T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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656.1 | me too! | DONJON::SCHREINER | Go ahead, make me PURRR... | Thu Jul 09 1987 12:05 | 16 |
| If you come up with a solution, I'ld love to know it!!! Is your
male cat neutered??? Mine isn't, and he refuses to "poop" in the
box....he always goes right next to it.
Fire lives in a kitty condo during the day and comes out to play
at night. I even tried filling up the bottom of the kitty condo
with litter boxes so he would have no choice!!! He chose to "poop"
on the shelf!!!
Lucky that I feed him science diet and his "poops" are almost as
hard as the dry crunchies themselves. I just pick them up with
toilet paper and flush! Not much of a solution, to an aggrivating
problem.
cin
|
656.2 | retraining/behavior modification | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Thu Jul 09 1987 13:11 | 27 |
| When I acquired one of my cats as a 6-week old kitten, he
too seemed to want to defecate in a particular location on
the living room carpet. What I did, was to place the litter
box in the location he wanted to go. Since I did not want
this as a permanent solution, my idea was to, eeeeeeever
soooo sloooowly, move the box towards the bathroom. This
could be accomplished because we lived in a small apartment
and the bathroom was right next to the living room.
He would sh*t in the box when it was placed in his 'location'.
So I left it there for a few days, made sure he was using it
regularly, and then I started moving a couple of inches a
day, towards, and then into, the bathroom. It worked!
As for your cat, it's not clear whether he simply does not
want to defecate in litter, or that he wants to defecate in
those particular spots. If it's the latter, then you can
try to modify his behavior using the technique above. If
it's that he does not want to defecate into litter then
here's another idea. Why not get a second, small pan for
him, that's empty, put it next to other litter box, and
see if he will choose that. It's sure a lot better than
where he's going now.
Good luck!
Donna
|
656.3 | Keep those cards and letters coming | BPOV09::LORD | | Thu Jul 09 1987 13:48 | 15 |
| re: .1
Yes, he's neutered.
re: .2
I tried moving the box to his favorite spot, but that didn't work.
I don't belive he likes the litter because he never covered when he did use the
box. I will try the empty box idea.
Thanks, Bill
|
656.4 | LALb (Local Area Litter box) | CLUSTA::TAMIR | | Thu Jul 09 1987 16:34 | 8 |
| I used to place disposible litter trays right where the favorite
spot was, in addition to leaving the main box where it belonged
(sorry, I just had a vision of a boot node box and satellite
boxes...I've been working too hard...). Soon, after there were
boxes everywhere, he started using the main box. So instead of
moving the one box, you might try a "distributed solution".
Mary
|
656.5 | P***ing Contest | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Thu Jul 09 1987 16:52 | 10 |
| Mary, I'm not sure if that would work with my cats. At one point
I had four jumbo boxes, and I was cleaning them all at the same
time. Panther and Argus made a point urinating in each box, probably
to cancle out the other. I remember this real well; Argus went (and
naturally didn't cover it). Then Panther went right over where Argus
went and covered it in a mountain. About a minute later when Panther
was out of sight, Argus came back, smoothed out the mountain and
urinated right over it. Talk about getting in the last "word".
Deb
|
656.6 | Try this.. | VICKI::BULLOCK | Living the good life | Fri Jul 10 1987 10:43 | 15 |
| Bill,
You might try this--cats, for some reason HATE tin foil. Put a
sheet down on each of his "spots". Along with that, when he goes
to the spots and finds them inassessible, put him in the litter
box.
My Billie used to get slaphappy and go on the floor beside the box,
so when she got into one of those moods, I would put the foil down
where she went. Worked every time--she would gingerly step over
the foil, and get in the box and go.
Good luck,
Jane
|
656.7 | Check your local newstands... | QBUS::MITCHAM | Andy in Atlanta | Fri Jul 10 1987 12:27 | 4 |
| There is an article in this month's Cat Fancy magazine about this very
problem. I haven't read it yet but it may give some ideas.
-Andy
|
656.8 | SAME PROBLEM | NUGGET::LIBBEY | | Fri Jul 10 1987 13:55 | 18 |
| I ALSO SUFFER WITH A NEUTERED MALE HIMALAYIAN THAT DECIDED NEXT
TO THE LITTER BOX WAS THE BEST PLACE TO GO - I TOO HAVE TRIED
EVERYTHING FROM ADDING LITTER BOXES TO THE HOUSE - PUTTING MOTH
BALLS IN HIS FAVORITE AREAS - SUPER-CLEANING THE LITTER BOXES AS
WELL AS DISCIPLINARY ACTIONS OF ALL SORTS - THE END RESULT WAS HE'D
JUST MOVE OVER A FEW INCHES OR FEET TO LEAVE ME A PRESENT. I ALSO
HAVE HIS MOTHER AND HIS SON AND ON OCCASION HIS SON DECIDED IT WAS
A NICE THING TO DO ALTHOUGH IT IS RARE FOR HIM. HIS OTHER NEW TRICK
WAS TO SPRAY RIGHT NEXT TO THE DOOR GOING OUTSIDE - I BELIEVE BECAUSE
OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD KITTYS THAT VISIT MY PORCH FROM TIME TO TIME.
MY CRITTERS ARE ALL "FIXED" AND I THOUGHT MALES WOULDN'T SPRAY IF
THEY WERE FIXED. I TOO WOULD APPRECIATE A FIX TO THIS PROBLEM -
MY TEMPORARY SOLUTION IS TO COVER THE FLOOR WITH PLASTIC ALL AROUND
THE LITTER BOX AREA - AT LEAST IT HAS SAVED MY FLOOR FROM RUIN.
OTHERWISE I COULDN'T ASK FOR BETTER HOUSEMATES THAN THEM
SANDY
|
656.9 | | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Fri Jul 10 1987 15:17 | 5 |
| Please refrain from using upper case. It is difficult to
read and is considered to be SHOUTING according to Notes
Etiquette. Thanks.
donna
|
656.10 | feed him there | PNEUMA::BAUMANN | | Mon Jul 13 1987 12:02 | 13 |
| Try feeding you cat where he poops illegally. Cats don't like
to "eliminate" where they eat. If you can convert his favorite
illegal toilet spot to a temporary lunch counter, he might quit
using that spot as a toilet. You might have to follow him around
a couple of times as he changes locations for his illicit activities.
How's the emply box working out? Some cats really hate litter,
for some reason. Maybe you should change the kind of litter you
use.
Good luck.
Laura
|
656.11 | Stand by your cat... | PARITY::WHALEN | And may the traffic be with you | Tue Jul 14 1987 22:30 | 11 |
| One suggestion which did work for me. Cats generally seem to have
to go after eating, so when I realized my offending kitty was apt
to go do-do after his meal, I took advantage of this and placed
him in his box after each meal. I stayed right there until he was
done, explaining that he MUST go here.
Haven't had a do-do since, where it doesn't belong, except when
the new kittens came on board, and that was only for a couple times.
He quickly recovered from their presence.
Denise
|
656.12 | Empty Box | BPOV09::LORD | | Thu Jul 16 1987 14:18 | 9 |
| RE: .10
The empty box did not work.
Feeding him where he goes sounds like it might work. I'll try that next.
Thanks, everyone for your suggestions.
Bill
|
656.13 | | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Thu Jul 16 1987 16:30 | 8 |
| What do you mean? Does he go somewhere else?
What would happen if you locked him in the
bathroom, with a box of course, for a couple
of days? Have you tried that? Also, when
you pick up the poops, have you tried depositing
them in the box and then showing him?
donna
|
656.14 | ANY CARPET WETTERS AROUND? | WBC::KORCHNAK | | Mon Sep 14 1987 14:29 | 56 |
| I have a problem with my cat using the litter box to poop, but using
a corner of the dining room to pee!
Let me explain what has happened. We moved into a townhouse a little
over a year ago and had no place to put the computer terminal except
the dining room table (or should I say card table?) Anyhow, I had
a VT100 cover, one of this plastic covers, which I put over in the
corner - that was the first and biggest mistake. I found out that
cats, when the plastic has an ammonia smell, will urinate in that
spot. When I noticed the smell, about a week later, I discovered
that the plastic cover was coated with urine - not a pretty sight.
I checked the carpeting, and it did not have a urine smell. Then
about 2 weeks later, I started to smell the urine smell, and yes,
he had decided the carpet was a GREAT place to pee!
I have seeked advise from numerous people, as well as this file
AND various animal organizations, and have tried the following:
1. Disciplining him when I see him start to squat.
* I caught him ONCE -- he must go now when I'm at work, cause
he's NEVER in there when I'm home.
2. Cleaning the carpet
* I've SCRUBBED the carpet, thrown out the padding, BLEACHED
cement underneath, and blocked off the area. He went AROUND
the blocked off area, only making the current area LARGER!
3. Aluminum foil
* My other cat eats it -- not too nutritious
Currently, since the opening to the dining room is about 3 feet
wide, and six feet tall, I have a HUGE piece of cardboard covering
the entrance. HOWEVER, the stench in the room is HORRIBLE! Tonight
I'm going to try yet ANOTHER shampoo to try and get this stench
out! It's starting to get through the entire house (it's a townhouse,
so there's not much space for it NOT to go!).
I'm also going to look for a few child guard gates - the ones with
the fencing. I'll have to buy 2 tall ones in order to close off
the area. But then again, it's going to make our decor look like
early American prison!
How do I keep the cat to stay away from the area and going there
again when/if I get the odor which is there now out? What do I do
in the meantime? The other cat is WONDERFUL! She goes in the litter
box. (I also keep the litter box EXTREMELY CLEAN, emptying it out
before I go to work AND after I get home!
I'm open for ANY suggestions -- (he was just checked at the vets
a few weeks ago and no urinary problems). SHould I call my vet and
ask him???
HELP!!
|
656.15 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | | Mon Sep 14 1987 15:15 | 6 |
| Be careful of those child gates. I've heard that kids can get their
heads stuck in them, so I assume they can trap cats as well. I'd
try dumping (really saturating) the carpet with rubbing alcohol,
and then (perhaps temporarily) putting something over it that the
cat can't get thru and that won't be appealing as an ersatz litter
box.
|
656.16 | try this | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Mon Sep 14 1987 15:32 | 6 |
| or, try one part white vinigar mixed with two parts warm water that
will neutralize the smell, but you will smell vinigar. You could
try buying an enzymatic cleaner specificaly for pet urine odor.
Any good pet store carries them (as do some vets).
Deb
|
656.17 | new litter box location | CADSE::LUBY | | Mon Sep 14 1987 18:06 | 10 |
|
RE: 14 (I THINK)
When I brought my kitten home, the first place he went to the
bathroom was in the corner of the living room. Well, I put
the litter box over the spot where he went. Maybe you should
try that.
Karen
|
656.18 | Yep -- tried that too | MARRHQ::KORCHNAK | | Tue Sep 15 1987 10:07 | 6 |
| I did --- he went around it on the floor.
I also tried 2 litterboxes -- same location and different location
- still same result.
|
656.19 | try ANYTHING! | EXODUS::ALLEN | | Tue Sep 15 1987 11:17 | 21 |
|
.10 suggested putting his food in the spot where he urinates, to
make that spot less attractive to him for that purpose... Have you
tried that yet?
Second, have you tried getting another litter box so each cat has
his/her own box with own scent?
OR, If it is his own urine smell that attracts him back there,
maybe you shouldn't clean the litter box QUITE so often.
OR OR OR, perhaps you should sacrifice your VT100 cover completely
(if you haven't discarded it already), and put that in a litterbox
just for him... If it attracted him once, it might work again -you
never know.
Good luck... I know you must be awfully frustrated by now... I sure
hope SOMETHING solves the problem!
Amy.
|
656.20 | | EXODUS::ALLEN | | Tue Sep 15 1987 11:23 | 10 |
|
oops, sorry. I guess my brain was in shut down when I read .18 that
you had already tried two litter boxes...
But I also meant to add, and I don't even know if they work... Have
you thought of cat repellant sprays (for the corner) I don't know
if they're so strong they'd make the cats avoid the entire room
??? Which may be overdoing it a bit!
Amy
|
656.21 | | MARRHQ::KORCHNAK | | Tue Sep 15 1987 12:53 | 13 |
| The repellant spray is the next thing.
HOWEVER - in search of more and more ways to get the odor out, a
girl from work has used a product called "Odor-B-Gone". She gave
me a bottle of it today to try. She said the urine smell will be
TERRIBLE at first, but will neutrilize the smell completely.
Well, if this DOES work, I hope he hasn't grown so accustomed to
the corner, and continue to go there.
If worst comes to worst, I will buy a door for the dining room --
expensive, but it might be worth it.
|
656.22 | Perhaps positive reinforcement? | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Tue Sep 15 1987 17:19 | 17 |
| There was a recent article in one of the cat magazines (the Aug.
Cat Fancy, I think, but I'm not at all sure) about the training
of one cat to use a litter box. I can't recall the entire article,
but I do remember an important insight (for the cat discussed in
the article):
The problem wasn't stopping the cat from using the wrong area. The
problem was getting the cat to use the right place. Instead of negative
reinforcement when the cat used the wrong place, the author gave
the cat positive reinforcement for learning to get into the litter
box. Previously, the cat absolutely hated being put into the litter
box, and would instantly jump out.
This may or may not be relevant to your case, but it might be worth
thinking about.
Gary
|
656.23 | no luck here | HUMOR::EPPES | Make 'em laugh | Wed Sep 23 1987 20:17 | 36 |
| Beware of using those child-guard gates -- cats can climb up some
kinds. We had the same problem you're having, except that our cat had
several favorite areas of the carpet, not just one. We tried
everything under the sun (I entered a note about it a while back, don't
remember the number). He's not under undue stress, he gets along with
our other cat, we give him affection, praise him when he uses the
litterbox, all to no avail. We tried shutting him in the
linoleum-tiled kitchen, using one of those gates--he climbed up it, and
it was too short, anyway (didn't think to use another one on top).
Finally we've had to resort to keeping him in a cage when we're not
there and at night (since we can't trust him while we're sleeping). I
feel bad about it, especially about locking him up at night (he used to
sleep next to my pillow, which was awfully cute), but compared to the
hassles and smells, there's really no choice, other than putting him to
sleep (how can I try to give him away to someone when he'll likely do
the same thing somewhere else?). The cage is good-sized and has a
couple of platforms he can jump up on, so he's not really cramped. But
he can't roam around and play with our other cat when we're not home,
which defeats the purpose for which we got him (as a companion for
her). We also don't let him go in another room unless we're in there to
keep an eye on him (the exceptions being the kitchen and bathroom,
where the food and litterbox are, respectively).
So, we're at a Mexican standoff, I guess. A couple weeks ago I tried
leaving him out of the cage overnight, but the next morning he'd left
a lovely present in one of his usual corners (it was solid, not liquid,
which was something to be grateful for, I guess). So he still can't
be trusted. Sigh.......
I sure hope you can get your problem solved. Best of luck!
-- Nina
P.S. Brookstone sells a carpet cleaner and a deodorizer (separate
products, but are sold together) that I found worked quite well, if
that's any consolation...
|
656.24 | have you done this? | CIRCUS::KOLLING | | Wed Sep 23 1987 20:57 | 5 |
| re: .23
You mentioned many possible causes, but not having him checked at
the vet's for a physical problem.....
|
656.25 | yes | HUMOR::EPPES | Make 'em laugh | Thu Sep 24 1987 17:23 | 11 |
| RE < Note 656.24 by CIRCUS::KOLLING >
> You mentioned many possible causes, but not having him checked at
> the vet's for a physical problem.....
I said (ahem) that "we tried everything under the sun" -- that included
(though it was not explicitly mentioned, sorry) $75 worth of tests at
the vet's, all of which came out negative. We still gave him crystals
and tablets for acidity (at the vet's suggestion), but they didn't help.
-- Nina
|
656.26 | 8^D | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Thu Sep 24 1987 17:31 | 8 |
| RE .25
Nina,
*All* the tests came out negative??? THAT'S the problem. Your
cat is too negative!!
Marion
|
656.27 | | 16835::MCALLISTER | It's okay to say the U___ word! | Thu Sep 24 1987 17:40 | 6 |
| .25
Yeah, some cats are so independent that they just won't go along
with anything.
|
656.28 | maybe going outside will help | HUMOR::EPPES | Make 'em laugh | Tue Sep 29 1987 18:24 | 13 |
| RE .26 -- But of course! That's it! (sound of hand slapping to
forehead) I will get him a copy of "The Power of Positive Thinking"
and maybe that will do the trick! :-)
Sigh, I wish it were that easy. Ah, well, we're moving to a new place
tomorrow, and although I don't trust him enough to let him roam free
when we're not there, I may let him outside (with supervision, since
he's declawed and an indoor cat) for short periods and see whether that
makes a difference. I recall another note somewhere in here where the
person had the same problem and the solution was to let the cat go
outside (where he could "go" outside). We'll see...
-- Nina
|