English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

how do i get my cat to stop going to the bathroom everywhere. he dose it even when i'm home, even in the room. how do i get him to stop?

2006-06-18 20:12:35 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Cats

8 answers

Keep him in a cage will better.

2006-06-18 20:27:59 · answer #1 · answered by Natalie Ooi 3 · 0 1

Always make sure his litterbox is clean, clean, clean!!!
Some tricks that may or may not work are: spray some perfume or cologne on the areas you want to keep him off. Pepper can also work. Some people try the water in the spray bottle, but can get a little wet.

There is a type of Prozac for cats that your vet can prescribe. This is administered for cats who for no other reason - have behavioral problems.

You should probably take him in just incase there is another problem, one that he's been trying to tell you about. :)

2006-06-18 21:14:05 · answer #2 · answered by Cheyenne 2 · 0 0

He might have urinary tract infection or bladder stones. If he is male this can be life-threatening and urgent, because he can block and be unable to urinate. Check if he urinates all right. Male or female, collect a sample of urine by putting a cup under his tail when he pees, and have it analysed. The vet will tell you if he needs medication (antibiotics), special food, etc.

All that if he is a toilet trained adult cat. If he is a baby, you just have to take him to the litter box when you see him trying to pee elsewhere, But as i am guessing he doesn't poo outside, the urinary tract problem is more possible, go to the vet ASAP and do the urine analysis test.
Ask the doctor if he would give him special food for urinary problems as a precaution or antibiotics.

2006-06-18 22:12:44 · answer #3 · answered by cpinatsi 7 · 0 0

Wow. In conjunction with your other question, I'd say it's likely your cat has diabetes. Vet! ASAP! I have a friend who's cat was peeing everywhere, all the time and it turned out that he is diabetic. Now that he's on insulin, he's feeling much better and not peeing nearly as much. He's back to using the catbox like he's supposed to.

2006-06-18 20:18:51 · answer #4 · answered by Kim 4 · 0 0

First thing stop using whatever you are using to clean it up, he will just keep trying to cover it up, try using another product to clean it. Next go to wal-mart or wherever you shop, and in the pet isle there is this stuff that you spray to keep dogs from crossing where ever you spray it. Spray that stuff all over your house, it don't work on the dogs but it works for keeping the cat from peeing on everything.

2006-06-18 20:23:26 · answer #5 · answered by Robi 1 · 0 0

First, learn to spell. Second, is your cat neutered? If your cat isn't
neutered, non-neutered cats pee all over the place to mark they're territory. Non-neutered cats do a lot of other werid stuff too! So, if he isn't neutered, get him neutered and he should stop
peeing all over your house. If he IS neutered already, maybe he isn't litter trained. To learn more about litter training, and neutering, read a cat book, or ask your vet. After that, learn to spell!

2006-06-19 02:11:31 · answer #6 · answered by Binky 2 · 0 0

Pets are much cleaner than human. They only do it in the place where it smells like it..!
When he does it at a place you would not him to do, then clean the place with bleach. He will never do it again there.

Prepare a place with soft straw or wood chip placed on a plastic sheet. The animals are fast to learn.
Do not hit the pet, they will not understand why you done that.They will also hate you for hitting them.

2006-06-18 20:23:16 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

unsure of the medical condition but i do know that male cats are very Territorial and they have more desire to spray to mark their territory that male dogs do..do you have other cats or another cat if so a male cat will not use the same litter box as another cat especially another male cat

2006-06-18 20:30:53 · answer #8 · answered by lelamae939 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers