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  • #76
    Originally posted by TrishY View Post
    If a cat feels not threatened by other cats, happy and secure in your garden it won't bury its poo - I remember that from watching a video all about cat behaviour at college
    But my cat is perfectly happy and secure in her own garden, sticks to the same area, but DOES bury it?? She's old, maybe its the younger ones who are 'mutating'!?

    One trick that does seem to work in my area is to sprinkle a little chilli powder where you dont want cats - it irritates their noses and whiskers and they do seem to remember after a few gos and leave the area alone!
    Life may not be the party we hoped for but since we're here we might as well dance

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    • #77
      Was going to write that we're lucky and have no cat issues where we are.... but then realised it's because we have 2 great big dogs who tear round the garden.... tends to put the mogs off a bit!

      I can't believe that cat's are pretty much allowed to roam free, toilet wherever and worry other animals (rabbits, guineas, chickens etc).

      If one of my dogs even goes near livestock (for example) a farmer has the right to shoot first, ask questions later. By law I'm required to have a collar and id tags on the dogs at all times in public, pick up and dispose of my animals mess; and keep them under control at all times in public places. But cat owners don't have to do any of this!!

      If my dogs escaped and killed someone's chickens or rabbit etc, there'd probably be hell to pay, but it seems like cats could do this and just saunter off with no repercussions for the owners? Is this right?

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      • #78
        My mum used to put lime wedges in her plant pots to deter my cat from using them as loos. They seemed to work, but they have to be replaced when they are dry. Also garlic and onion seem to work, cats hate the smell of them.

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        • #79
          I am no cat expert but I was told that cats hate strong smell such as : pepper powder, chili powder (I think more that it irritates their nose). Would coffe powder work as it has strong smell ? But if they easily get wash away by rain it will be pretty expensive to be use as a cat detterent.
          I grow, I pick, I eat ...

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          • #80
            Those cat spikes are nearly £5 a metre! Wowzer. Keep cats away | Cat deterrent | Cat scarer | Catwatch

            Perhaps some Grapes can rig up a Heath Robinson affair?
            All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.

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            • #81
              I planted my sweet peas in the border and put a wire mesh frame over them to keep the cats off. Went out today and one of the little b*****s has wormed it's way behind the mesh and done it's business!!!!! Also done some token digging but the s**t is still on the surface. Sweet peas seem OK, but what do you do?????

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              • #82
                Originally posted by Two_Sheds View Post
                Those cat spikes are nearly £5 a metre! Wowzer. Keep cats away | Cat deterrent | Cat scarer | Catwatch

                Perhaps some Grapes can rig up a Heath Robinson affair?
                How about the grip strips you put down when laying carpet? I considered using them all over the chook run roof as a fox deterrent.
                Kirsty b xx

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                • #83
                  Originally posted by kirsty b View Post
                  How about the grip strips you put down when laying carpet? I considered using them all over the chook run roof as a fox deterrent.
                  Maybe to protect your chickens its ok but for keeping cats out of a garden even I think its a bit harsh. If you've never used gripper rods they are very sharp and shed your knuckles. It would do a lot of damage to a cats paw.

                  It might not be legal either if you have in on your boundary but I don't know the specifics?
                  http://plot62.blogspot.com/

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                  • #84
                    cats are not dull .if they step on them they wont do it again and its not going to rip its feet to bits. jump on and straight back off i love cats myself but am only trying to give some advice and its a very cheap way of keeping them out of your garden.

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                    • #85
                      Carpet gripper rods are really nasty...I don't like cats but I wouldn't subject them to injury from them...now human vandals...that's another matter!"

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                      • #86
                        Originally posted by Matt. View Post
                        Maybe to protect your chickens its ok but for keeping cats out of a garden even I think its a bit harsh. If you've never used gripper rods they are very sharp and shed your knuckles. It would do a lot of damage to a cats paw.

                        It might not be legal either if you have in on your boundary but I don't know the specifics?
                        I'm a cat lover, have 3 of the them, so am probably a bit more forgiving, but they do the same thing in my garden! Very frustrating and I appreciate totally where you are coming from. However I think Matt is right about the legalities...I'm sure there is a law or by-law that gives cats the right to roam! One of my friend's old neighbours put shards of glass sticking up in his garden, but I'm sure the police got involved eventually!

                        I think I've said previously on the forum, I'm using netting on (as opposed to above and over) the ground/raised beds as they don't like netting under their paws and will move on! Hopefully this will work!
                        "A cat sees no good reason why it should obey another animal, even if it does stand on two legs."

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                        • #87
                          Originally posted by kevin jenkins View Post
                          you can get stuff called new silent roar cat repellent fertilizer £8.99 from ebay
                          I was speaking to a friend this week, he's having a problem with cats digging at his new fruit trees and is none too happy, and not really a cat lover! I mentioned the lions roar to him but he also said that real lion dung was available from Blair Drummond Safari Park (near Stirling) - but there is a waiting list for years! Seems there are quite a few people then suffering with our felines' toilet habits!
                          "A cat sees no good reason why it should obey another animal, even if it does stand on two legs."

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                          • #88
                            My old neighbour (as in previous, not old) dropped by last evening for an apero. She told me her new cat, under a year old, has just produced 5 kittens, so I gave her 'the look' and asked about having the cat speyed. She told me that she'd been to the pharmacy to buy a bottle of ether to put the kittens down as she didn't want to keep any of them. I was horrified.

                            Anyway, she told me that another mutual friend doesn't agree with having cats speyed and when her female cats have litters she BEHEADS those that she can't rehome - and it isn't a rumour, she's actually seen her doing it to the poor little buggers.

                            This thread started being about cats and bad owners - cats need to be speyed before they reproduce to keep the population down, no problem about that but the French attitude to domestic animals can be just awful - you see so many wholly pampered dogs and cats here but the other side of the coin is the number that are abandoned by their owners just before the summer holidays and people just being cruel to their animals - cutting their heads off is just f****** barbaric.

                            Good news is that the 5 kittens were rehomed today and the woman who came for the apero last evening is currently on the 'maybe' Xmas card list!
                            Last edited by TonyF; 05-04-2008, 05:34 PM.
                            TonyF, Dordogne 24220

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                            • #89
                              Originally posted by TonyF View Post
                              My old neighbour (as in previous, not old) dropped by last evening for an apero. She told me her new cat, under a year old, has just produced 5 kittens, so I gave her 'the look' and asked about having the cat speyed. She told me that she'd been to the pharmacy to buy a bottle of ether to put the kittens down as she didn't want to keep any of them. I was horrified.

                              Anyway, she told me that another mutual friend doesn't agree with having cats speyed and when her female cats have litters she BEHEADS those that she can't rehome - and it isn't a rumour, she's actually seen her doing it to the poor little buggers.

                              This thread started being about cats and bad owners - cats need to be speyed before they reproduce to keep the population down, no problem about that but the French attitude to domestic animals can be just awful - you see so many wholly pampered dogs and cats here but the other side of the coin is the number that are abandoned by their owners just before the summer holidays and people just being cruel to their animals - cutting their heads off is just f****** barbaric.

                              Good news is that the 5 kittens were rehomed today and the woman who came for the apero last evening is currently on the 'maybe' Xmas card list!
                              I am horrified that this sort of thing happens! I have a kitten just now, about 12-14 weeks, she's had her jabs...but she is def not going outside until she has been spayed! i read at one time that one cat, if unspayed, the descendants potentially will amount to 40,000 cats! OMG! it's a bit of pain, for me to not let my kitten outside, she is raring to go...but it will not happen! no way! as with all the cats i've had previously...they will get the `op'! Dee
                              "A cat sees no good reason why it should obey another animal, even if it does stand on two legs."

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                              • #90
                                We have 3 cats, all taken in needing a good home. Betty is my first cat and came from the RSPCA. She was spayed when I had her 18 years ago and as she is now 20, has never had kittens. All owners should get their animals spayed as a matter of course.

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