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Gardening

Bloody cats !

(94 Posts)
gillybob Wed 17-May-17 11:40:33

I am sick to death of cats and cat owners.

I now have 4 battery operated cat scarers in my (oddly shaped) back garden and 2 in my tiny front garden, which is barely a garden at all. On top of this I have a few glass bottles half filled with water. Because of the shape its difficult to cover every angle.

There are loads of cats around where I live, most of which must have ignorant or lazy owners who have never bothered to train them to use a litter tray. I have one of the very few gardens (with plants and soil)and I am sick to death of my garden being used as a cat toilet. Last week my DGC wanted to plant some herbs and salad in a trough I had prepared for them but when they started to dig I noticed it was full of cat shit!

On my way out to work this morning I noticed that some of my bedding plants have been dug up yet again. The soil is all over the path and I have no doubt that when I try and sort it out this evening there will be even more piles of shit to remove!

Does anyone know of a way to keep them out, short of shooting them?

I AM SO ANGRY angry

gillybob Thu 18-May-17 16:24:20

Its okay I'm not worried in the slightest Charleygirl Our "local" PC lives right opposite me and he is equally as peed off about the cats as I am.

Actually I would be only giving back what belongs to them much as you might do if someone dropped something in the street.

I am glad you love your cat and that she gives you pleasure Charleygirl but surely you appreciate how awful it is for those of us who don't love cats and don't want cat poop all over our gardens.

cornergran Thu 18-May-17 16:58:35

Cats will always divide opinion but I guess dogs do as well. We couldn't have a cat as Mr C is seriously allergic, actually dangerously allergic. Dogs aren't feasible for us now so no animal deterrent for our garden. I'd never hurt a cat, I enjoy watching them pass by and am fascinated by the ability to balance on the fences but would still prefer not to have to clear up their faeces which is often both runny and oh so smelly. At least the fox leaves solid bits behind him.

ginny Thu 18-May-17 18:41:20

Having dogs yourself will not stop the cats unless the dogs are patrolling the garden 24 hours a day.

gillybob Thu 18-May-17 18:52:51

Next door the other way have a dog. They never seem to get cats in the garden although they don't have soil, they have that artificial lawn. They never even seem to walk on their fence ginny.

NfkDumpling Thu 18-May-17 19:35:03

We do have a gadget which fits on the hose with a sensor on it. Squirts water when the cat passes. The trouble is we forget where we've put it so get squirted too. The GDC love it though!

BBbevan Fri 19-May-17 05:27:19

We buy plastic coated garden fencing and lay that on the ground, planting through the holes. Easy to weed through and can be rolled up for another season come winter. Cats can't scratch through it so go elsewhere. It is a bit expensive if you have a large garden but once bought lasts years.

BlueBelle Fri 19-May-17 09:39:06

It does get you a bit paranoid though I just crept outside to frighten the black cat off to find it was a large black empty plant pot blown over in the night

NfkDumpling Fri 19-May-17 22:23:19

grin

Cosafina Tue 23-May-17 14:06:52

I've been told citrus peels and coffee grounds will keep the cats away (as well as lion dung).
I have a cat and she has a litter tray outdoors that she uses. Someone told me that other cats won't go in my garden because of my cat, but a couple of times lately I've found signs of digging - although no sign of poo. Of course it could be next door's dog escaping into my garden...
I did buy those trellis things from the 99p store (before Poundland bought them, and stopped selling them) and put them over my beds - they made great guides for planting, allowed all sun and rain in, but didn't leave enough space for any cat to do its business.

rosesarered Tue 23-May-17 14:12:13

????????

travelsafar Wed 24-May-17 19:29:02

we too have a cat that visits our garden. It always uses the area that I grow my salad plants in and this really puts me off using the food. After several attempts of clearing the area of cats poo, gagging the whole time i might add, i have resorted to covering with netting in the hopes it will deter them.

Janetblogs Wed 24-May-17 22:08:20

I agree that it's so annoying but lion poo (buy on eBay) really works - it's the only thing h I've found that stops the cats doing it In Our garden
However now we have a very territorial puppy no cat dare step foot - apart from our own. Cat who he tolerate s

NfkDumpling Thu 25-May-17 14:03:20

Lion poo didn't affect the ginger tom which stalks through our garden. I think he saw it as a challenge

gillybob Thu 25-May-17 14:43:59

My garden currently has:

Orange peel scattered at random.
Pepper and chilli powder scattered at random (this works as long as it stays dry)
4 battery operated cat scarers
A dozen or so glass bottles half filled with water (they actually seem to work but there's a limit to how many you can have)

Plastic spikes on order to be nailed around the back perimeter fence.

Its probably your own cat and dog that are keeping the others out janetblogs not the lion poo.

Your post should have had a giant turd at the end of it roses wink

rosesarered Thu 25-May-17 17:32:26

???????????haha gilly earlier today when I had planted a newly bought orange coloured rose in a green pot, I commented to DH ...how nice that would look with a ginger cat sat next to it! He said 'no cats!' But we will have another one eventually.

rosesarered Thu 25-May-17 17:33:45

I know they can be a pain in the garden, but....

grannylyn65 Thu 25-May-17 18:21:44

We love em anyway!!

grumppa Thu 25-May-17 19:17:39

What is wrong is that gillybob and others should have to take all these extreme measures because creatures belonging to other people are not controlled properly. The wretched moggies should be subject to the same laws as dogs, and their owners should be legally responsible for their actions.