I have a fixed male and an unfixed female... she's perfectly healthy but when she's in heat she pee's around the house mostly on plants- my vet said that when females are in heat they spray to attract the males by her peeing on plants or larger furniture its just natural instinct in her mind.. she'll be getting fixed soon which the vet says should stop it. Talk to your vet about it and try and watch when they are around the house to see who the culprit is
2006-12-15 18:32:25
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Last year my beautiful Manx cat Theodore went out for the evening and never came back. I love cats and the house didn't feel the same without one, so I picked up Lola from a rescue centre. She was very frightened and would pee all over the house. I found Cat Spraying No More� on the internet and the techniques worked almost immediately. I haven't had a problem with Lola since. Amazing!
Can't stop your cat peeing in the house? Then worry no more...
2016-05-14 18:40:39
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Usually when a cat starts to go outside the litter box she is trying to tell you something. This could be her telling you that she has a Urinary Tract Infection. UTI's are very dangerous for cats so you will need to get her to the vet immediately, they can be fatal if not properly checked out. Make sure she has plenty of drinking water and try feeding her some moist food, or if she's on a dry food regimen, mix a little warm water with the hard food. <- That is not a cure, just advice if you cannot get a vet appointment immediately. After she gets checked out and prescribed medicine I would look into feeding her more moist food, cats that don't get enough water / moisture are more susceptible to UTI's.
2016-03-29 09:01:31
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Whichever one it is, they do this sometimes when their litter box isn't clean enough for them. Some cats are pickier than others. If you don't scoop daily and change the litter weekly, try that. If you do, get a second litter box. Some cats simply won't set foot in a litter box that's already been soiled. Maybe you already do all these things, but just a thought.
2006-12-15 18:52:48
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answer #4
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answered by Tara Y 1
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I would guess the female cat. Try letting the male outside and see what he does. It might calm him down to go checking his territory for those big, scary cats that he's weary of. Has to watch over the property, you know.
2006-12-15 17:45:50
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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My bet would be the fixed male. I have a fixed 8 year old male who was fixed after recommended (6 months approx) because I got him when he was 1 and I have had problems with him spraying on occasion ever since. I have since gotten a now 1 year old male who was fixed on schedule and have had no problems with spraying from him.
2006-12-15 17:49:28
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answer #6
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answered by rwing 1
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More than likely it is the male cat spraying. If there is an unaltered female cat in the house ( which yours is ) he is doing a very normal territorial thing. Even though he is altered, your female is not and he is going to spray to ward off other males, even though there aren't any others in the house. This is an instinctual thing.
2006-12-15 17:37:55
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answer #7
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answered by P H 3
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2017-02-17 04:28:31
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I would seperate them, leaving them in seperate rooms (or one in a room and the other loose in the house..whichever is practical) with food, water and litter. Eventually, the house soiler will 'go' inappropriately.
It could be a bladder infection, so I'd take whomever is having the accidents in for a check up
2006-12-15 17:46:17
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answer #9
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answered by inwardsinging2 2
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Perhaps the cause is a parasite, put some olive leaves or parsley in their drinking water.
Give yourself some olive leaf tea or olive leaf extract too as we catch parasites from our cats
2006-12-15 18:04:33
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answer #10
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answered by jojo 2
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