In our backyard, we don’t have to worry about it because our backyard is fenced, and the dogs keep a tight perimeter. However, out front I’ve recently been spooking cats hiding in the bushes beneath our bird feeders.
I hate putting my dog on a long lead(she gets tangled), but I’m thinking that putting her on a lead out front occasionally could help train the cats to avoid the area. Otherwise, I’m considering trapping them and dropping them off at animal control. Id rather not do this because our city’s animal control is overwhelmed with stray cats and dogs, and I don’t want to add to their workload.
So if anyone has an effective way they like to deter or harass cats and it’s ethical, please let me know!
Thanks.
motion sensor sprinkler will do it
This is the best option. Especially if you set the motion sensor lower to the ground so that the birds at the feeder aren’t triggering it, just the cats when they come up.
We had one to keep animals away from our goldfish pond. It worked really well. We also found out that the mailman cut through our side yard after dropping off our mail.
This is the only thing that would work in my opinion.
A metronome will spook cats. The Japanese use a piece of bamboo that fills with water and then whacks against another surface to scare deers.
Neat. I like this idea.
I know that there are some plants and herbs cats don’t like. You could try placing some.
Have you tried getting them high? I did a thing: Getting stray cats high to stop them eating my pets
I’m going to try this.
The obvious answer is to move all the bird feeders to the back. If you’re attracting them to an area with predators then you’re better just not feeding them.
You can also use window feeders or similar to move the feeders up high, but I’d say the first option makes the most sense.
Additional to moving and/or securing the food source, there are a bunch of very pleasant odours cats hate that are harmless and plant-based. Lavender, citrus, mints, etc. Too strong for cat noses.
PDF warning but a decent guide to deterring cats originally made by Sacremento Feral Resources
https://www.cityofsacramento.org/-/media/Corporate/Files/General-Services/Animal-Care/Feral-Cat-Deterrents.pdfIndeed. Birds are capable of flight [citation needed] so for them taking a trip to the back yard to visit the feeder is super easy, barely an inconvenience.
Adorable edge case: Kiwi / Apterygiformes
There are odor repellents that can work in addition to making the environment around the feeders uncomfortable for the cats. If you can somehow make the ground sticky or wet it might be enough to keep the cats away without harming them.
We’ve taken to putting a basil plant anywhere we don’t want the cat to go
COSTWAY Scarecrow Motion Activated Animal Repellent https://a.co/d/aM1eWYD
That would scare the birds more than the cats tho
Which will also give the cats no reason to hang around! The perfect solution.
I’m thinking about building something similar with one of my raspberry pis sitting around.
Believe you can get high pitch things but that will probably irritate your dog. Could run out screaming at the cat and they will scarper, they then just collectively learn not to come by lol
I read that article before asking, but often times those “10 best” articles are just generic suggestions without any real world efficacy.
Have you tried those ultrasonic cat scareres?
In my experience, I don’t believe you’ll be able to “train” the cats that way. They’ll be more cautious to keep an eye out for your dog, but if your dog is not around they’re not gonna want to miss a hunting opportunity. I could be wrong, but that’s the way my cats behave at home. Being trained not to do something is really just a “be more careful of when I should do this” to them
There’s no controlling cats. Which is why letting yours free roam is bad. For the environment, their safety, all around really.
Ah, well I come from a more brutal rural background I guess, but if any cats cause me problems with the chickens it’s a cage trap followed by a .22 to the head through the bars of the cage. Quick, painless, no burden on animal control but understandably some people would be reluctant to do it. I do the same for friends with feral cat problems who are uncomfortable with the final act.
I still find it abhorrent that people put animals in sacks and drown them. That really makes me feel ill (and angry), but I can swallow the lump in my throat when I have to dispatch a cat, sheep, chicken knowing that it’s the way that causes the least stress, and there really are no better options.
Assuming you’re in the US (I’m not) it can’t be too hard to find a gun-toting maniac to do the deed! (sorry)
I’ll take the downvotes for being evil now if you wish.
You can’t murder peoples pets.
Feral cats are usually pretty easy to distinguish. They’re often in poor condition; skinny, dull coats. They have outbreaks of cat flu when numbers build up, with gross mucus around their eyes, and they are mostly wildtype tabby. You know you have a problem when you start seeing them frequently stalking through the hedges and you start seeing the same cat causing trouble. They shit in the hay barns and cause toxoplasmosis-induced abortions in sheep and humans, not to mention the catastrophic impact on native birds. They need to be controlled. Taking every feral cat in to see if they are chipped is really not an option practically, financially or sensibly.
Even so, mistakes are possible, but if at any point they directly start attacking livestock, like chickens, it really doesn’t matter if they are a pet or not. That’s the outcome for any animal hassling livestock, including dogs, and it doesn’t matter a jot if they are someone’s pet.
Lots of things in that are untrue, but the OP is asking about free roaming cats, not feral cats.
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