Thanks in advance

OMG! Storm first used to jump up on our worktop and spray all the bottles that were on there, it wasn't until British Gas came to do a service until we moved them and noticed that he had been doing it...he then proceeded to blow our electrics on more than one occasion, wee'd on the cooker hob, behind the sofa and unfortunately my partners expensive stereo systemCussypat1974 wrote:i have had serial sprayers and have lost various electronic items because of it! At one stage I was going through a DVD player a week! they were all neutered, and most sorayers were boys but I have had females do it too.
in my case it was stress from overcrowding. I rescue and had too many cats in the house. to solve it, I moved to the countryside, and it is not an issue now at all. I see the same goys spray the bushes around this time of year, as there are roving tomcats and my neighbour just moved in with his 2 cats who are new to the area.
I had 48 cats, most of whom were indoor only (the area just wasn't safe). Now I have 30 cats who roam as freely as they wish.
Blimey sounds like you had your work cut out there!Lilith wrote:Hi there - I've had them in the past.
The simplest case was a rehabilitated tomcat - he was middleaged, feral and un-neutered when he arrived, and it took neutering and about 8 months, as I remember, for his testosterone levels to fall, pretty messy and smelly till then, but after that he was good as gold, bless him. I used to tell him 'no!' sharply, if I caught him at it, and give him lots of praise for using his tray.
When I bred Siamese in the '80s, girls in call (heat) would spray like toms. That was when I started buying my curtains from Oxfam...
My worst case was a neutered three-quarter Siamese, orginally christened Claudia but who got the nickname of The Leopard. She started out free-roaming, albeit in a multi-cat household, but with plenty of room, and clearly one of the dominant members. I tried confining her to the (enormous) kitchen, otherwise, if doors were left open, the Leopard would boldly go where no Leopard had been before...well only a few times before. And the Leopard never changed her spots!
Moving to another house made no difference. Still plenty of room even when I secured the garden (though her brother George still got out and so could the Leopard if she'd wanted to.) That cat sprayed everything! I once cut a beautiful bouquet of flowers for a visitor and left them in water on the kitchen worktop. The Leopard watered them too.
She lived till fifteen, a total pain in the whatsit but still sadly missed. About a week after her death I happened to move a carrier bag out of a corner (I'm not tidy) and there - was a posthumous piddle!
I swear she came back to do it!
So...no solutions I'm afraid, where the Leopard was concerned, but by 'eck I've had 'em!
I will have a google of the fourpaws industrial cleaner, thanksbobbys girl wrote:With us, it's not the boys but the girls that spray! Willow did it once and tripped the switch. We thought it might be damp in the greenhouse, so we isolated the 'outside' (greenhouse, shed and caravan). Eventually we tracked it down to a socket in the caravan!She had got shut in and panicked.
Purdy is the main 'sprayer'. She 'favours' the kitchen. We thought when we had a new kitchen last year that she might be put off, but no. She Christened the entire room.Her favourite spot is the microwave, with the hob a close second.
We always know when there is a stray Tom cat around - the microwave gets it!
I have found that 'Fourpaws Industrial Cleaner' works pretty well. It has a not unpleasant soapy smell and seems to put her off (until the next Tom cat.)
Hi ZoeZoeL wrote:Hi there I'm on here as I'm desperate for some advice. I have 2 female cats that are a year old an they have now taken to spraying on my kitchen counters. I have tried to think of everything I can do to try persuade them not to tried putting foil down leaving lemon out I'm at my wits end. I love my cats to bits but nothings working. I can't think of anything that has caused any anxiety and they show no signs of depression. Has anyone got any suggestions? Anything would be helpful. Thanks