Cat stealing other cat's food

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2Btoo

Original Poster:

3,424 posts

203 months

Thursday 8th November 2018
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We have a cat; he's a rescue cat and probably about 3 years old now. He's a regular British shorthair and we've had him for just over a year. He was neutered by the RSPCA before we had him. I'd post a picture but he's adorable and I don't want every other cat owner on here to feel jealous .... smile

He's a big character, quite an extrovert and very confident. He's fed the recommended amount of Hills Scientific food every day but is putting on weight; he used to be quite sleek but now there he has a definite podge in the middle. He's also clearly going into other people's homes and stealing their cat food; he often appears during the day looking quite fat and happy and has vomited cat food that is quite different to the stuff we feed him four times over the last 3 days. He's a greedy bu99er and we can well believe that if he came across a large bowl of cat food he'd scoff the lot and make himself ill.

The question is what to do about it? We live in a terraced house with a long run of gardens at the back and there are several neighbourhood cats. To keep him in would be difficult as he likes the outside and he'd destroy the place if not allowed out. Him stealing food is not good as some other cat is going without, it is making him ill and it won't be long before he annoys some other cat owner who may do something unkind. It's also quite embarrassing!

Simple Q: is there anything we can do about it? All (sensible) suggestions welcome. Thanks in advance.

ali_kat

31,988 posts

221 months

Thursday 8th November 2018
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If he was a stray, he’s probably used to scavenging and that’s a hard habit to break

You could cat proof your garden so he can’t escape from it?

2Btoo

Original Poster:

3,424 posts

203 months

Thursday 8th November 2018
quotequote all
Good point about the scavenging but he wasn't a stray; the RSPCA were quite guarded about what they said about him but he was a 'Welfare Case' and had been taken from a previous owner. This doesn't discount the scavenging habit possibility though I guess.

Cat-proofing the garden would be fantastically difficult although it's an interesting idea! He's an extremely adventurous chap and would climb for miles to get his freedom.

Thanks for your input though - it's appreciated.

Keep it stiff

1,765 posts

173 months

Friday 9th November 2018
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Why not put a tracker on him? You should be able to identify where he is getting his extra meals from and then follow up to ask other owners if they could make changes to prevent your cat from helping himself.

The Moose

22,847 posts

209 months

Friday 9th November 2018
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There is the possibility that he is being fed by someone else too (as opposed to scavenging). Someone used to feed our cat - started with treats, went on to food. Drove me mad. Eventually it stopped.

henrycrun

2,449 posts

240 months

Friday 9th November 2018
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pop on a collar, with note 'please do not feed my cat'

BigMon

4,186 posts

129 months

Friday 9th November 2018
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The Moose said:
There is the possibility that he is being fed by someone else too (as opposed to scavenging). Someone used to feed our cat - started with treats, went on to food. Drove me mad. Eventually it stopped.
We had that too. Selfish old bat up the road with three cats of her own who also fed ours despite me going round so many times to ask her not to I lost count. He's on medication for a hyperactive thyroid and stopped coming home for his meals, and when we did see him he wasn't hungry.

In the end we had to keep him in, and I told her to her face that she was now responsible for making him unhappy as I couldn't let him out any more.

Floods of tears etc, but she was just a bloody idiot.

Cat are sods really (though I do love em).

ali_kat

31,988 posts

221 months

Friday 9th November 2018
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2Btoo said:
Good point about the scavenging but he wasn't a stray; the RSPCA were quite guarded about what they said about him but he was a 'Welfare Case' and had been taken from a previous owner. This doesn't discount the scavenging habit possibility though I guess.

Cat-proofing the garden would be fantastically difficult although it's an interesting idea! He's an extremely adventurous chap and would climb for miles to get his freedom.

Thanks for your input though - it's appreciated.
Poor boy, it could just be that he’s not been used to regular meals frown

Ours wouldn’t be an easy garden to cat proof either.

A “do not feed me” collar is a good idea!

shep1001

4,600 posts

189 months

Friday 9th November 2018
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2Btoo said:
Good point about the scavenging but he wasn't a stray; the RSPCA were quite guarded about what they said about him but he was a 'Welfare Case' and had been taken from a previous owner. This doesn't discount the scavenging habit possibility though I guess.

Cat-proofing the garden would be fantastically difficult although it's an interesting idea! He's an extremely adventurous chap and would climb for miles to get his freedom.

Thanks for your input though - it's appreciated.
Get a PawTrax GPS tracker. We got them for our two to see where they go, its real-time GPS searchable on Google Maps its scarily accurate. My neighbour sent me a video once of Moglet in his kitchen at 3am with cutlery stuck to his magnetic collar, too scared to move as it jangled. He had come down stairs with his bat as he thought somebody was breaking in!

2Btoo

Original Poster:

3,424 posts

203 months

Friday 9th November 2018
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Hi,

Thanks for the answers.

KiS - a tracker is a good idea actually, although it would need to be accurate to a fairly fine area; we're in London and the gardens aren't exactly large, and we'd want to knock on the right door if possible ....

Moose/BigMon, could be. He is essentially a big outgoing thug so will happily steal stuff (including the pastrami from my lunch today) so we assumed it was clandestine, although could be wrong. That may be harder to stop, as per BigMon's story (although the sod of that piece wasn't the cat!)

Henrycrun/AliKat, such a note would only work if he was being fed by someone else. If - as we suspect - he is stealing then I doubt it will make much difference. Worth a try though, although we'll need to persuade him to wear a collar first.

AliKat, he may not have been used to regular meals previously but he's been with us for over a year now and he's been fed regular as clockwork since then, and the problem has only occurred in the last 10 days or so. I cleared up a VAST pile of puke from my study floor this morning so it would be good to do something about it soon!

B210bandit

513 posts

97 months

Wednesday 14th November 2018
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Same situation but worse, in that we took in the battered old tom who hung around the neighbourhood. No chance of stopping him from imposing on the feeders he's cultivated over the years! Good luck, but it might be a lost cause.