Cats

BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
edited June 17 in Purgatory
I don't have cats myself but our street is 'cat city'. Almost every house has a cat and they all have cat flaps and wander free. Some are very exotic breeds and come and 'talk' to me when I don't have the dogs with me. It's a very quiet cul-de-sac where kids play so no danger from cars.

I was interested to read this on another thread.
@Boogie we've kept our cats in at night for over 20 years to try and help the wildlife a little bit, however when we moved to a new home with direct access to native creatures on tap, I decided that wouldn't be good enough. I'd not seen them catch anything at the previous house, but know studies of cats indicate they have a wide range of travel and they hunt even when you never see them do it. Many new suburbs are designated as cat containment areas, how successfully that's adhered to, I am not sure.

Cats were very cranky when first leashed and walked, I was hissed at each time for a couple of weeks. Now they know the door opening sound (screen door is kept closed as a secondary barrier), and rush to the door to be leashed (one wears a small dog harness) and know they will have their wander around the garden, a roll in the gravel, a good sniff of everything and then they are perfectly happy. I don't always achieve doing it daily, depending on weather and other commitments, but we make sure it happens several times a week. They have cat towers and scratching posts and have not rejected me as official chief cuddller, so I think I'm ok and so are they.

As far as I know I indoor cats are not a thing in the UK.

What do others think?

What about Germany? My son lives there and is about to get two kittens.
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Comments

  • I had made a bit of a tangental post on the other thread I omitted some information. Feral cats as well as other animals, (deer, camels, rabbits) are a big problem in rural areas. Some cats get enormous when they are in the wild and hunting at will. We have many small creatures that are just not able to exist with cats hunting at will and are at risk or have already become extinct.

    It's not just small mammals also lizards and birds too. We have a number of beautiful birds that come to our garden and I want to enjoy them for as long as possible. I know there are roaming cats in our area and I debate whether to get a council supplied trap or not, as we are not in a cat containment suburb. I do think there might be a more recent rule that allows old cats to continue to roam, but not younger cats, but I need to check that.

    I know there are those in Oz who would like cats to be completely eliminated from our lives and environments. I do understand their perspective, but do think if they are provided for and managed properly, they can be a source of joy and companionship for many people. It is almost impossible to police people doing the right thing by the environment and their pets as well.

  • Gill HGill H Shipmate
    Here in the UK, many adoption centres will not let you adopt a cat if you don't have sufficient space for them outside. However, there are exceptions for cats designated as 'indoor cats' - they may be blind, deaf or have FIV (the feline equivalent of HIV) which makes it unsafe for them to be outside.

    When we lived in London, we were three floors up and right next to a busy road. There is no way we could have let a cat outside, and it wouldn't have been possible to build a 'catio' where we were.

    Thanks to the Mayhew Centre, dear Spikey came into our lives, 17 years old and deaf. Her previous owner had to go into a nursing home, so fortunately she had been well-loved and not mistreated. We had three happy years with her. Since she was older and reasonably placid, we were able to put a harness on her and take her to the park, for what we euphemistically called a walk. In reality she was mostly carried or sitting, but she did like to sniff around!

    She became something of a fixture in a local cafe, where she liked to sit in the window and look out at the world. We would always sit at the front table so we could hold her lead and let her sit there. On one occasion we popped in and someone else was sitting at that table, so we started to move towards another table at the back. The owner immediately came over and asked the guy if he would move so the cat could have her place!

    After Spikey, Cookie came into our lives thanks to a friend who was offered a council house and wasn't allowed to take the cat with her. Cookie had always been an indoor cat, so our flat wasn't a problem. When we moved to our present house, we've still kept her inside as there is a busy road in front of our house and no pavement.

    However, we are about to move into my parents' old place, which has a small garden at the front and the back, and much less traffic on the road. There are already several cats living nearby (and yes, we know them by name!) So it may well be that eventually we let Cookie explore outside, once she's settled down.
  • SandemaniacSandemaniac Shipmate
    Our neighbours certainly have indoor cats in a catio* - to my amusement, they have one that was not the sex it was sold as,
    which they promptly christened Lola when they found out.

    Most of the cats locally, however, roam, which is something of a source of friction when I discover a freshly deposited turd whilst gardening. See also predating on our nestboxes (any cat trying that now has to deal with pyracantha trained over the lid to stop the bastards from sitting there waiting for a bird to emerge). On the other hand one of the arch-roamers has been seen to emerge from the bottom of our garden carrying a rat, so it's not all bad.

    You wouldn't believe reading that that I am actually quite fond of moggies, would you? It's the turd landmine that I object to...

    *my granny briefly had one, which she referred to as her "pussy parlour". We didn't enlighten her...
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    We have a fair number of feral cats around the place. Some efforts are made to catch and neuter them, but they provide valuable service, particularly around the tip, keeping rats and mice under control. It can be slightly unnerving going to the tip and seeing three identical heads turn towards you from a bed built atop a mound of rubbish.
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    Cats are native to the UK - I do appreciate we have far more than we would if they weren’t kept as companion animals - but they have been living with people in the UK for thousands of years. I think therefore there is an extent to which they have carved out their niche in the ecosystem.

    There are strategies you can use to reduce predation by a cat you also allow to go outside. I think there is a lot to be said for keeping your cat in overnight - it is also safer for them with respect to traffic.

    But, the publication of the absolute numbers of prey the cat population kill a year is less informative than it might be. To take a random example, say cats currently kill 500,000 starling fledglings a year (hypothetical number I couldn’t find numbers by species). Imagine I wave a magic wand and they kill 0 next year - what do you think would happen ? Likewise if they suddenly stopped killing mice ? What percentage of the hatched fledglings is that number ? In countries without significant cat predation what percentage of similar species make it to adulthood.? If cats didn’t take them, would this simply result in other predators, weasels for example, filling the gap ?

    We would almost certainly, within a year or so start talking about whether there needs to be a cull program or similar. A lot of the pressure on species in the uk is about habitat loss, and indoor cat culture can’t solve that.
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    edited June 17
    Our neighbours certainly have indoor cats in a catio* - to my amusement, they have one that was not the sex it was sold as,
    which they promptly christened Lola when they found out.

    Most of the cats locally, however, roam, which is something of a source of friction when I discover a freshly deposited turd whilst gardening. See also predating on our nestboxes (any cat trying that now has to deal with pyracantha trained over the lid to stop the bastards from sitting there waiting for a bird to emerge). On the other hand one of the arch-roamers has been seen to emerge from the bottom of our garden carrying a rat, so it's not all bad.

    You wouldn't believe reading that that I am actually quite fond of moggies, would you? It's the turd landmine that I object to...

    *my granny briefly had one, which she referred to as her "pussy parlour". We didn't enlighten her...

    Have you tried lion’s roar products ?

    Basically, if a cat thinks a lion lives in your garden they’ll steer clear.
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    edited June 17
    Most of the cats locally, however, roam, which is something of a source of friction when I discover a freshly deposited turd whilst gardening

    Lemon juice sprinkled round the flower beds works a treat to keep cats off. I use one with added potassium which is good for the plants.




  • We got our tortoiseshell cat, Mochi, 18 months ago from a rescue centre and she is nearly 10. She had previously been a rural cat (she is a proficient tree climber) and we had been warned that she had caught birds and even a bat. As mentioned, rescue centres in the UK often require access outside. I was aware of the differences in cat-keeping across nations and I have seen occasional people walking cats on leads here, generally Chinese people. When we got Mochi it was amusing to read US rescue centres saying don’t let the cat out you’ll shorted its life expectancy while UK rescue centres said you had to allow access outside for health and exercise. In the global internet world this also leads to arguments on social media. If you go to somewhere like Tunisia you see stray cats wandering around the hotels and many Arabic countries treat cats as a communal resource which are fed by the local community (Tunisia has a neutering programme, the cats with clipped ears have been ‘done’.)

    How much Mochi goes out varies as she is quite timid and would prefer to accompany me in the daytime. But this spring she has been going out by herself more and occasionally goes out at night too. We live in a terrace with big gardens and she has plenty of room to explore out the back, the road in front of the house is not busy but she has little interest in going there as they are mostly paved drives. She has brought 4 birds into the house, luckily she does not kill them. Last week I rescued a robin in the kitchen. Once I sat down in my study one morning and 2 dunnocks started flying around my head. On the upside, there are no mice around.
    There are numerous cats in our street and I’ve seen at least 6 in our garden recently. Our old neighbours had 2 outdoor cats but our new neighbours have a ragdoll cat which is kept inside; though we found it on our patio a few weeks ago and returned it to them, so it has obviously not got the memo. It was very docile and tried to get in our house.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    edited June 17
    Our cat Plato went out and about, but we had no evidence that he killed anything. Then he had an intussusception (expensive vet bill) after which we were told to keep him on a low-protein diet (expensive low-protein food available from our vet).

    He immediately started supplementing his expensive low-protein diet with high-protein birds and mice.

    We reverted to his previous diet and he stopped hunting.

    Our last cat, Elizabeth, was ten when she came to us and not particularly interested in going outside. She'd follow me out if I was hanging up washing etc, but generally, she was an indoor cat.

    Like Doublethink, I think cats should be kept indoors overnight.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    Gill H wrote: »
    Here in the UK, many adoption centres will not let you adopt a cat if you don't have sufficient space for them outside.
    It’s the other way around on the US, where many adoption centers will not let you adopt a cat unless you commit to not letting the cat go outdoors. Vets here also strongly recommend cats being indoors only. This is partly for the sake of other wildlife, birds in particular, and partly for the health and safety of the cat. The average life expectancy for outdoor cats is significantly shorter than that of indoor cats.

    Our first cat was an indoor/outdoor cat; she was a stray or abandoned cat who “adopted” us when she was around 2 or 3. We let her go outside because she was so used to it. All of our cats since have been indoor only. That said, we do have a mesh backpack cats can ride in while we take a walk, and one cat in particular is amenable to a leash.


  • All my cats have been indoor cats, and I trained the last two to go on a leash. It was always great fun walking them and playing with them outdoors.

    My mother fed out half a tonne of various types of birdseed every winter for 35 years and would not tolerate cats hunting her precious birds. We fed our barn cats but they knew their place, and never approached the house.

    I read @Cheery Gardener and thought "what a lovely activity for them, and how considerate of the birds". Cats are cats, and they don't discriminate. Prey is prey, you can't blame them, but you can still reduce risk for local songbird and foraging bird populations.

    AFF
  • EigonEigon Shipmate
    I'm making friends with a cat who uses the back gardens as a shortcut. S/he (too fluffy to tell yet) doesn't come every morning, but they have got used to me going out to say hello, and have got as far as sniffing round the kitchen door.
    A friend has an indoor cat who used to be a feral farm cat - so keeping him indoors is the only way to ensure he won't wander off (which he did once, for several days). He's pretty elderly now, so he doesn't seem to mind being inside all the time.
  • Our neighbour in Norfolk used to have about 6 cats, very useful for keeping rats down, as we live next to a corn-dryer. However, they have all disappeared, so we are worried about influx of rats. I used to watch one cleaning his whiskers on the compost heap, quite cute.
  • Our cats have almost all enjoyed the outdoors at all times of the year. (The exception was one taken over from friend that looked and acted like the Queen Mother). Whenever we had two cats it was wonderful to watch them having fun outside, exploring and climbing trees for no obvious purpose other than fun. When one cat lost his eyesight he was inseparable from a kitten who became his eyes, and they still ran everywhere together. Another cat, Leonides, was a self-appointed therapy cat who stayed close when he was needed, but went out exploring the neighbourhood with Griffon when he wanted a break. Griffon would cross the road to visit his friend and was lucky to live until he had an untreatable medical emergency. He was an exceptional cat, and I had a sense of bereavement when he died that still astonishes me. He was a Good Cat.
  • There are several Cats in Arkland - they aren't feral (AFAIK) but do tend to roam freely, albeit presumably keeping to what they consider to be their own territory? - and discourage the Rats. There are a few Rats around, but they're not a problem (Cats have their uses).

    He wasn't an indoor Cat exactly, but the Church Of My Youth had an elderly organist, whose daughter had a number of mental health issues. The family owned a Cat, which the daughter would carry up the hill (their street was quite a steep one) before walking it down - on a lead...

    The coat which she invariably wore when airing the Cat sported some magnificent tatters, caused by carrying the animal (quite a large one IIRC) under her arm.

    Apparently, the poor girl (she was in her 40s by the time I knew her!) had had a Cat when she was much younger, and was greatly distressed when it was run over and killed in the street.
  • EnochEnoch Shipmate
    I'm sorry. This may shock, horrify and upset some who have posted on this thread. I'm no great cat enthusiast, but keeping a cat indoors all the time and not letting it out to wander around the garden/neighbourhood strikes me as cruelty to animals. It is on a par, if not worse, than having a dog and not taking it for a walk at least once every day.

  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    Enoch wrote: »
    I'm sorry. This may shock, horrify and upset some who have posted on this thread. I'm no great cat enthusiast, but keeping a cat indoors all the time and not letting it out to wander around the garden/neighbourhood strikes me as cruelty to animals. It is on a par, if not worse, than having a dog and not taking it for a walk at least once every day.
    I’m not shocked, horrified or upset. Why should I be, just because your opinion is uninformed?

    Our indoor cats have been perfectly happy, and likely healthier. Research shows that in the U.S., at least, the average lifespan for an outdoor cat is 2-5 years, much shorter than the average lifespan of an indoor cat. Traffic, toxins and predators (of which there are more than a few in my part of the world) are just some of the challenges that endanger cats outdoors. The one cat we did allow to go outside was the only cat we ever had to take to the vet because of a fight with another animal. A fight with a stray cat almost lost her an eye.

    A competent cat-owner will make sure that an indoor-only cat has plenty of things to do, play with, safely climb on, etc. Thinking that it’s cruelty not to let a cat wander outside is confusing romantic ideas about wandering, carefree cats with what is actually better for the cat.


  • When we adopted our last cat from the shelter in the US, we had to sign a document stating that she would not be allowed outside. We have two outside cats that are feral in our mobile home park. They were caught, neutered, and released outside to help keep rodents under control. Here, the practice is to catch feral cats, neuter and notch their ears, and release them, but pets are encouraged to be indoor pets.
  • The power of the Ship can be a little scary. Just after I posted the note above, we went out for a hike in the woods a few miles away, well out of town. As soon as we got out of the car we were met by a young, apparently healthy, and affectionate tortoiseshell cat whose message was clearly, "Take me home!" Which we did. I am really not ready for another cat, but we shall see.
  • The power of the Ship can be a little scary. Just after I posted the note above, we went out for a hike in the woods a few miles away, well out of town. As soon as we got out of the car we were met by a young, apparently healthy, and affectionate tortoiseshell cat whose message was clearly, "Take me home!" Which we did. I am really not ready for another cat, but we shall see.

    Cat distribution system works as intended.

    AFF
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    They choose you 😺
  • RuthRuth Shipmate
    @Enoch: It was only a matter of time before someone from the UK expressed shock at what is entirely normal in the US. We don't criticize you for apparently not caring about cats getting run over by cars, snatched by larger predators, or catching nasty diseases because we're able to comprehend that you live in a different country thousands of miles away where things could be, you know, different for any number of reasons.
  • jedijudyjedijudy Heaven Host
    edited June 17
    Allowing a cat to roam outside in my neck of the woods can be very hazardous.

    A long time ago, my kitties were allowed inside and outside at will, except for night time when the cat door was locked. My mom had done that because she felt bad about keeping any animal, or pet bird caged or housebound. (Her parakeets had the freedom to fly through the house all day!) One of her cats was eaten by an alligator. One of mine died from snakebite; either rattlesnake or water moccasin.

    I determined that I would always keep my cats indoors after that. Some were escape artists, however! But they always came running home when they got hungry.

    My daughter has two Ragdolls who are pretty, indoor itties! But they only share one braincell between the two of them. If they would get outside, they would have no clue how to survive. Lots of gators and rattlers there, too.

    eta: I suspect @Enoch has no gators or venomous snakes in their neighborhood, although I could be wrong.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    jedijudy wrote: »
    eta: I suspect @Enoch has no gators or venomous snakes in their neighborhood, although I could be wrong.
    Or foxes, or coyotes, or wolves, or raccoons, or bears, or hawks, or eagles . . . .

  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    jedijudy wrote: »
    eta: I suspect @Enoch has no gators or venomous snakes in their neighborhood, although I could be wrong.
    Or foxes, or coyotes, or wolves, or raccoons, or bears, or hawks, or eagles . . . .

    Most foxes would give cats a wide berth, I think, and I'm not aware of any issues with birds of prey. Mostly, though, the UK has long since wiped out any predator likely to be a threat to cats, and we don't have the issues with rabies other places have, so the risk profile is rather different from the US.
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    I am told by my neighbour that my 16yr old cat saw off a fox in my garden a couple of months ago.

    I do agree the UK and US are very different - here cats generally do go out and it is usual for people to have non-indoor cats that make it into their teens. I think this is mostly a difference in wildlife.
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    edited June 17
    My friend's Bengal cat is 19 soon and has always been an outdoor cat with a cat flap, free to come and go.

    But he will not sleep alone. When she goes away another friend stays over. The cat sleeps in the bed with her!
  • HarryCHHarryCH Shipmate
    While most of the US is not well equipped with bears or wolves or poisonous snakes,
    coyotes are almost ubiquitous.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    HarryCH wrote: »
    While most of the US is not well equipped with bears or wolves or poisonous snakes,
    coyotes are almost ubiquitous.
    We had a mama bear and her cubs walk through the front yard a few nights ago. I’ve had a nest of copperheads living in my yard; a neighbor’s dog was bitten by a copperhead while walking on the sidewalk. She lived, but it was touch and go. Wolves are not as common but are occasionally encountered.

    Meanwhile, a coyote killed a dog not too far from us a month or so ago. There was also small dog attacked by an eagle not too long ago.


  • Nick Tamen wrote: »

    Meanwhile, a coyote killed a dog not too far from us a month or so ago. There was also small dog attacked by an eagle not too long ago.


    When I was living in a condo community in the middle of Charlotte NC, I remember seeing a neighbor's little yorkie on the awning covered upper terrace of her condo. The next minute, a red tailed hawk had just dived under the awning, snatched the poor little critter and flew away before anybody could get to it.

    Same neighborhood, there were two large stocked communal ponds and our neighbors had a koi pond right on the edge of their ground floor terrace. One day there was a terrible kerfuffle from their terrace, and I saw a great blue heron flapping majestically away with three of their koi. That was like a $900 heron lunch.

    This is the neighborhood I walked my cats on a harness, I wasn't taking any chances.

    AFF
  • Yep. I'm in St. Louis, and we've got scads of eagles and hawks (made me watch my chihuahuas, I'll tell you that) as well as poisonous snakes AND coyotes and even the occasional bear. And I'm told the mountain lions are making a comeback in the Midwest...

    Really, if I left a cat to roam in this neighborhood, I wouldn't count on having it for more than a year, tops. And we're in an inner-ring metropolitan suburb.
  • HedgehogHedgehog Shipmate
    My concern is cars. While I live in a residential area of town, cars still speed down the street. And I have a grey tabby which, in twilight, can become invisible for all practical purposes.

    Not that that it is much of a problem. Just like my prior cat, this one has Zero Interest in going outside. Just like my last cat, I can leave the door wide open and she will not even go near it. This is her house and she has made it quite clear that if anybody is leaving this house, it is me, not her.
  • Being in the southern hemisphere our windows are all north facing (rather than south) to get the best light. We have sliding doors rather than windows right down that side of the house and the cats just love them. Lots of sun comes in on the floors which warm up nicely. Because the windows are large we often joke that when the cats are watching the birds, that they are watching cat TV. They love watching the magpies roosting on the neighbours' roof and the little wrens that hop around on the ground.

    One thing that has amused me has been the visiting of a yellow wattle bird to our garden. We also had one in the garden at our old house which delighted in taunting our poor old chunky black cat, Harry. Harry would sit on the front verandah and look out at the garden and this bloomin bird would perch on the verandah railing and just give him the firmest talking to ever. Harry was so placid and showed no interest in anything other than cuddles and food. We still miss him, he was such a good boy.

    I think the reason that many are opposed to cat ownership in Australia is that they are an introduced species, and many of the species that have been introduced here have become real pests and managing them costs money and has varying degrees of success.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    The UK may not have wildlife that is dangerous to cats, but it does have cars and also has humans who may want to harm cats - and other cats who can potentially injure your cat in a fight. There's also no reason why allowing a cat to have access to the outdoors means letting it free-roam - nobody would suggest that letting a dog have outdoor access means letting it free-roam. You can get inexpensive modular catios from Omlet in the UK and I think cat rescues normalising them rather than free-roaming would do a lot of good.

    It's a cultural norm in the UK to let pet cats free-roam, but that doesn't mean it's a good thing. Preventing cats from free-roaming protects your cat, other cats, and wildlife. I have been a cat owner my whole life, and although I don't have a cat at the moment I fully intend on having my next cat as an indoor + catio cat.
  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    edited June 18
    Cats are native to the UK - I do appreciate we have far more than we would if they weren’t kept as companion animals - but they have been living with people in the UK for thousands of years.

    No they aren't. At least, domestic cats aren't. See
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestication_of_the_cat - they were domesticated originally in the Near East and are descended from the African wildcat.

    Our native wildcat species (Felis silvestris silvestris) is critically endangered as a result of interbreeding with domestic cats.

    I do appreciate that cats give people a lot of pleasure as pets, but they are having a catastrophic effect on wildlife. Some urban areas in the UK have more than 200 cats per square mile - they don't need to be good at hunting to make life impossible for ground-feeding birds.

    You question what the ecological effect of stopping pet cats from hunting would be. Well, first of all it would remove a distortion to the ecological balance. Usually, an increase in predators decreases the amount of prey available to individuals: some predators (the worst hunters) starve: the prey populations recover: rinse and repeat. This doesn't happen with domestic cats, because their owners feed them, so they can keep on killing prey until the prey have been wiped out.

    Secondly, the populations of other small predators who also eat birds and rodents would recover. I haven't seen a weasel in years. Perhaps our native wildcats would finally get a chance to expand their range.
  • I don't own a Cat (or maybe I should say that I'm not employed by a Cat), but I have had the misfortune to run over one whilst driving - the poor animal was being pursued, or something, and just rushed out from under a fence into the road...

    It was killed outright, perhaps fortunately, but I recall being quite distressed about it. I laid the body carefully on the grass verge, as I had no way of knowing which house the Cat had come from.
  • Foxes have killed some cats not far from me and we once had a cat which was run over by a car. I buried it in the garden with due ceremony and the younger Gamalielette asked me to 'say a few words.'

    I have a good friend who keeps their cat indoors all the time and whilst that doesn't sit well with me, I understand the reasons for it.

    I'd love a cat here but have hung fire on getting one for the sake of the birds. My next door neighbour's cat used to crunch the heads off baby blackbirds in front of their shrieking parents. What a bastard.

    I was quite fond of him as he was a real character and very cheeky, but can't say I was too sorry when he went off to cat heaven at a ripe old age - or to cat hell perhaps for his vicious crimes.

    I don't know many indoor cats here and the average lifespan seems to be well into their teens. I've known some very venerable cats.

    I like cats a lot but there are loads of them round here already and I like the range of birds I get in my garden.

    I do get mice and I don't like poisoning them or putting down traps so I need to find some way to deter the little devils without harming them. I know of devices that emit sound or light or some kind of mouse deterrent mojo but people who've used them tell me they don't work.

    Any suggestions?
  • Jengie JonJengie Jon Shipmate
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    jedijudy wrote: »
    eta: I suspect @Enoch has no gators or venomous snakes in their neighborhood, although I could be wrong.
    Or foxes, or coyotes, or wolves, or raccoons, or bears, or hawks, or eagles . . . .

    Quite possibly foxes and hawks, but a British fox is the same size as the average UK cat and hawks tend to go for pigeons of which we have a plentiful supply. I say this as foxes frequent my city centre housing estate and peregrines nest within half a mile.
  • Foxes have killed some cats not far from me and we once had a cat which was run over by a car. I buried it in the garden with due ceremony and the younger Gamalielette asked me to 'say a few words.'

    I have a good friend who keeps their cat indoors all the time and whilst that doesn't sit well with me, I understand the reasons for it.

    I'd love a cat here but have hung fire on getting one for the sake of the birds. My next door neighbour's cat used to crunch the heads off baby blackbirds in front of their shrieking parents. What a bastard.

    I was quite fond of him as he was a real character and very cheeky, but can't say I was too sorry when he went off to cat heaven at a ripe old age - or to cat hell perhaps for his vicious crimes.

    I don't know many indoor cats here and the average lifespan seems to be well into their teens. I've known some very venerable cats.

    I like cats a lot but there are loads of them round here already and I like the range of birds I get in my garden.

    I do get mice and I don't like poisoning them or putting down traps so I need to find some way to deter the little devils without harming them. I know of devices that emit sound or light or some kind of mouse deterrent mojo but people who've used them tell me they don't work.

    Any suggestions?

    Humane mouse traps have worked well for us. We quickly learned that you have to release them a considerable distance away, or they will be back. We found this out when I started to recognize the colouring of a particular mouse that must have reckoned the night in the trap was worth it for the free meal. Other deterrents (peppermint oil was one) seemed completely ineffective. We have garter snakes around here: I don't know if they discourage mice, but we never see them at the same time.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    I don't understand what the issue with indoor-only cats is - I'm surprised that even some people here who don't have cats have an instinctive resistance to the idea. It's not difficult to play with cats and give them suitable enrichment.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Jengie Jon wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    jedijudy wrote: »
    eta: I suspect @Enoch has no gators or venomous snakes in their neighborhood, although I could be wrong.
    Or foxes, or coyotes, or wolves, or raccoons, or bears, or hawks, or eagles . . . .

    Quite possibly foxes and hawks, but a British fox is the same size as the average UK cat and hawks tend to go for pigeons of which we have a plentiful supply.

    I once saw a sparrowhawk in my parents' garden tackle a very plump pigeon. So plump, in fact, that the hawk was unable to take off with it and had to eat its fill on the ground, leaving a bit of a mess as you might imagine.
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    edited June 18
    Pomona wrote: »
    I don't understand what the issue with indoor-only cats is - I'm surprised that even some people here who don't have cats have an instinctive resistance to the idea. It's not difficult to play with cats and give them suitable enrichment.

    I suppose part of it is that it can be very difficult to keep a cat inside, and if they are not used to being outside, accustomed to traffic etc you are worried because they are more at risk being both outside and not streetwise. Also, because a thousand documentaries about cats with behavioural problems seem to suggest a much higher risk of that with indoor cats.

    In theory you can spend a lot of time playing with cats - but if you are at work/commuting 10 hours a day - getting up dressed washed prepping food doing chores another 1-2 hours a day and then asleep yourself 7-8 hours a day, that actually leaves 4-5 hrs a day if you have no other commitments, like partners, children, hobbies etc.
  • ChastMastrChastMastr Shipmate
    Getting at least two cats helps with them having someone to be with when one is out, at work, etc. I got two sisters from the same litter from the animal shelter, keep them totally indoors, and they’re very happy together. They’re my family.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    Pomona wrote: »
    I don't understand what the issue with indoor-only cats is - I'm surprised that even some people here who don't have cats have an instinctive resistance to the idea. It's not difficult to play with cats and give them suitable enrichment.
    I think it’s an example of “but we’ve never done it that way before,” with a bit of “therefore it must be wrong.”

    Pomona wrote: »
    I don't understand what the issue with indoor-only cats is - I'm surprised that even some people here who don't have cats have an instinctive resistance to the idea. It's not difficult to play with cats and give them suitable enrichment.

    I suppose part of it is that it can be very difficult to keep a cat inside, . . . .
    I can’t say I’ve ever encountered much difficulty keeping a cat inside.



  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    My cat learnt to hack the cat flap, also he will shoot out the front door between your legs given the opportunity.
  • GwaiGwai Epiphanies Host
    Pomona wrote: »
    I don't understand what the issue with indoor-only cats is - I'm surprised that even some people here who don't have cats have an instinctive resistance to the idea. It's not difficult to play with cats and give them suitable enrichment.

    I suppose part of it is that it can be very difficult to keep a cat inside, . . . .
    I can’t say I’ve ever encountered much difficulty keeping a cat inside.

    [/quote]
    I will say that can certainly depend on the cat. I have a cat (named Trouble) who had a deep urge to go outside. He kept trying to get out and succeeded sometimes. (We have a household of 7 people, 3 of them children.)
    So I got him a leash and I walk him for a few minutes each day. It isn't hard, probably sounds like more work than it is in fact since it means he doesn't need much indoor play from me. (He also has a brother to play with.) He just comes to me for snuggles. But he's not my first cat, just my first cat who asked to be outdoors, so I suspect he has more drive to go outdoors than normal.
  • Ex_OrganistEx_Organist Shipmate
    I see that cats will not be employed to control vermin in the Palace of Westminster: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cqjqrddnldgo
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    My cat learnt to hack the cat flap, also he will shoot out the front door between your legs given the opportunity.
    Ah. We don’t have cat, or dog, flaps.

    We did have one cat who would occasionally try to slip out the back door. We could usually keep that from happening as long as we checked where he was before opening the door. Our other indoor cats have never tried to slip out.


  • Jengie Jon wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    jedijudy wrote: »
    eta: I suspect @Enoch has no gators or venomous snakes in their neighborhood, although I could be wrong.
    Or foxes, or coyotes, or wolves, or raccoons, or bears, or hawks, or eagles . . . .

    Quite possibly foxes and hawks, but a British fox is the same size as the average UK cat and hawks tend to go for pigeons of which we have a plentiful supply.

    I once saw a sparrowhawk in my parents' garden tackle a very plump pigeon. So plump, in fact, that the hawk was unable to take off with it and had to eat its fill on the ground, leaving a bit of a mess as you might imagine.

    That happens a fair bit in my neighbour's garden. It's what sparrow hawks do. They only fly off with sparrows, blackbirds and small birds.

    Meanwhile, despite what everyone's said, I still can't imagine having a cat that lives indoors all the time. Does.not.compute.

    I know, I know ...

    But there it is.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Pomona wrote: »
    I don't understand what the issue with indoor-only cats is - I'm surprised that even some people here who don't have cats have an instinctive resistance to the idea. It's not difficult to play with cats and give them suitable enrichment.

    I suppose part of it is that it can be very difficult to keep a cat inside, and if they are not used to being outside, accustomed to traffic etc you are worried because they are more at risk being both outside and not streetwise. Also, because a thousand documentaries about cats with behavioural problems seem to suggest a much higher risk of that with indoor cats.

    In theory you can spend a lot of time playing with cats - but if you are at work/commuting 10 hours a day - getting up dressed washed prepping food doing chores another 1-2 hours a day and then asleep yourself 7-8 hours a day, that actually leaves 4-5 hrs a day if you have no other commitments, like partners, children, hobbies etc.

    Ut d
    Pomona wrote: »
    I don't understand what the issue with indoor-only cats is - I'm surprised that even some people here who don't have cats have an instinctive resistance to the idea. It's not difficult to play with cats and give them suitable enrichment.

    I suppose part of it is that it can be very difficult to keep a cat inside, and if they are not used to being outside, accustomed to traffic etc you are worried because they are more at risk being both outside and not streetwise. Also, because a thousand documentaries about cats with behavioural problems seem to suggest a much higher risk of that with indoor cats.

    In theory you can spend a lot of time playing with cats - but if you are at work/commuting 10 hours a day - getting up dressed washed prepping food doing chores another 1-2 hours a day and then asleep yourself 7-8 hours a day, that actually leaves 4-5 hrs a day if you have no other commitments, like partners, children, hobbies etc.

    You could say the same thing about caring for any pet that has social needs (so, not reptiles/insects/arachnids/fish - but even they need caring for) - why get a pet if you're too busy to care for them? Surely your pet is part of your family? Nobody would suggest that it's unreasonable to expect dog owners to walk them every day.
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