T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3167.1 | Maybe youcould lure him into a cat carrier. | MAMIE::RUSSO | | Thu Dec 21 1989 10:54 | 9 |
| Can you put his food inside of a cat carrier and then close the
door behind him when he goes in to get it. He may not react very
well to this at first. Is your intention to keep him inside
temporarily or for good. Will this cat let you handle him? He
probably needs to feel that he can come and go as he pleases.
I feel so bad for all the kitties that are outside...it's
so cold.
Mary
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3167.2 | | ASABET::CUNNIFF | | Thu Dec 21 1989 10:54 | 15 |
| Use what we used - a fishing net on a 3' handle, catch him
and keep him in if you want him in.
It's a heartbreaking situation to know a cat, and know he/she is
out in this bone-chilling cold. By the same token, though, it's
hard to tell a cat that WAS an outdoor-only stray cat that
now that you have it in the warm house, here it will stay,
regardless of what it THINKS it wants. We're doing that with
Jesse James II, and although sometimes he makes me feel very guilty
for holding him in against his will, I DO know better than he does,
and I know he'd have trouble surviving the cold.
just my two cents..
jack
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3167.3 | A Garage?? | MICLUS::MTAG | | Thu Dec 21 1989 11:03 | 7 |
| Do you have a garage? Maybe if you can't get him in the house, you can
lure him into your garage and lock him in. It won't be as warm as
being indoors, but it's still better than being outside and will
protect him from any wind. Don't forget to leave a litter box for him.
Mary
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3167.4 | Further Information | CAPNET::SPOONER | | Thu Dec 21 1989 11:05 | 21 |
|
Thanks for the suggestions, the problem is that he will come into
the house and he will eat and sit down, and relax but as soon as we
go near the door he bolts outside again. I know that he is cold
because he licks the pads of his feet and is constantly"kneading" on
the rug when he does come in. I would like him to stay in for good
(by Christmas would be ideal!) but he is really skiddish and very
afraid to be trapped indoors.
I think that I can get him inside and close the door somehow, but I
am afraid that he will go crazy as soon as he realizes he cannot get
outside.
Has anyone had this happen? Do cats go WILD?
Thanks again, I am really worried about him. For what it's worth he
brought a friend with him once, needless to say she is a house cat now!
We also have two other kitties that have no problem being indoors!
Dawn
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3167.5 | | ASABET::CUNNIFF | | Thu Dec 21 1989 11:14 | 10 |
| re "Do cats go WILD?":
Jesse didn't really like it when we'd shut the door behind him. He
whined and whimpered, but he didn't really attack the other cats,
the house, or us.
Of course, "your mileage may vary".
j
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3167.6 | He'll adjust... | MAMIE::RUSSO | | Thu Dec 21 1989 11:28 | 16 |
| I trapped a feral kitten in a carrier last year. She was 6 months
old. Needless to say, she *hated it*. There was quite a scene
at the vets. She literlly climbed the wall and at one point jumped
from the floor to a picture on the wall and both cat and picture
came crashhing down. I was asked to leave because I was becoming
more hysterical than the cat. The vet thought I was crazy because
I had her spayed and brought her home to live in my house. There
was never a repeat performance of the scene at the vet. We just
give her her space and never try to make her feel trapped. I think
your kitty will do ok if he doesn't feel cornered at has a place
where he can go to get away from it all.
Good Luck,
Mary
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3167.7 | I HAVE ALOT OF EXPERIENCE ! | SHARE::WESTON | | Thu Dec 21 1989 11:39 | 32 |
| HI.......
I have SCRUFFY -- she was a stray at 1 year. She's about 4 years now,
took almost another year before she'd stay in and she still loves it
out. She goes to a barn about once a month for a nite or two, no
matter how COLD it is. I do worrie, but there's nothing I can do!!
She's a great cat and prefers to do her duty outside, no matter what
the weather!!
I have about-----------(if you don't already know!!) 15 strays in the
neighborhood. What I've done for them FOR THE COLD is:
I have an old dog house with HAY & BLANKETS in it, on the opposite side
of the stairs a box with hay in it. They bundle up together and when I
feed them I feel them and they are WARM. Let him/her in feed it and
just sit and watch TV or do something......... It will get the message
that its O.K. to relax, don't worry tooo toooo much about it wanting to
be outside..........if you are home this week and weekend, have it go
in and out. This will teach the kittie he/she has a home and has
freedom too. SCRUFFY has a home and her freedom. She is very
happy!!!
I know your worried, but you do get use to it,
I still fret over my strays -- but I know there are places they go too
and I can't run around trying to force them in a home or the dog house.
Do your best make a box outside too that will help
your worries, incase the kittie remains outside.
MERRY CHRISMAS!
|
3167.8 | Go for the hay! | FRAGLE::PELUSO | There's ALWAYS room for ONE more | Thu Dec 21 1989 13:00 | 18 |
| If your really worried about the strays being outside, get some
hay or straw, fluff it up and put it in a box, prefferably out of the
wind. Bagged, kiln dried shavings (the kind you put into horses
stalls) work well too!
All three types of material can be purchased at a grain/feed store
very easily. They will have an insulating effect and keep the kitties
warm if they choose to use it.
My aunt had a cat (RIP - she dissapeared about a month ago) that
would not come inside. I gave her some hay, and the cat lived in a
dog housde filled w/ hay year round.
If you need help finding any of the above mentioned materials, send
mail and I'll help you find something.
Michele & Nippa
|
3167.9 | Make him a little cave | CSC32::K_KINNEY | | Thu Dec 21 1989 13:02 | 11 |
|
I agree with .7 whole heartedly. If kitty prefers to
be outside to the point of worrying about it, I would
provide him with a little hidey hole and fluff up a
bale of straw (can be had pretty cheaply). It gives
puss a lot of insulated material to burrow into and
if he has a little shelter to keep the wind off, he
should do okay.
kim and the Nipper
(who prefers a warm bed in the winter)
|
3167.10 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Dec 21 1989 14:45 | 5 |
| Little Bit took about a week to realize that he wasn't going outside
again after he became an indoor cat. The week was tough on both of
us. But he seems very happy and well adjusted now, and gets more
loving and cosy every day .
|
3167.11 | The heck with this weather! | PARITY::DENISE | And may the traffic be with you | Thu Dec 21 1989 17:01 | 13 |
| That's how I came to have Pepper. She was an abandoned kitty, about
9 months old and PREGNANT! I used to leave some food out for her until
she trusted me and then one day on a day much like today (below zero
and windy) I told her she just couldn't stay out any more. She agreed
and came in to the house. She had six kittens that March, and has
stayed in the house since. On nice days she comes out with me to the
garden and cleans out all the mice and moles, but she won't go out on
a cold day like today! I open the door for her, but when she realizes
it's so cold, she cringes back and says "No way, I ain't that crazy to
go out in that again!"
Denise
|
3167.12 | *OUTDOOR into INDOOR* | AIMHI::OFFEN | | Fri Dec 22 1989 15:37 | 34 |
| *MAMA* was a stray for who knows how long before we found her. She
lived in the alleys in Mancester right near Elm Street. My daughter
saw her and tried to get close to her. *NO WAY, JOSE.* My daughter
started leaving food out for her and then a box with a blanket in it
when it started getting cold. This went on forever. Mama still
wouldn't let my daughter near her. One day my daughter took the
blanket from the box and put it in her lap. Mama came and laid on the
blanket on my daughter's lap. *WHAT A BREAKTHROUGH.* Then Mama got
pregnant. We couldn't let her have the babies outside. They would
die. The day that Mama didn't want my daughter to leave because she
didn't want to be alone was the day Mama had her kittens. My daughter
called her husband and he helped her get Mama into the house. He took
the blanket and just wrapped it around Mama and carried her into the
bathroom. Mama stayed there for four weeks after having the babies.
Then she was allowed out of the room to meet the other kittys. In the
meantime, the Feliners had found wonderful, wonderful homes for the
babies. When it came time for the first and second to leave my
daughter was crying. She had come to love them. As I was dropping off
the first kitten, the owner said she had read that *two are better than
one and could I leave the other kitten*. I said that it already had a
home but that Mama was still in desparate need of one and that she
wouldn't have to put up with the *strange kitty* syndrome. It worked.
Mama had a home. With a lot of patience, Mama has turned into a
wonderful cat. She is an indoor only cat and doesn't miss the outside.
I know that was a long story but I have a tendancy to ramble but I also
wanted to point out that an outdoor only kitty can be made to be an
indoor only kitty. It just takes patience and love and love and love.
Sandi (who thanks her lucky stars for the wonderful Feliners)
Merry Xmas.....
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3167.13 | | CRUISE::NDC | DTN: 297-2313 | Tue Dec 26 1989 07:46 | 5 |
| I agree Sandi. At this point none of the captured kitties shows
any indication that they'd rather be outside in the cold. Dusty
just says he'd like to be outside the back bedroom so he could
come lay on the couch with us. What a love he is!
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