* cocoa hulls
* toothpicks
* plastic forks
* coffee grounds (highly recommended)
* black pepper
* aluminum foil
* cinnamon
* bramble cuttings
* heavy bark mulch
* chicken wire
* gutter covers
* rose bush cuttings
* hawthorn cuttings
* crushed rock
* donate catnip into your neighbor's yards
* citrus peels
* cedar compost
* river rocks over the exposed soil
* garlic
* stone mulch
* carpet tack strips
* squirt gun with water
* six-inch bamboo skewers (pointy side up)
* short twigs throughout the planted area about 6" apart
* thorny berry, lilac, hawthorn, clippings
* holly leaves
* Rue
* Essential Oils of Orange, Lemon, Lime, Citrus, lemon grass, citronella, mustard
* pinecones
* lavender
* keep your area damp, they like dry soil
* Carefresh - "recycled" wood pulp
* loud sudden noises
* spray on your leaves (not the cat): fill a spray bottle with 1/2 t chili powder, 1/2 t cayenne pepper, 1 t dishsoap and water
* motion sensor sprinklers (highly recommended)
Motion Sensor Sprinkler
* water bottle on "light stream" do not spray a direct stream into their eyes, this can cause serious damage and is cruel.
*** chili powder, red crushed pepper, cayenne pepper (not recommended), it gets on the cat's paws then they wash themselves and they get it in their eyes, beware cats have literally scratched their eyes out because of this
*** moth balls (not recommended), avoid these in your garden because they are highly toxic unless you hang them above the ground
* jam jars or clear plastic bottles half full of water left at intervals in the flower beds. Put lid on and place in the middle of the lawn. If you have a big lawn then put a few about. Leave out and see if it works! Cats are suppose to be scared away by the bottle, but how you ask? It works best at night and if there a breeze. Take a light say from a street lamp, car or one of your windows. This light travels through the bottle and the water which is then reflected away like laser beams in different directions giving off little flashes. The cat sees these flashes and Zap! He's away. There you have it so go out and try it out on your lawn.
*** Consider what will be safe and won't prevent even you from doing garden work if you bend down on your knees, etc
Check out this forum, has many different solutions
2006-06-16 04:44:40
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answer #1
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answered by pdanielleh 4
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Here are 2 different options for dealing with cats in the garden:
1. Scatter a bag of smelly dog hair around your plants. Really!
2. Special spike pads designed to deter cats from "scatting" in garden beds are available at local garden centers. It feels like walking on nails to the animal, which may seem brutal, but once bunnies, raccoons, or other plant eating critters find a choice garden, they will probably keep coming back.
2006-06-16 06:00:50
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answer #2
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answered by creative_erin 2
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Basic Training of the Puppy - Read here https://tr.im/epOKw
The new puppy is certainly one of the most adorable and cuddly creatures that has ever been created. It is the most natural thing in the world to shower it with love and affection. However, at the same time it is important to realize that if you want to have a well trained adult dog, you need to begin the training process right away. The dog, like its related ancestor, the wolf, is a pack animal. One of the features of a pack is that it has a single dominant leader. Your new puppy is going to want that leader to be you, but if you do not assume that role from the very beginning, the puppy’s instincts will push him to become the leader.
The most important thing to remember about training the puppy during its first six months of life is that it must see you as the leader of the family pack. The essential thing is gaining the trust and the respect of the puppy from the beginning. You will not do this by allowing the puppy to do whatever it wants to do whenever it wants to do it. On the other hand, a certain amount of patience is required. Most people err in their early training by going to extremes one way or the other. Although you need to begin the basic training process at once, you can not expect your dog to do too much at first. Basic obedience training is fine and should include simple commands like sit, stay, and come. Remember that trying to teach the dog advanced obedience techniques when it is a puppy is much like trying to teach a five year old child algebra.
It is also important to restrain from cruel or abusive treatment of the puppy. You can not beat obedience into your dog, and it certainly is not going to engender feeling of respect and trust. House breaking is an area where this usually becomes a problem because of the anger that is triggered when the puppy fails and creates a mess inside the home. Although this issue must be addressed without anger, it most be addressed. If you allow the puppy to eliminate inside the house, it will continue to do so as an adult dog. The same thing is true of other destructive or dangerous behavior such as chewing and biting. Do not expect the puppy to grow out of it. You are going to need to train the puppy out of it, but you should do so firmly but with a sense of play and fun using positive reinforcement and lots of love and praise for good behavior.
2016-07-20 07:01:21
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answer #3
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answered by ? 3
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I easily have a backyard and performance had cat issues over the years. i have been instructed any variety of prickly flowers (cactus particularly) deter cats. i am going to't advance a lot of those flowers because my backyard has too a lot colour yet I do locate that mothballs placed around the the backyard keeps the cats away. I in simple terms replace them some cases in accordance to turning out to be season.
2016-11-14 20:45:55
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answer #4
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answered by chowen 4
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I've only found 3 things that work;
1) Cut outs of cats faces with big round scary eyes.
2) Keeping a dog.
3) Orange and lemon oil poured on to silicon watering granules and left lying around, especially where they come in. They really don't like the smell but you have to keep topping it up with fresh oil.
2006-06-16 12:52:12
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answer #5
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answered by sarah c 7
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Sprinkle pepper down and also fill some empty clear lemonade bottles with water. The 2 ltr ones. The reflection from any kind of lights spook the cats. Its tried and tested and has proven successful in my garden.
2006-06-16 04:54:56
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answer #6
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answered by amy d 2
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The garden is a area that not all the residences can presume, If you want to make your very own dream backyard then decide on https://tr.im/Cisah , Ideas 4 Landscaping for newbies and experts.
The Ideas 4 Landscaping is a total landscaping resource with in depth diagrams, complete with color images and examples on several types of landscaping patterns. It is almost everything you'll require to get began in making the perfect outside so you don’t dream anymore and make it feasible.
2016-04-13 21:02:10
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answer #7
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answered by ? 3
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There's a sonic (?) sound thing you can stick in your garden. When a cat comes in your garden it triggers the sensor and sets off a noise that only cats can hear. If safe and painless. I think in the Uk they cost around £25. Your local pet store can advise further on it.
2006-06-16 04:53:11
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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It's so frustrating, isn't it? I've tried these two solutions in the vegetable patch - would work in flowers beds as well.
1 half bury jam jars filled with ammonia - trouble is that we can smell this too...
2 Put down small branches and twigs of something spiky - pyrocantha or holly - especially in the area they use as the toliet and the path they take.
2006-06-18 20:57:50
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answer #9
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answered by Amanda C 2
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Long nails can be harbingers for bacteria, specifically if they are artificial, but they are good for scratching and starting those little foil wrapped containers which are so hard to get directly into.
2017-03-01 05:33:24
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answer #10
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answered by ? 3
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