The Accidental Smallholder Forum

Pets & Working Animals => Cats => Topic started by: hafod on March 27, 2013, 09:24:09 am

Title: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: hafod on March 27, 2013, 09:24:09 am
Hi,
Have any of you got any ideas on how i can deal with this situation?!

We are cat lovers and have two cats of our own but over the past few months there has been a random cat around our yard (no collar and very timid, but looks quite well fed so not sure if it is a stray or not).
 Our two cats don't seen too bothered about it, they let it into their space without any hissing or fighting but this cat has started coming into the house and spraying everywhere - I'm fed up of trying to get rid of cat wee smells!
We have a magnetic cat flap which is supposed to only open if the cat has a magnet on their collar. However, this random cat has worked out that the cat flap opens if it whacks it hard (magnet or no magnet!) We have already replaced one cat flap as it managed to shatter the plastic flap and this current one is on the way out too!

I wouldn't mind so much if it was just eating cat food, but spraying/weeing everywhere is just so horrible and last night it sat outside our bedroom door and howled!! (not impressed - I like my sleep)
The cat runs off every time it hears us coming so we've no chance of getting near it.
Any ideas what we can do to stop it coming in the house. I don't really want to block the cat flap because of our two cats.

Thanks
H

Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: Rosemary on March 27, 2013, 11:03:47 am
Cat Protection may lend you a cage to catch the cat. Personally, I'd take it to the vet and get it neutered - I asume it's an unneutered tom, if it's spraying. Then I'd just adopt it  :)
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: happygolucky on March 27, 2013, 12:31:09 pm
Firstly I would check if it does belong to anyone near you? then if know one owns up to this roaming Tom then do ring cats protection and maybe get him chopped, that should sort that out but at a cost.
This post caught my eye as we used to have the very same problem although a few years ago, our neighbours had a huge male cat that got in as we also kept cats, it would eat the food and spray everywhere but the very bad when one night it came in to fight with our lovely female cat who then ran into our room and weed all over my partner, now husband...it was sort of funny but not funny....not sure what happened as from then on we kept our small window shut at night and our cats in!!!!
Keeping a cat out the house is not too hard if you have a dog around but its a different and much harder story with outdoors...our neighbours cat sits and watches the hens most days, our dogs are not remotely interested and I am sure the cat has a smug look on its face too!!
 
Good luck :fc:
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: Fleecewife on March 27, 2013, 02:10:34 pm
Shut the doors from the room the cat flap opens into to limit the problem to just the one room. 
 
Wait for the cat with a water pistol - doesn't hurt the cat but they don't like being splashed, and you can get it from a distance.
 
If your other cats will use a litter tray then shut the catflap at night.,
 
We once had a tom who was the culprit in similar behaviour.  We had him castrated, so he ran away in protest but eventually came home after 7 weeks.  He no longer sprayed but still went into other peoples homes - now to beg for food, until he ended up like a football.  Everyone thought he was a stray and fed him and he obviously practised the starved cat look in front of a mirror, so people believed he was starved when he was totally rotund  :cat:
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: happygolucky on March 27, 2013, 02:18:30 pm
 :roflanim: Cats are not daft :innocent:  One of our cats used to fo to the near buy train staion for his breakfast, i was told by a friend who saw him daily "beg"
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: plumseverywhere on March 27, 2013, 04:17:33 pm
neither of your cats are coming into season are they? we had a tom that decided to smash in the locked cat flap after our little hussy, snowball, screamed so much through it he took desperate measures. After he got her pregnant he went onto spray my brand new kitchen, was really impressed  ::)
He wasn't owned by anyone locally so he took a little holiday to the CPL to be rehomed and neutered. 
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: SallyintNorth on March 27, 2013, 04:23:29 pm
Yes, please don't assume this cat has no owners who love him and would be distraught if he were to be taken away or neutered without their involvement!

And don't assume he's unneutered either; all my males have been neutered at 6 months and two of them sprayed, one of them extensively. 

Limiting the problem to one room and making him unwelcome, along with making sure the owners know what he's up to, would be my first lines of approach.
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: funkyfish on March 27, 2013, 06:53:53 pm
Microchip activated cat flaps are great- pricy but save you a lot on vet fees when your cats get stress cytitis or having to spend money feeding a cat you don't own! Sureflap are a good make.

Have you tried cleaning up any wee with a solution of biological washing powder (1 table spoon to 1 pint water).
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: hafod on March 27, 2013, 08:56:43 pm
Thank you everyone for your ideas. We have around 2.5foot of snow on the ground at the moment so i will try and follow the cats tracks to see where it comes from. It doesn't belong to any of our close neighbours.
Must dig out the water pistol!
Thanks again  :cat:
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: hafod on March 28, 2013, 08:21:04 am
Just thought I'd give you an update.....
As suggested we shut all the doors other than the kitchen and living room to try and contain the problem. When my OH came down stairs this morning all 3 cats (our 2 and this random 1) were curled up together on the sofa!!! When they woke up and saw OH our two 'pretended' to see the random cat off by a half-hearted box round the ears and a chase but I'm pretty sure it was all for show. Random cat ran off (as i said before he is not a people cat - yet!)
On the plus side there doesn't seem to have been any spraying last night.
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: Rosemary on March 28, 2013, 08:58:14 am
Your cats have adopted him. Your opinion has become irrelevant  ;D :cat: :cat:    :cat:
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: hafod on March 28, 2013, 09:48:16 am
Rosemary - I think you might be right! ::)
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: SallyintNorth on March 28, 2013, 02:03:02 pm
Your cats have adopted him. Your opinion has become irrelevant  ;D :cat: :cat:    :cat:

 ;D

Funny from the cats' point of view - but perhaps less so from the p-o-v of the other humans who think he is their cat!  Still, if they don't put a collar and name/address tag on him, what can you do?
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: Rosemary on March 28, 2013, 03:13:34 pm
Cats live where they choose - that's why we love them - they are completely self centred  ;D
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: happygolucky on March 28, 2013, 07:23:05 pm
 :thumbsup: , so true, cats are certainly free spirits!!
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: doganjo on March 28, 2013, 10:51:33 pm
Your cats have adopted him. Your opinion has become irrelevant  ;D :cat: :cat:    :cat:

 ;D

Funny from the cats' point of view - but perhaps less so from the p-o-v of the other humans who think he is their cat!  Still, if they don't put a collar and name/address tag on him, what can you do?
Sorry but that isn't a good criteria either.  I have a  roaming cat - he doesn't spray and he is neutered, but he just adores people, other cats, and horses.  He has gone through 10 - yes 10   ::) collars in 5 years, and the last one was under his armpit when he came home, a previous one had got twisted and he came home choking - I had to cut that one off to save him.  So just because a cat has no collar doesn't mean he isn't a much loved pet, and it certainly doesn't mean he is a stray - no cat is a stray.  They are opportunists and will go where they find the best bed/food/company.  At the  moment Rio is sporting a lovely light blue suede collar with my mobile and post code plastered over it in black pen.  A strange thing happened a couple of weeks go too.  His sister disappeared one night three years ago - always came in every night without fail, then one night didn't.  I scoured the roadsides and a Network Rail maintenance team checked the line as well.  I assumed she was dead.  However, as I was driving slowly down the Cattle Market a cat strolled - yes strolled across in front of my car and turned to look at me.  It was Candy!! I'd k,now her anywhere, she was also a ginger, but paler than Rio, and her face had a peachy pink glow with one eyebrow higher than the other - it was definitely her. She has a new home! :excited:
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: Dans on March 29, 2013, 10:18:28 am
I second the microchip catflap.

My mum had had the magnetic ones before and the cats always managed to push their way through, no problem at all with microchip, in fact even we can't push our way through it (though could probably kick it in if determined). Best investment we ever made for the cats. The one we have is the one that is powered from the mains.

I agree that a cat without a collar doesn't mean it isn't owned, some cats just won't wear a collar no matter how much an owner tries. But the owner can microchip the cat, so if you do catch him get the vet to scan him. In addition it is true that cats independence is part of the attraction, and if they decide they want to live elsewhere they will up sticks and go. If mine made that decision I'd rather someone took them in and loved them than turned they away in case they already had an owner. Luckily I get to feel blessed each evening mine return through the flap knowing that my home is where they call home, for now.

Dans
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: sabrina on March 29, 2013, 10:45:26 am
Well Barnaby is not a tom cat and he now sleeps in the stables as he was spraying in the house. Drove me nuts. We had another stray cat a couple of years ago that turned up and started fighting with Jacs. She is a quite easy going girl but this stray laid into her big time. We got the stray in a trap and took it to the vets thinking it was a tom. turn out he had already been done and was just a nasty lad. Cats protection took him. Over the years strays pay us a visit but we have no girls who come into season so they move on.
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: Rosemary on March 29, 2013, 11:18:16 am
Until there's a cat flap that can detect whether or not Bertie has something in his mouth, he'll just have to yowl on the windowsill to get in  ;D
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: Fleecewife on March 29, 2013, 04:07:27 pm
I second the microchip catflap.

The one we have is the one that is powered from the mains.


Dans

That will give him a surprise  :idea:   :roflanim:
Title: Re: Help - stray cat coming into house and spraying!
Post by: plumseverywhere on March 29, 2013, 04:31:31 pm
Your cats have adopted him. Your opinion has become irrelevant  ;D :cat: :cat:    :cat:

 ;D

Funny from the cats' point of view - but perhaps less so from the p-o-v of the other humans who think he is their cat!  Still, if they don't put a collar and name/address tag on him, what can you do?

I've given up putting a collar and nametag on Snowball because the mad cat lady down the road just takes them off. Have had a quiet word and so far my cat is my own again but come autumn, she will be coming back smelling of log burner and cheap perfume again  ::)