T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
377.1 | DON'T wait 'til he's fried | GLINKA::GREENE | | Thu Nov 06 1986 13:33 | 8 |
| About 20 years ago, we almost lost a puppy who chewed through the
cord of an electric blanket. We were all lucky, and puppy *never*
tried it again, but it could have been fatal.
Don't know what to suggest, except perhaps some of the potions that
are supposed to keep pets away (I've never tried them, so I don't
know whether or how well they work) - or just some unpleasant_to_cats
flavoring from the kitchen.
|
377.2 | possible solution | THRILL::FRIBERG | | Thu Nov 06 1986 13:39 | 9 |
| try putting something he hates the smell of on the cords. for
each cat this is something different. garlic, lemon juice,
something non-toxic but soapy smelling. also since it's only
in one area try washing the floor/wall in that area to get rid
of any smell that might be triggering his urge to chew. if this
is not enough, try getting some kind of protective tubing for
the cords. good luck.
kristen_who_misses_her_kitties
|
377.3 | more stuff | USHS01::MCALLISTER | TARDIS Sales and Service Co. | Thu Nov 06 1986 13:41 | 6 |
| if they are vinyl cords, try Armorall. Be careful of trying garlic,
some cats, mine for instance, love the taste of garlic
Phone cords seem esp. tempting... I've lost more phone cords...
Dave
|
377.4 | | SAHQ::CARNELL | | Thu Nov 06 1986 14:13 | 6 |
| Go to a pet store or vet and buy a product made for this type of
problem. I can't give you a particular brand but I do remember
one called Bitter Apple. Just spray it on electrical cords. I
used this several years ago on a silk flower arrangement (what a
dumb cat huh) and it didn't harm it at all.
|
377.5 | A different kind of option! | DONJON::SCHREINER | danger zone | Thu Nov 06 1986 14:19 | 6 |
| Well, this is what I've done in my Cattery.....I run the cords through
paper towel tubes. It's not the prettiest site, but they can't
get at the cords.
cin
|
377.6 | Tabasco | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Thu Nov 06 1986 18:00 | 10 |
| Try hot pepper sauce. Our kitty was chewing on the wooden arms
of the Captain's chair - part of our dining set and the only one
with arms. He hasn't since I put the tabasco on them. He didn't
even try - one sniff told him that it wasn't gonna be fun.
--Louise
(be careful - tabasco will stain carpets. Put it on with a q-tip
or something, too, not your fingers!
|
377.7 | And I thot I was the only one with this problem! | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Thu Nov 06 1986 20:23 | 9 |
| My Eirene has gone thru 2 phone cords in the past two weeks (I'm
about ready to start bying a gross at a time). None of cat repelents
(indoor NO, Bitter apple, etc) seem to work. The VT125 that I use
here at work has the terminal wires running through this hard plastic
flexible tube. I'd like to get some of this stuff in an attempt
to protect my phone cord. Does any body have any idea where it is
available?
Deb
|
377.8 | Try the hardware store for tubing | ZEPPO::ROMBERG | Kathy Romberg DTN 276-8189 | Fri Nov 07 1986 08:53 | 22 |
| re: .7
> (indoor NO, Bitter apple, etc) seem to work. The VT125 that I use
> here at work has the terminal wires running through this hard plastic
> flexible tube. I'd like to get some of this stuff in an attempt
> to protect my phone cord. Does any body have any idea where it is
> available?
find someone who doesn't want theirs, take yours home, or see if
there are any that aren't being used.
I have protected most of my phone (not the curly ones though)
and electrical cords with plastic tubing available at the hardware
store. You have two cjhoices - buy tubing large enough for the plug
to fit through (hard to find) or use thinner tubing and slit it the
long way and then tape the split closed. This seems to have deterred
my little "fang kitties" for the time being. I have no idea what I'm
going to do when the Christmas tree goes up. Last year I lost 3
strings of lights to the little monsters. Maybe they'll spend all
unsupervised time in the basement.
Kathy
|
377.9 | munch, munch ... gobble | USHS01::MCALLISTER | TARDIS Sales and Service Co. | Fri Nov 07 1986 11:58 | 14 |
| re .5
My kitties think hat paper towel rolls are made for munching.
Two of my cats love hot sauce (to the point of eating jalepinos).
I use the clear tubing method, as described.
Dave
(I sure hope it's warm up there, I get to spend 5 days in Nashua
NH next week)
DWMc
|
377.10 | Too bad we don't make DECtubes! | CLUSTA::TAMIR | | Fri Nov 07 1986 12:18 | 7 |
| The VT125 tubes work really well. I took home a few I found around
the offices that no one wanted.
Re .9: Should we Nashuans tell him that it snowed Wednesday night??
Bring your woolies!
M.
|
377.11 | TIGGA'S GOT AN ATTITUDE | DAMSEL::MITCHELL | | Fri Nov 07 1986 14:35 | 21 |
| Well you fellow kittie lovers have given me a lot of suggestions.
Last night I washed the entire area (wall,woodwork, wires, cords
and rug with Barcolene (with ammonia). Little Tigga didn't go near
the area at all, just sniffed and sauntered off with a real
attitude. I'm going to the pet store tomorrow to see what is
available to spray, and will also visit a hardware store for
suggestions.
There's got to be something that will work, I'm going broke buying
phone cords, although the last time I replaced the cord with the
thicker coiled ones that usually go into the headset, which are
thicker, and so far no teeth marks.
Did any of you ever try to repair a phone cord. Little teensy wires
that break..... I sat on the floor once for two hours..and ended
up with an attitude worse than Tigga had....
I'll let you know if I come upon a product or device that really
works.
kathie
|
377.12 | Feline IBEW Workers | EUCLID::LEVASSEUR | Ayatollah of Rock n Rollah | Mon Nov 10 1986 11:06 | 14 |
| I've had this problem also and the only solution was to route
the lines in such a way that it was hard for kitties to get a good
jawhold on them. Cords like lampcords, etc that I could not re-route
got unplugged whenever I went out. Then there was Rascal who chewed
through ~1/3 of the comm cable between my VT125 and modem. Needless
to say this made logging in impossible. I don' know what it is that
attracts cats to electrical cords. In my audio/video equipment,
I used some of that spiral wrap around stuff to bundle all power/
signal lines. This plastic not only keeps stuff neat, but it's
tough enough to discourage feline teeth. Lemon and other coatings
that were supposed to discourage cat sabotage did not work for
me.
Ray
|
377.13 | mouse flavored chewing gum? | SPACEY::FRIBERG | | Tue Nov 11 1986 13:10 | 6 |
|
It seems in many cases, to be the 'chewyness' of the cord that is
appealing. Perhaps they are similar to the consistency of the innards
of their natural prey. Making the cords less 'chewy' appears to
be the best solution.
|
377.14 | going bananas over beans | GLINKA::GREENE | | Tue Nov 11 1986 13:48 | 6 |
| re: .13
The "chewiness" theory (texture AND shape) would fit with my cats
very favorite stolen food: whole string beans. They do actually
eat them, but while doing so, they fling them around, pounce on
them, etc. Fun!
|