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

There are about 3 cats that every single night come and one of em poops on this specific place on the front lawn. We put landscaping, and a weedmat and rocks to decorate next to this pole that supports these stairs. The cat ALWAYS poops there. Last night, my dad put a piece of plastic there so the cat wouldn't poop in that spot...
IT POOPED NEXT TO IT!
It's very frustrating. We have no idea whose cats these are, and really wanna know how we can get the cats to stop pooping there? Is there some sort of deterrent?

2007-01-12 07:23:51 · 8 answers · asked by Hyphon 3 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 and should NOT be used. 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.

2007-01-12 08:38:34 · answer #1 · answered by ♪ Seattle ♫ 7 · 4 0

There are spray deterrents sold at petstores like petco and petsmart that you spray on your lawn. You could also use vinegar in the area, or all over if hes that persistant. Or citrus, lemon peels in the area also may work. When I was a kid a neighbors cat would do this in our back yard, my dad used to throw things at it. If it were me id start with the vinegar, its cheap by the gallon and harmless if ingested or stepped on by any children or other pets you may have. Good luck!

2007-01-12 07:33:21 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

In my adventure with this same ordeal when we dared enable our cats outdoors (fairly undesirable friends!), we discovered that kitties HATE the smell of citrus. in case you'll locate a good citrus depending cleanser made with orange oil or limonene, mix some up into the soil. As somebody else stated, you are able to favor to provide an section a wee bit extra faraway from the door for them to apply. i recognize that cats truly favor sand to soil, so per chance a bag or 2 is with a view to make an outside "restroom" for them. even as someone had suggested moth balls, i do not recognize how secure it truly is for both the flowers to boot because the kitties & i'd be leery of using them. i wish that your kitties can locate concepts on the thanks to act somewhat more suitable domesticated, notwithstanding, they'd have concept that they were only "helping" by using including more suitable fertilizer. >^._.^< - and what do you imagine yours smells of, rosebuds?

2016-10-30 22:40:53 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Every cat I have ever seen buries it - did you actually see them do it & not bury it ?
The only deterant I know to cats, might be a dog but you would have to have it chained to that location all the time.

2007-01-12 07:34:06 · answer #4 · answered by kate 7 · 0 0

Chain a pit bull up there.

But, seriously, I have heard lots about using mousetraps to deter cats. It won't hurt them, but when it goes off it will startle the cat enough to deter its return. Cats are spineless like that.

2007-01-12 07:26:36 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I have heard that if u sprinlke red pepper flakes it'll stop them. But if you dont want it to come back ever put mothballs, since they're poisonous.

2007-01-12 07:33:05 · answer #6 · answered by bluefire_91 2 · 0 0

Hire Smith & Weson to take of all 3 cats.

2007-01-12 07:34:14 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

BUY A DOG

2007-01-12 07:27:13 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

fedest.com, questions and answers