Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fill a water gun with paint and have some fun with it. Otherwise very strong vinegar or something very, very smelly.
To the PP saying that the cat wouldn't like plain water, I wouldn't really care about what the cat likes or doesn't. I'm trying to teach the owner a lesson. If the cat comes inside with wet paint every day (water based paint the first day, permanent after that) then they have some personal incentive to fix the problem. Selfish people don't care about others, you need to give them a personal incentive to do the right thing.
Gross. You're more of a turd than what the cat is leaving in the OP's garden. It's hard to imagine you are a mature adult. Most adults outgrow their childish pleasure in punishing others way before they become teens. Don't waste your time preaching about "selfish people don't care about others" or "incentive to do the right thing" since you are clueless about both. You are a closet sadist. Terrible neighbor material right there.
Forget about the cat -- I would keep my children and family away from you. But I'm sure people who interact with you get a good read on what you're all about on the inside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fill a water gun with paint and have some fun with it. Otherwise very strong vinegar or something very, very smelly.
To the PP saying that the cat wouldn't like plain water, I wouldn't really care about what the cat likes or doesn't. I'm trying to teach the owner a lesson. If the cat comes inside with wet paint every day (water based paint the first day, permanent after that) then they have some personal incentive to fix the problem. Selfish people don't care about others, you need to give them a personal incentive to do the right thing.
Gross. You're more of a turd than what the cat is leaving in the OP's garden. It's hard to imagine you are a mature adult. Most adults outgrow their childish pleasure in punishing others way before they become teens. Don't waste your time preaching about "selfish people don't care about others" or "incentive to do the right thing" since you are clueless about both. You are a closet sadist. Terrible neighbor material right there.
Forget about the cat -- I would keep my children and family away from you. But I'm sure people who interact with you get a good read on what you're all about on the inside.
Just keep your animals, trash and “family” on your own property and you won’t have a problem with any of your neighbors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fill a water gun with paint and have some fun with it. Otherwise very strong vinegar or something very, very smelly.
To the PP saying that the cat wouldn't like plain water, I wouldn't really care about what the cat likes or doesn't. I'm trying to teach the owner a lesson. If the cat comes inside with wet paint every day (water based paint the first day, permanent after that) then they have some personal incentive to fix the problem. Selfish people don't care about others, you need to give them a personal incentive to do the right thing.
Gross. You're more of a turd than what the cat is leaving in the OP's garden. It's hard to imagine you are a mature adult. Most adults outgrow their childish pleasure in punishing others way before they become teens. Don't waste your time preaching about "selfish people don't care about others" or "incentive to do the right thing" since you are clueless about both. You are a closet sadist. Terrible neighbor material right there.
Forget about the cat -- I would keep my children and family away from you. But I'm sure people who interact with you get a good read on what you're all about on the inside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd fill a water gun with paint and have some fun with it. Otherwise very strong vinegar or something very, very smelly.
To the PP saying that the cat wouldn't like plain water, I wouldn't really care about what the cat likes or doesn't. I'm trying to teach the owner a lesson. If the cat comes inside with wet paint every day (water based paint the first day, permanent after that) then they have some personal incentive to fix the problem. Selfish people don't care about others, you need to give them a personal incentive to do the right thing.
This is a very good idea. After using the watered down ammonia the cat stayed in their house and stopped using our vegetable garden as their personal potty. Cat crap should not be on food.
Anonymous wrote:I'd fill a water gun with paint and have some fun with it. Otherwise very strong vinegar or something very, very smelly.
To the PP saying that the cat wouldn't like plain water, I wouldn't really care about what the cat likes or doesn't. I'm trying to teach the owner a lesson. If the cat comes inside with wet paint every day (water based paint the first day, permanent after that) then they have some personal incentive to fix the problem. Selfish people don't care about others, you need to give them a personal incentive to do the right thing.
Anonymous wrote:They will never keep it inside until you have it covered in wet paint or similar. And you have a much better chance of doing that now before things like automatic sprinklers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's another idea. The cat needs a litter box. If you just try to take it away with nothing to replace it, he's not going to give up easily.
What if you get the cat a litter box and put it by your garden? You'd have to get his scent on it. it's not like you'd have to clean it often.
Umm you got the part where this is not her cat and she doesn’t want it on her property, right?
Anonymous wrote:Here's another idea. The cat needs a litter box. If you just try to take it away with nothing to replace it, he's not going to give up easily.
What if you get the cat a litter box and put it by your garden? You'd have to get his scent on it. it's not like you'd have to clean it often.
Anonymous wrote:Curious about the vinegar - do the cats not like it or is it just to alert the owner?
Anonymous wrote:Here's another idea. The cat needs a litter box. If you just try to take it away with nothing to replace it, he's not going to give up easily.
What if you get the cat a litter box and put it by your garden? You'd have to get his scent on it. it's not like you'd have to clean it often.