Gransnet forums

Pets

A tracker on a cat

(52 Posts)
Sparklefizz Sun 03-Aug-25 15:52:02

I have had my little rescue cat since April, and she is about 18 months old.

I've had 2 cats run over on a road near me because those cats wandered. The road isn't even busy but they were unlucky when people were rushing off to work, and because I didn't want to go through that heartbreak again, I had my garden "cat secured" with netting, an idea I got from a company online. This worked for 10 years to keep my remaining cat in the back garden.

However, Mia, my new little cat, is very adventurous and determined and has found a way over the netting. As fast as I block her exit routes, she finds or makes another one, and then when I want to get her in, I have to walk around the housing development looking for her. She roams far and wide.

I am thinking of getting a tracker collar which connects to my iPhone. Has anyone tried one of these fairly recently? I know that they are improving all the time, but research has shown that they're expensive and I don't want to waste my money. It cost me nearly £1,000 to get the garden secured, and that worked for 10 years, but is not enough to keep Mia the Ninja Cat safe.

sodapop Sun 03-Aug-25 15:59:29

Can be a double edged sword as you worry when they are tracked crossing roads etc. My daughter has two cats, one stays close to home and the other one wanders far and wide. With the best will in the world sometimes you just have to let them do their own thing.

TillyTrotter Sun 03-Aug-25 16:06:41

Hi Sparklefizz
We have just been trying out the tracking available to cats. We found one suited us better than the other.
We did a trial with “Tractive”, advertised on TV but we thought the device too clumpy round a young cat’s neck (ours is 18 months old).
He lost it, and we did not find it. The tracker went dead.
Tractive refunded our 12 months subscription so the “trial period” is a very good idea.
Good luck with your adventurous cat - ours are too 😻

We are getting on better with Apple I-tags which slot into special collars, much neater for a cat’s small neck.
No subscription to pay; you connect it to your smart phone (like Apple luggage tags)
and you can get a good idea of where your cat is by looking on an app on your mobile.

BlueBelle Sun 03-Aug-25 16:15:24

Let the little cat be free to roam that s just what cats need to do have little adventures, cats rarely go very far from their home they have an area but they need the freedom to live normally even if it’s more of a worry to the owner
That second idea of TillyTrotters sounds a good one

Cabowich Sun 03-Aug-25 16:15:56

This is going to sound a bit harsh, but a tracker, whilst being able to track your cat, will in no way be able to stop her being run over.

Sparklefizz Sun 03-Aug-25 17:11:10

BlueBelle

Let the little cat be free to roam that s just what cats need to do have little adventures, cats rarely go very far from their home they have an area but they need the freedom to live normally even if it’s more of a worry to the owner
That second idea of TillyTrotters sounds a good one

Thanks for that unsympathetic remark BlueBelle.
Maybe you've never loved and lost 2 pets within 18 months.

Sparklefizz Sun 03-Aug-25 17:12:38

Cabowich

This is going to sound a bit harsh, but a tracker, whilst being able to track your cat, will in no way be able to stop her being run over.

Of course not, I'm not stupid, but at least it would save me walking the streets for an hour every night trying to find her, a prospect I don't relish for the autumn and winter.

Sparklefizz Sun 03-Aug-25 17:13:36

Thank you TillyTrotter, that's a great idea. Where did you get the special collar?

MayBee70 Sun 03-Aug-25 17:20:11

The worst thing is not knowing what has happened to a beloved pet. I still think of Rosie, a little grey cat of mine that never came home. And my first cat that disappeared but we did find him years later[ he'd just gone to live with someone else]. It's broken my heart losing cats on the road but at least I knew what had happened to them. I tried having house cats with a cat pen but that didn't seem right, either. I stopped having cats because I was so stressed about them not coming home.

NoodleNut Sun 03-Aug-25 17:22:05

We have an air-tag on ours.
Works well for us, although we have it more as she's now old and deaf. She doesn't wander far, but used to come back on hearing her treat rattled.
It doesnt tell you where they've been- just where they are at that moment. Just under £30, and the collars are around £5ish. (quick release)

TillyTrotter Sun 03-Aug-25 17:39:54

It’s on the big River company 😉
- Apple air-tag cat collar . Current price £12.50 each. Adjustable, and quick release.

We want our cats to have freedom, but it is reassuring to be able to activate it’s bleep
- and we found our cats then return home. (No guarantee all cats will respond).
Useful at meal times 😻

Cabowich Sun 03-Aug-25 17:54:59

Sparklefizz - sorry, I didn't mean to make you sound stupid.

I've spent many an hour searching for my cats, worried sick about them. I did once contemplate buying a tracker - this was at 5am wandering round the neighbourhood whispering the cat's name.

The cats I have at the moment don't wander much, thank goodness, but I have been there - believe me.

And when they do go missing for, it's not knowing what's happened to them that's almost as bad as getting the bad news.

BlueBelle Sun 03-Aug-25 18:11:52

Sparklefizz

BlueBelle

Let the little cat be free to roam that s just what cats need to do have little adventures, cats rarely go very far from their home they have an area but they need the freedom to live normally even if it’s more of a worry to the owner
That second idea of TillyTrotters sounds a good one

Thanks for that unsympathetic remark BlueBelle.
Maybe you've never loved and lost 2 pets within 18 months.

I really didn’t mean it to be unsympathetic Sparklefizz and yes I cried a lot over my last, very much loved cat who got run over in front of my eyes it killed me inside but I still believe cats should have a natural life and not be kept in houses
Again there was my beautiful little girl years before who I had for a long long time she came in at 10 pm every night without fail until one night she didn’t and I never saw her again I cried buckets over her I hunted for weeks

We just have a different idea of love and care that’s all.

NoodleNut Sun 03-Aug-25 18:29:03

Cabowich

Sparklefizz - sorry, I didn't mean to make you sound stupid.

I've spent many an hour searching for my cats, worried sick about them. I did once contemplate buying a tracker - this was at 5am wandering round the neighbourhood whispering the cat's name.

The cats I have at the moment don't wander much, thank goodness, but I have been there - believe me.

And when they do go missing for, it's not knowing what's happened to them that's almost as bad as getting the bad news.

We also find it useful when she'd hiding at home!

NoodleNut Sun 03-Aug-25 18:30:22

Not sure what happend there - I meant to quote TillyTrotter.

TillyTrotter Sun 03-Aug-25 18:39:44

That too Noodlenut 😀

TillyTrotter Sun 03-Aug-25 18:47:16

The apple AirTag is nearly £30
(Enlarge photo to see retailer)

Sparklefizz Sun 03-Aug-25 19:04:57

Thank you so much.

Flippinheck Sun 03-Aug-25 19:19:16

Sorry if you’ve already considered this but what about a cat flap? I have one that only allows only my cat through it - it is battery operated and is easily programmed to respond only to his chip, so making sure that other cats can’t come in. It doesn’t stop me worrying about him but it does stop me wandering the streets looking for him.

AuntieE Tue 19-Aug-25 14:49:15

Are you sure she will wear a collar?

My present cats won't. I gave up the attempt after buying the first ten collars or so for each cat.

Sadly, some cats will be run over or hit and fatally injured by cars if they are allowed out, but most if they survive their first summer have learned to take care.

Visgir1 Tue 19-Aug-25 15:51:00

My son has 2 cats. Both have always had trackers on their collars since the first time they ventured out.

Whitewavemark2 Tue 19-Aug-25 21:20:10

My little stray after giving me a few panics - we’ve had her 7 months now - has decided that her territory is the house and garden. She might stray outside of that once a month but that is all.

We do keep a close eye on her though.

Whitewavemark2 Tue 19-Aug-25 21:37:50

What I meant to say is that, you can’t change your cats proclivities. If they decide their territory covers the whole neighbourhood it will never change. They all have their own character preferences.

One of our cats years ago moved out to an elderly lady (probably younger than me now😊) who fed her off the fat of the land. Snowytoes became the fattest cat I’d ever seen but she was happy in her tubbiness😊

TillyTrotter Tue 19-Aug-25 22:08:26

Just like the characters of children they are all different but they need a bit of guidance from us to keep them safe especially if they are rescue cats and nervous, or kittens just venturing out.

TillyTrotter Tue 19-Aug-25 22:11:10

Here are our 2 (rescue) bundles of joy.