are animals. Keeping them indoors 24 hrs a day is cruel. Unfortunately they can't read property boundaries and do climb fences. But not everybody is like you. We love our neighbor's cat to pieces and it makes my kid's day when the neighbor cat comes to visit us (and she's always rewarded with some petting.)
This is not a fact. It is your opinion.
There are major consequences to letting cats roam. They kill native bird populations and the cats themselves are vulnerable to coyotes, foxes, cars/traffic, disease.
It is cruel to allow pet cats to roam.
My fat outdoor cat has killed zero birds, yet I've seen black rat snakes strangle and kill plenty of baby birds in their nests! Where's the outcry?? People should keep their black rat snakes indoors or on leashes!
Oh shut up. You don't know that your cat hasn't killed any birds and its abusive to over feed the poor thing to boot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pets are still animals and having a pet doesn't mean that they stay indoors 24 hours a day (see dogs, walking).
Then walk your damn cat and clean up after it. I would have no qualms about taking a trespassing cat to the humane society.
that's psychotic to think you would do this before just speaking to the cat's owners about how it affects you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pets are still animals and having a pet doesn't mean that they stay indoors 24 hours a day (see dogs, walking).
Then walk your damn cat and clean up after it. I would have no qualms about taking a trespassing cat to the humane society.
Anonymous wrote:There's been a HUGE surge in Lyme disease concurrent with the push to reduce the outdoor cat population.
Lyme disease's primary reservoir is white-footed mice and other small rodents (chipmunks, etc) NOT deer (deer are the end-stage blood meal, and can't pass on Lyme disease, only small rodents have the bacteria at high enough concentrations in their blood to infect ticks and then those ticks infect humans).
Cats control small rodents much better than poison and traps. It's not a coincidence that we're seeing this dramatic surge in illness now that cats are mostly kept indoors. I'd rather see a few dead mice on my lawn than worry about my kids having permanent neurological symptoms from missing an infected tick during our daily tick checks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cats are animals. Keeping them indoors 24 hrs a day is cruel. Unfortunately they can't read property boundaries and do climb fences. But not everybody is like you. We love our neighbor's cat to pieces and it makes my kid's day when the neighbor cat comes to visit us (and she's always rewarded with some petting.)
This is not a fact. It is your opinion.
There are major consequences to letting cats roam. They kill native bird populations and the cats themselves are vulnerable to coyotes, foxes, cars/traffic, disease.
It is cruel to allow pet cats to roam.
My fat outdoor cat has killed zero birds, yet I've seen black rat snakes strangle and kill plenty of baby birds in their nests! Where's the outcry?? People should keep their black rat snakes indoors or on leashes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Clicked on this thread because there is a cat who thinks our doormat is its litter box. WHY?
Anyways I just got a new doormat and sprinkled it with white pepper and some cayenne pepper (but not too much cayenne because we'll track it onto our carpet).
I truly don't get it. I think it's neglected and left outside, and my kids have treated it with kindness--maybe it thinks it is part of our family now and so must do the family business as close as possible to where an indoor litter box would be?
Are you sure itnis a cat and not some other animal? Cats go where they can bury the evidence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cats are animals. Keeping them indoors 24 hrs a day is cruel. Unfortunately they can't read property boundaries and do climb fences. But not everybody is like you. We love our neighbor's cat to pieces and it makes my kid's day when the neighbor cat comes to visit us (and she's always rewarded with some petting.)
This is not a fact. It is your opinion.
There are major consequences to letting cats roam. They kill native bird populations and the cats themselves are vulnerable to coyotes, foxes, cars/traffic, disease.
It is cruel to allow pet cats to roam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Clicked on this thread because there is a cat who thinks our doormat is its litter box. WHY?
Anyways I just got a new doormat and sprinkled it with white pepper and some cayenne pepper (but not too much cayenne because we'll track it onto our carpet).
I truly don't get it. I think it's neglected and left outside, and my kids have treated it with kindness--maybe it thinks it is part of our family now and so must do the family business as close as possible to where an indoor litter box would be?
Are you sure itnis a cat and not some other animal? Cats go where they can bury the evidence.
+1. Unless you are finding cat shit in your sandbox, I'm surprised you're seeing cat shit at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Clicked on this thread because there is a cat who thinks our doormat is its litter box. WHY?
Anyways I just got a new doormat and sprinkled it with white pepper and some cayenne pepper (but not too much cayenne because we'll track it onto our carpet).
I truly don't get it. I think it's neglected and left outside, and my kids have treated it with kindness--maybe it thinks it is part of our family now and so must do the family business as close as possible to where an indoor litter box would be?
Are you sure itnis a cat and not some other animal? Cats go where they can bury the evidence.