T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1447.1 | foil or cones? | PARITY::WHALEN | And may the traffic be with you | Wed Jun 08 1988 18:12 | 7 |
| Well, you could try pine cones, a layer of them on top of the
soil should provide an uncomfortable surface for them to try to
climb on. It did work for me once.
Also, cats are not too fond of foil, and a few pieces kind of
rumpled on the top might keep them out.
Denise
|
1447.2 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Wed Jun 08 1988 19:09 | 2 |
| A layer of decorative stones? Ones too big for them to swallow.
|
1447.3 | | MYVAX::LUBY | love them furry terrorists | Thu Jun 09 1988 10:17 | 10 |
|
Re: .0
I have no live plants left..... (of course, the fact that
I don't water them may contribute to this).
And, T.K. LOVES, ABSOLUTELY LOVES tin foil, makes a great
toy that they can carry around if it is in a ball.
Karen
|
1447.4 | | FSHQOA::RWAXMAN | | Thu Jun 09 1988 10:29 | 9 |
| One neat thing my sister did to keep her kittens out of her beautiful,
large ficus tree is took a piece of cardboard and cut it to fit
the diameter of the pot. She cut a hole in the middle to fit around
the tree bark. Result: Now she simply waters plant through the
hole and kitties stay out of her tree!
Kittens do outgrow this stage eventually, but now you will have
to take every precaution to protect your greenery.
|
1447.5 | marble chips | GLINKA::GREENE | | Thu Jun 09 1988 10:55 | 7 |
| I had GREAT success with medium sized marble chips layered over
the top of the soil. Easy to water, but the cats are not
attracted to it. A bag weighs a *lot* but is not very expensive...
should be available at a garden supplies store near where they
have peat moss, vermiculite, etc. I got the chip size that
is approx 1 inch chunks. Actually looked attractive [to humans]
as well!
|
1447.6 | Pass the vinagarette | CLUSTA::TAMIR | ACMS design while-u-wait | Thu Jun 09 1988 13:51 | 13 |
| There are two problems here; digging in the plant and eating the plant!
I used some type if volcanic stone to cover the plant Honey found
wonderful to dig in. However...I don't think there is a palm plant
on Earth that can survive kitty warfare. If you've got a palm,
I suggest giving it to some cat-less person before it gets eaten.
Other plants they can't resist eating are spider plants ("Oh, Mom,
salad!") and ferns ("Oh, Mom, gourmet salad!"). And the flowers
on my African violets. I don't remember who wrote about how her
violets got 'furred' to death, but mine are also covered with fur.
Sigh....
Mary
|
1447.7 | WATER!! WATER!! | JAWS::COTE | Are you buying this at all?? | Thu Jun 09 1988 14:03 | 6 |
| Aja recently did in one of the Thai Hot Pepper plants I've been
trying to raise.
Apparently none of the flame lives in the leaves...
Edd
|
1447.8 | thanks | CISM::HAWES | | Thu Jun 09 1988 14:29 | 12 |
| Thanks for all of your suggestions -- My plants thank you.
I think I will try the marble chips first, and if that doesn't work,
I'll go for the cardboard.
My kids love tin foil too, I roll up balls for them to bat around
the kitchen floor -- they love it because they can carry it around
in their mouth! - Doesn't that make your teeth hurt to think about?
Deb, Crowder, & Nina (alias Little Girl)
|
1447.9 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Thu Jun 09 1988 14:45 | 4 |
| I have a really huge Boston fern on a plant stand. The kitties
nibble the fronds, but it's not noticeable since the plant is so
big. Keeps us all happy.
|
1447.10 | | MYVAX::LUBY | love them furry terrorists | Thu Jun 09 1988 17:22 | 21 |
|
Re: tin foil
The other day I was unwrapping some food when T.K. came
rushing over and sat expectantly in front of me begging!! I
couldn't believe it!! He never begs for food. My first thought
was that my roommate was teaching him some bad habits. Then
I realized that he wanted the tin foil.
Re: spider plants
One of the few plants that can't be killed from lack of
water. I actually do have 2 plants that aren't dead yet
and they are in my office where everybody else waters them
cause they know I won't.
I would bring the cats favorite plants to the office
if I were you...
Karen
|
1447.11 | Please don't eat the daisies | CISM::HAWES | | Fri Jun 10 1988 11:13 | 14 |
|
Well, woke up this morning to find my coleus in little pieces, and
a big dirt pile, scattered all over my (light-colored rug).
Ever try vacuming at 6:00 in the morning? Gotta hate it.
I guess the kitties have won the war. I will have to decorate with
other (non-living) things than plants.
I can still keep my hanging plants though - I hope!
DEB & the DESTRUCTO-CATS
(would make a nice name for a band - eh??)
|
1447.12 | Kats = 1 Plants = 0 | EDUC8::TRACHMAN | | Fri Jun 10 1988 11:30 | 2 |
| Yup, vaccing at 6 am sucks! I've given up all plants - the little
suckers can jump to get to the hanging ones. oh well..
|
1447.13 | couldn't resist! | GLINKA::GREENE | | Fri Jun 10 1988 11:46 | 9 |
| re: .12
Pun intended?
>>Yup, vaccing at 6 am sucks!
Time for a new bumper sticker? (Holly, that's your cue...)
p
|
1447.14 | | TOPDOC::TRACHMAN | | Mon Jun 13 1988 10:58 | 7 |
| Yup it was!! I spent most of this weekend vaccing - boy, I never
thought I would appreciate winter - at least the kids keep their
hair on! All Yurii (all white shorthair) has to do is curl up
anywhere on any part of any rug and everything around him turns
white! He won't have any skin left if I brush/comb him any more.
E.T. the_human_hair_sucker
|
1447.15 | other options, sigh | TIMNEH::TILLSON | Sugar Magnolia | Thu Jun 16 1988 19:29 | 16 |
|
re: plants, mine are:
a) outside in the garden
b) in covered terrariums
c) at work
d) cactuses with thorns
Note that (d) is not *always* an option, depending on the cat.
My former cat, Mitzi (R.I.P.), once consumed a rather large (2 foot)
prickly pear in an afternoon. (No, that is NOT why she died, in
fact it didn't seem to have any effect on *her* at all. Raised
my blood pressure by about 30 points, though.)
Rita
|
1447.16 | 3/4" Chicken Wire | LYMPH::SWANT | Can't get away from basics | Thu Jun 23 1988 17:18 | 24 |
| Extracted from
"Horticulture"
July 1988, Volume LXVI Number 7, p. 13
Q. My cats use my potted house-plants for litter boxes. What
can I do to stop them? J.G., Boise, Idaho
A. With tin snips or wire cutters, cut circles of three-quarter-
inch chicken wire (or hardware cloth) large enough to lie on the
rim of the plant containers. Cut a radius from the outer edge of
the cover to a snipped-out center hole large enough to slip
around the plant base without injuring the stems. Your cats
won't walk on or dig through the wire, yet water and fertilizer
can be easily applied.
by Elise Cox
- Julie
|
1447.17 | a little prettier | VAXWRK::DUDLEY | | Fri Jun 24 1988 10:44 | 4 |
| I've been successful using pine cones and decorative
gravel/stones placed on top of the dirt.
Donna
|