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because my neighbors cats are always pooping in our yard

2006-11-06 15:08:16 · 8 answers · asked by JORGE 1 in Pets Cats

8 answers

HI there...Common odours that are effective deterrents for cats are:

Citronella works best for cats as well as citrus scents such as orange or lemon (primarily towards cats), cayenne pepper, coffee grounds, pipe tobacco, lavender oil, lemon grass oil, citronella oil, peppermint oil, eucalyptus oil, and mustard oil.

"Havahart's Cat Repellent" uses capsaicin pepper and oil of mustard as its active ingredients. It repels by both taste and odor, has a lemon scent.

Every animal responds differently to each of these. Some will not be phased by them and others will be quite revolting.

For training purposes they are applied on items that are to encourage avoidance behaviours and not for use with a squirt bottle as they could harm the eyes or respiratory system. Test each substance and observe to see which works as a deterrent so that accidental injestion does not occur as some could then be fatal.

Coleus plants can be effective, but every cat responds differently so it is uncertain without experimenting.

Many people believe mothballs work, however they are considered toxic. Here's more information on this:
http://www.cvm.uiuc.edu/ope/enotes/showarticle.cfm?id=89
MOTHBALLS are toxic to cats which contains the ingredient Naphthalene. Mothballs are approximately twice as toxic as paradichlorobenzene, and cats are especially sensitive to naphthalene. Signs of ingestion of naphthalene mothballs include emesis, weakness, lethargy, brown-colored mucous membranes and collapses. Paradichlorobenzene mothballs may cause GI upset, ataxia, disorientation, and depression. Elevations in liver serum biochemical values may occur within 72 hours of indigestion.

2006-11-06 15:32:10 · answer #1 · answered by ♪ Seattle ♫ 7 · 2 0

Make sure there is no loose sand (eg a child's sandbox) that would be very attractive to them. DIg up any existing poop so they can't smell it as a place to poop again because it worked in the past. Also they hate the smell of citrus so maybe try putting some orange peel around might work. And if it's noisy or there's nowhere to scratch and bury what they do they might go somewhere else.

2006-11-06 15:33:49 · answer #2 · answered by Carmen 2 · 0 0

opposite to Exodus' professional advise, cats do no longer consistently dig a hollow for "poo." My cats these days began only occurring the grass too. i think of they do only this while it has rained and it somewhat is muddy so as that they at the instant cannot dig a hollow. the reason they dig a hollow to poop in is so as that they'd conceal it to hid the scent from predators. this would be a elementary intuition and that i do no longer think of they might poop without overlaying it if given the choice to. ought to it somewhat is that there is not any place with open dirt on your backyard for them to flow in? if so, you could think of of turning over a small patch of dirt for them, yet while that does artwork, you nonetheless would have a difficulty while it somewhat is moist. stable success!

2016-10-21 09:51:29 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

set up heat seeking missiles, and stand on your porch with a shotgun works every time. jk

well you could tell the neighbor to stop

2006-11-06 15:22:53 · answer #4 · answered by moose 1 · 0 0

try making a pool? that'd stop them going into ur yard

2006-11-06 15:22:59 · answer #5 · answered by meow 2 · 0 0

.22

2006-11-06 15:10:36 · answer #6 · answered by AK 6 · 1 1

grow some grass... they will poop in dirt or stones or sand...

2006-11-06 15:21:20 · answer #7 · answered by wibiggurl 3 · 0 0

Get a big dog.

2006-11-06 15:16:03 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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