Large aggressive neighbour's cat

Large aggressive neighbour's cat

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SWAT78

Original Poster:

1,079 posts

183 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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A new cat has moved into the area in the past couple of months (I assume with new neighbours as well, although not a clue which house). It is quite large, aggressive and keeps squaring up to my very small cat who I think runs away generally, but this is becoming more frequent in my back garden which I assume my cat wants to 'defend' as it's not backing down so readily - at one point my cat resorted to curling up in a ball and almost 'playing dead' - clearly no intention of fighting back, but also no intention of running.

My cat only goes out when we're in the house and so we've spotted these confrontations and interrupted before any fighting happens (a slip off a wet patio during an interruption resulted in gashing one of my toes open on Christmas Day, but I digress).

My concern is that at some point these cats will come to blows over the 'territory' in my back garden, and that my cat will come off far worse. This may have already happened - my cat got a bad infection last month that the vet thought was most likely from an open wound, but as he's very long haired we couldn't see any evidence of this (and there were no marks on his face or legs).

Has anyone else been in a similar situation? Is there any way to discourage the other cat from spending time in my garden? As a cat lover I don't really want to resort to the 'blast from a Super Soaker'. I know I'd be p*ssed off if I thought my cat was getting the same treatment elsewhere. Having said that, part of me feels that the other cat is 'in the wrong' and needs to be discouraged somehow.

Any ideas? Ideally something more humane than a water pistol, but then I can't think of any other way to get rid. The other cat has quickly worked out that it doesn't need to run away from me too far when I am trying to 'shoo' it, because we established early on that I have no intention of kicking it up the arris when I do get close enough.

Help! (photo of my moggy below to persuade responses if necessary...!)


Jasper by stuwaton, on Flickr

Sowler

223 posts

149 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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I've got the same problem currently and my cat is now not keen on going outside to be fed like usual.

Super soaker and/or hosepipe IMO. Your not doing it any harm.

chr15b

3,467 posts

190 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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Sowler said:
I've got the same problem currently and my cat is now not keen on going outside to be fed like usual.

Super soaker and/or hosepipe IMO. Your not doing it any harm.
squirt the offending cat, just dont let him see you

Mr Gearchange

5,892 posts

206 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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chr15b said:
Sowler said:
I've got the same problem currently and my cat is now not keen on going outside to be fed like usual.

Super soaker and/or hosepipe IMO. Your not doing it any harm.
squirt the offending cat, just dont let him see you
This - but fill supersoaker with undiluted lemon squash

SWAT78

Original Poster:

1,079 posts

183 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
quotequote all
Thanks guys. Guess I just wanted some reassurances from other animal lovers that a quick blast in the backside with a small-calibre Super Soaker is "reasonable force" and doesn't amount to animal cruelty.

Cheers for the quick responses!

Sowler

223 posts

149 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
quotequote all
I'd be happy for anyone to hose pipe mine if it was bothering their cat in their garden. However she barely strays out of the garden let alone any further!

chr15b

3,467 posts

190 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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Mr Gearchange said:
This - but fill supersoaker with undiluted lemon squash
i'd try the water first and move onto citrus or mint..

simoid

19,772 posts

158 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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Make sure the large, aggressive neighbour doesn't see you either.

Munter

31,319 posts

241 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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Sowler said:
I'd be happy for anyone to hose pipe mine if it was bothering their cat in their garden. However she barely strays out of the garden let alone any further!
That applies here also. If my cat was getting blasts from a supersoaker because it was in someone elses garden I'd be ok with that.

Otherwise you are into "cat proofing" your garden in order to keep them separate.

paintman

7,688 posts

190 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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Another vote for the super soaker.
We used one of the small flower type mister sprayers to stop our two doing things - such as dismantling the curtains or each other - & all we have to do now is just shake it & they stop instantly.

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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SWAT78 said:
My concern is that at some point these cats will come to blows over the 'territory' in my back garden, and that my cat will come off far worse.
Don't bet on it. Our cat is pretty big, yet seems to be pretty useless at fighting. He's come off second best to a (I think female) cat half his size, and has a nick in his ear to prove it.

simoid

19,772 posts

158 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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Greg66 said:
Don't bet on it. Our cat is pretty big, yet seems to be pretty useless at fighting. He's come off second best to a (I think female) cat half his size, and has a nick in his ear to prove it.
But faced with the choice of "squirt it the next time" or "let them fight it out"...?

Mr Gearchange

5,892 posts

206 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
quotequote all
chr15b said:
Mr Gearchange said:
This - but fill supersoaker with undiluted lemon squash
i'd try the water first and move onto citrus or mint..
Undiluted lemon squash (Robinsons if your particularly interested) worked on my cats. They have the dichotomy of hating having horrible sticky fur - but hating the taste when they have to clean it off - double whammy!

SWAT78

Original Poster:

1,079 posts

183 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
quotequote all
simoid said:
Make sure the large, aggressive neighbour doesn't see you either.
Definitely a concern, although it's only an issue in my back garden, and I don't think the cat belongs to either of my immediate neighbours. Hopefully it's something I wouldn't have to do more than a couple of times, so small chance of being spotted. And, more importantly, small chance of being beaten to a bloody pulp.

Simpo Two

85,450 posts

265 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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On the rare occasions my cat has been intimidated by a marauding tom, I go out and shoo the offender off myself. It may not be afraid of my cat but it can be afraid of me, and hopefully will remember the place it came second!

simoid

19,772 posts

158 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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SWAT78 said:
simoid said:
Make sure the large, aggressive neighbour doesn't see you either.
Definitely a concern, although it's only an issue in my back garden, and I don't think the cat belongs to either of my immediate neighbours. Hopefully it's something I wouldn't have to do more than a couple of times, so small chance of being spotted. And, more importantly, small chance of being beaten to a bloody pulp.
Is the neighbour actually large and aggressive?

Might be better to start off with water as opposed to something sticky and flavoured, so the neighbour doesn't think that someone is shooting Robinson's at his cat.

SWAT78

Original Poster:

1,079 posts

183 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
quotequote all
simoid said:
Is the neighbour actually large and aggressive?

Might be better to start off with water as opposed to something sticky and flavoured, so the neighbour doesn't think that someone is shooting Robinson's at his cat.
No idea! Not sure which house it's from, although there is a lot of social housing nearby, so it's very likely. Definitely starting with water - as I said above am hoping that it only takes a couple of blasts (under cover of darkness) before it learns to keep away.

ali_kat

31,992 posts

221 months

Thursday 17th January 2013
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Munter said:
Sowler said:
I'd be happy for anyone to hose pipe mine if it was bothering their cat in their garden. However she barely strays out of the garden let alone any further!
That applies here also. If my cat was getting blasts from a supersoaker because it was in someone elses garden I'd be ok with that.
yes

TwigtheWonderkid

43,386 posts

150 months

Saturday 19th January 2013
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I'm not sure aggression and fighting ability is anything to do with size. I have a cat who is just a complete coward, he went for a robin the other day and got his ar5e kicked!

Simpo Two

85,450 posts

265 months

Saturday 19th January 2013
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TwigtheWonderkid said:
I'm not sure aggression and fighting ability is anything to do with size. I have a cat who is just a complete coward, he went for a robin the other day and got his ar5e kicked!
Nasty critters, robins. IIRC they go for the eyes.