Hello,
We have a five year old cat with some big behavioral problems. He was a
"farm cat" that was taken from the farm at five months old. We adopted him
four years ago from our neighbors, which had give up on him.
From the start, he has had a problem marking his territory (he is fixed).
If we were to leave a blanket on the floor, or when we bring new furniture
into the house, he urinates on it. We have to keep all our doors in the
house closed because he'll do the same thing to our beds.
He is also turning more aggressive towards our other, older male cat. He
spends all night staring out the windows, and if he sees a cat outside, he
will attack our other cat, at times making him bleed.
Recently, he has also started defecating outside the litter box, even if it
is clean. For some reason, he only does this on the lower level of our
house, not on the main floor.
It would be very easy for us to bring him to the shelter. We are moving
into a newer house next month, and don't want him doing the same things
there. Trouble is, at times, he can be the sweetest, most loving cat we've
ever had. I'm concerned that if we just pass our problems on to another
family, they'll just have him destroyed.
Can anyone provide some advice? We've heard all the jokes about the inbred
farm cats, but I'd love to help him if we can.
Thanks,
-Chris
James Marz - 20 May 2004 22:53 GMT
> Hello,
>
[quoted text clipped - 27 lines]
>
> -Chris
Preheat your oven to 350, throw your cat in, remove after it quits sqealing.
Sunflower - 21 May 2004 00:32 GMT
> Hello,
>
[quoted text clipped - 27 lines]
>
> -Chris
I'm assuming that you've taken him to the vet to rule out any medical
problems, added extra litterboxes and scooped them daily, as well as used
Feliway. If you've tried all of these things and nothing works, then either
agree as a family to manage his behavioral problems (confine him to a set of
rooms where this behavior is easily cleaned and will be tolerated) or take
him to your vet and have him euthanized. I can tell you right now, that
your cat is an extremely poor candidate for adoption from any shelter, and
that it would be sheer torture to subject him to one. Any kill shelter
would euthanize him immediately and not even give him a chance. A no kill
shelter would be worse, as he'd be "in jail" forever because no one would
adopt a cat with this history of problems. And, if you lied and didn't tell
about his problems, it would be found out. Then, there's the age factor
which also is against rehoming. If you aren't willing to deal with the
problems in your new home, then at least give him the gift of an easy death
with you at his side. He's earned that. He doesn't deserve an anonymous
stranger at a shelter as his last sight on earth.