Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I've seen a fox at the other end of the neighborhood (0.75 miles away) near the woods but not at ours that is much less forested and close to office buildings. I've seen the cats using the grass in a neighbor's yard to pee. I didn't confirm that the cat pooped there, but given the pee in grass, I assume it's possible. It's not dogs given the fencing, so seems quite possible it's the cats. Have never seen raccoons nearby.
Anonymous wrote:There should be a special place reserved in Hell for people who let their precious cats outdoors.
Just sayin'.........
Anonymous wrote:OP, here. I've seen a fox at the other end of the neighborhood (0.75 miles away) near the woods but not at ours that is much less forested and close to office buildings. I've seen the cats using the grass in a neighbor's yard to pee. I didn't confirm that the cat pooped there, but given the pee in grass, I assume it's possible. It's not dogs given the fencing, so seems quite possible it's the cats. Have never seen raccoons nearby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would call animal control and report it as a lost cat. I'm an indoor only cat owner and have no tolerance for outdoor cats.
It's kind of shitty to file a false report with animal control-- plus what if they trap the cat and it is euthanized? Why not talk to the owners as a first step? Put out mothballs, as others suggested. Is the cat really hurting anything? No. As many have said, it's not the cat that is pooping in the open.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it legal to let your cat run wild in Arlington? Having issues with the neighbor's cats pooping in our yard regularly. I don't want to pick it up, but hate having my kids running through the yard with multiple piles of it in the grass.
Do you see them pooping in your grass? How do you know it's a cat leaving the mess?