T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2202.1 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri Feb 03 1989 16:03 | 7 |
| Has the old carpet and the old rug pad been pulled up? If not, they could
be drawn to those spots. My Argus's bladder problems resulted in some of
my cats begining to mark. I opted to put in a hardwood floor instead of
new carpeting and that solved my problem. By the way, I opted for the
hardwood floor since it was cheeper than a new rug and a new pad.
Deb
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2202.2 | Mine liked the floor -- ANYWHERE! | MARRHQ::KORCHNAK | | Mon Feb 06 1989 08:58 | 21 |
| My Shanti had a similar problem. She liked to urinate in 2 corners
of our dining room, one corner of our living room, once on our bed,
and in the middle of our bedroom floor.
Well, I took her to the vet, for fear she was sick -- nope. So the
vet gave me a list of things to look for. Since nothing had changed
around the house, he was wondering if the cat could see any strange
activity out the window. I thought it might be the landscapers outside
our townhouse during the day, so I isolated that window off. Nope,
she peed in the living room. Thought she might not be getting enough
attention -- nope, that wasn't it. But, my last resort was to lock
her my bathroom during the day with the litter box. Well, the first
time I did that I realized that she was alergic to the litter! After
changing the litter, and leaving her during the day in the bathroom
WITH her new litter for a week, she's been great! And that was 4
months ago! (I had been putting up with her miscellanous potties
for over a year!)
I also thought that it might be the cleanliness or lack of cleanliness
of the litter box. My two don't like clean ones -- it has to be
AT LEAST soiled twice !
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2202.3 | Persistance pays off | AIMHI::OFFEN | | Mon Feb 06 1989 11:09 | 15 |
| Hang in there. I had the same problem with Black Thunder. Patience
and perserverance paid off. I tried all the remedies too EXCEPT
locking her in the bathroom. I locked her in MY room with HER kitty
box. The Aluminum foil on her favorite spots helped immensely.
I also cleaned the rugs and sprayed NO and PRAISED her immensely
when she used the box.
She is now using the box 100% of the time (except if I forget to
clean the box).
Of course, the fire she caused might have also scared her too.
Sandi (Lightning, DejaVu and The Infamous Black Thunder's mom)
|
2202.4 | | SUBURB::TUDORK | SCEADUGENGA | Mon Feb 06 1989 13:46 | 7 |
| Bethany (what a pretty name)
Welcome to Feline notes. Just a thought since you didn't mention
it - have your cats been spayed? Have they been wetting in the
house since you met them, or is it just a recent thing?
Kate
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2202.5 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon Feb 06 1989 15:20 | 7 |
| I agree that the old carpet and pad might have been reattracting them
to th same places. I would treat the floor with Nature's Miracle
thoroughly nad let it dry before putting down the new carpet. I am still trying
to solve a similar problem with Holly. I know it isn't the litter that
bothers her, because she uses a litter box about half the time to have
stools. Sigh.
|
2202.6 | Thank you so much! | NYEM1::BENNETT | Butterfly | Wed Feb 08 1989 07:48 | 23 |
| Thank you all for you replies, I agree with the majority of you
that mentioned it could be the floor in the Living Room. The thing
that I don't understand is that we have 2 layers of new plywood
that we put down, do you think that the urine smell can go through
them? I forgot to explain that we totally gutted this room and
redid (I am glad that it is almost over) it.
Well, last night we picked up our new carpet. My husband and I
washed the floor with Vinager and water and then we put the carpet
down. I am going to try to lock the cats up in a room of their
own with their own litterbox and see if this helps.
My cats are clever and stubborn (Hammy discovered how to open up
the refrigerator at night. After he takes out what he wants and
gives a little to the dog he closes the door, [another story in itself]
we had to put a lock on the door). I hope that they will change
their habits.
Thanks again for you help.
Purringly yours,
Bethany
|
2202.7 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Feb 08 1989 11:59 | 14 |
| My money is on your cat's noses. Unless you've got some kind of a
"barrier" like 4ml plastic between the old floor and the new plywood
subfloor you laid down, the possibility is always there. Also, did you
(or do you plan to) seal the plywood with something like Thompson's
water sea; before you put down the pad and carpet? That way, if the cat
has another "accident" that goes through the pad at least it won't
permeate the wood. In fact, it would be a good idea to seal it even
if cat urine wasn't a problem just because you might have some other
kind of accident (like a burst pipe) that could flood the room and make
unsealed plywood buckle, even if it is nailed every six inches. (My uncle
had this problem when the pipe going to his baseboard heating sprung a
leak; BTW - his subfloor was marine grade plywood!).
Deb
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2202.8 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Wed Feb 08 1989 14:55 | 4 |
| Is it also possible that the water seal will prevent the urine smell
from coming up from underneath the plywood, so the cats won't
clobber the area again?
|
2202.9 | | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Feb 08 1989 15:02 | 5 |
| No, water seal just prevents the wood from absorbing moisture. You need
a non-permiable barrier like thick (4 to 8 mill plastic) over the
subfloor that has the urine smell in it to really block it.
Deb (who has been doing a lot of renovations lately)
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