Neutered female cat calling, mating and spraying indoors near baby - desperate for help.
Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2016 9:00 pm
We're desperate for some advice about our cat - whose behaviour is a bit complex...
Tinker is 10 years old, a small ginger cat, who we adopted when she was 3 along with her mum. She's alway been a very affectionate lap cat, and adores attention. The problems started a couple of years ago a year after we moved house when I became pregnant and she began calling - slightly confusingly as when adopting her we were told she'd been neutered, which we assume to be true as over a year later she has not become pregnant. The calling and mating is constant and seems to follow no pattern. It has been accompanied by spraying and urinating inside out flat (particularly after the baby arrived) which has become out of control. It includes spraying on all available surfaces (she has favourite locations but marks everywhere), spraying on me, urinating in puddles and downward spraying on fabric/carpet which is incredibly smelly. I can never work out how welcome the mating is, she runs out if a male cat calls for her, but I have sometimes found her cornered by three male cats and she's bolted inside as soon as I've opened the door.
The poor cat is obviously very stressed. I taken her to two vets, one who was very unhelpful, the other who wasn't sure what to do but prescribed Ovarid as we assumed she may have part of her ovaries remaining. Having looked this medication up online I discovered lots of cat breeders think vets prescribe a far too high dose for cats (causing kidney problems etc), so we followed the dosage recommend by the breeders which made no difference to the calling.
I've since discovered we should ask to check for a urine infection (although I think it's clearly stress related), so will be taking her to a third vet. She currently only has access to the living room, kitchen and garden and I installed feliway diffusers in both rooms last week. I have tried both cleaning the marking with an enzymatic cleaner, and leaving it, neither make a difference.
We are at the stage where our baby is becoming more mobile and she is spraying in areas he can easily reach, so it's a real hygiene problem, and we might be at the point where getting her rehoused is the only solution - but neither of us are keen on this and would only go for it if it was the best option for her and meant she could settle again.
Can anyone help...?
Tinker is 10 years old, a small ginger cat, who we adopted when she was 3 along with her mum. She's alway been a very affectionate lap cat, and adores attention. The problems started a couple of years ago a year after we moved house when I became pregnant and she began calling - slightly confusingly as when adopting her we were told she'd been neutered, which we assume to be true as over a year later she has not become pregnant. The calling and mating is constant and seems to follow no pattern. It has been accompanied by spraying and urinating inside out flat (particularly after the baby arrived) which has become out of control. It includes spraying on all available surfaces (she has favourite locations but marks everywhere), spraying on me, urinating in puddles and downward spraying on fabric/carpet which is incredibly smelly. I can never work out how welcome the mating is, she runs out if a male cat calls for her, but I have sometimes found her cornered by three male cats and she's bolted inside as soon as I've opened the door.
The poor cat is obviously very stressed. I taken her to two vets, one who was very unhelpful, the other who wasn't sure what to do but prescribed Ovarid as we assumed she may have part of her ovaries remaining. Having looked this medication up online I discovered lots of cat breeders think vets prescribe a far too high dose for cats (causing kidney problems etc), so we followed the dosage recommend by the breeders which made no difference to the calling.
I've since discovered we should ask to check for a urine infection (although I think it's clearly stress related), so will be taking her to a third vet. She currently only has access to the living room, kitchen and garden and I installed feliway diffusers in both rooms last week. I have tried both cleaning the marking with an enzymatic cleaner, and leaving it, neither make a difference.
We are at the stage where our baby is becoming more mobile and she is spraying in areas he can easily reach, so it's a real hygiene problem, and we might be at the point where getting her rehoused is the only solution - but neither of us are keen on this and would only go for it if it was the best option for her and meant she could settle again.
Can anyone help...?