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Mermaid
June 1st 04, 02:02 PM
About 2 months ago I rescued a stray cat that came to my house. She is very
loving and sweet but we need to keep her outside because we have a bird. And
another reason is she is an avid hunter for which I would not like to see my
bird a meal.. In the last 2 days she has caught and eaten 2 chipmunks. I
tried to put a breakaway collar on her with a bell for which only stayed
maybe 30 minutes on her. Yesterday we found the collar. How can I curtail
her instincts. One good thing. The squirrels have not come around since she
moved in. Seems like the birds are too fast for her. Guess she would be a
good mouser too. Just hate to see the chipmunks get it and know that it
might not be good for her to eat them and other wild things. She gets food
in the morning and evening. Its not like she is starving.

Anyone with opinions and ideas?


Thanks,
Paulette

Ted Davis
June 1st 04, 04:54 PM
On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 09:02:09 -0400, "Mermaid" > wrote:

>About 2 months ago I rescued a stray cat that came to my house. She is very
>loving and sweet but we need to keep her outside because we have a bird. And
>another reason is she is an avid hunter for which I would not like to see my
>bird a meal.. In the last 2 days she has caught and eaten 2 chipmunks. I
>tried to put a breakaway collar on her with a bell for which only stayed
>maybe 30 minutes on her. Yesterday we found the collar. How can I curtail
>her instincts. One good thing. The squirrels have not come around since she
>moved in. Seems like the birds are too fast for her. Guess she would be a
>good mouser too. Just hate to see the chipmunks get it and know that it
>might not be good for her to eat them and other wild things. She gets food
>in the morning and evening. Its not like she is starving.
>
>Anyone with opinions and ideas?

Cage the bird and keep the cat inside. Keeping dry food available
24/7 might help a bit.

I have eleven cats, and of those the only ones that don't hunt are the
ones that were kept inside during their youth and for years more. Two
of them are dedicated hunters who disappear for days at a time on
hunting expeditions; three spend much of their prime waking time
patrolling the yard for whatever they can find, but don't treat
hunting as an essential part of their lifestyle, most of the rest
attack anything that crosses their paths, but seldom actively search
for prey. One of the two that don't hunt tries to catch moths if they
come within reach.

The bottom line is that cats are semidomesticated predators: the
instinct to hunt has not been suppressed by breeding - in fact, many
cats are kept precisely *because* they hunt small vermin, and for most
of their history of living with people, that was almost the only
reason.


T.E.D. - e-mail must contain "T.E.D." or my .sig in the body)

Ted Davis
June 1st 04, 04:54 PM
On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 09:02:09 -0400, "Mermaid" > wrote:

>About 2 months ago I rescued a stray cat that came to my house. She is very
>loving and sweet but we need to keep her outside because we have a bird. And
>another reason is she is an avid hunter for which I would not like to see my
>bird a meal.. In the last 2 days she has caught and eaten 2 chipmunks. I
>tried to put a breakaway collar on her with a bell for which only stayed
>maybe 30 minutes on her. Yesterday we found the collar. How can I curtail
>her instincts. One good thing. The squirrels have not come around since she
>moved in. Seems like the birds are too fast for her. Guess she would be a
>good mouser too. Just hate to see the chipmunks get it and know that it
>might not be good for her to eat them and other wild things. She gets food
>in the morning and evening. Its not like she is starving.
>
>Anyone with opinions and ideas?

Cage the bird and keep the cat inside. Keeping dry food available
24/7 might help a bit.

I have eleven cats, and of those the only ones that don't hunt are the
ones that were kept inside during their youth and for years more. Two
of them are dedicated hunters who disappear for days at a time on
hunting expeditions; three spend much of their prime waking time
patrolling the yard for whatever they can find, but don't treat
hunting as an essential part of their lifestyle, most of the rest
attack anything that crosses their paths, but seldom actively search
for prey. One of the two that don't hunt tries to catch moths if they
come within reach.

The bottom line is that cats are semidomesticated predators: the
instinct to hunt has not been suppressed by breeding - in fact, many
cats are kept precisely *because* they hunt small vermin, and for most
of their history of living with people, that was almost the only
reason.


T.E.D. - e-mail must contain "T.E.D." or my .sig in the body)

June 1st 04, 04:57 PM
On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 09:02:09 -0400, "Mermaid" > wrote:

>About 2 months ago I rescued a stray cat that came to my house. She is very
>loving and sweet but we need to keep her outside because we have a bird. And
>another reason is she is an avid hunter for which I would not like to see my
>bird a meal.. In the last 2 days she has caught and eaten 2 chipmunks. I
>tried to put a breakaway collar on her with a bell for which only stayed
>maybe 30 minutes on her. Yesterday we found the collar. How can I curtail
>her instincts. One good thing. The squirrels have not come around since she
>moved in. Seems like the birds are too fast for her. Guess she would be a
>good mouser too. Just hate to see the chipmunks get it and know that it
>might not be good for her to eat them and other wild things. She gets food
>in the morning and evening. Its not like she is starving.
>
>Anyone with opinions and ideas?
>
>
>Thanks,
>Paulette
>
Cats by nature are predators.
There is really not much you can do except keep her inside away from
her prey.
At least she is eating them and bringing them half-dead into your
house saying "look at what a good girl I am!" and then letting them go
so that you have to chase and capture the prey as the cat sits there
and smiles at you while you give the cat entertainment.

June 1st 04, 04:57 PM
On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 09:02:09 -0400, "Mermaid" > wrote:

>About 2 months ago I rescued a stray cat that came to my house. She is very
>loving and sweet but we need to keep her outside because we have a bird. And
>another reason is she is an avid hunter for which I would not like to see my
>bird a meal.. In the last 2 days she has caught and eaten 2 chipmunks. I
>tried to put a breakaway collar on her with a bell for which only stayed
>maybe 30 minutes on her. Yesterday we found the collar. How can I curtail
>her instincts. One good thing. The squirrels have not come around since she
>moved in. Seems like the birds are too fast for her. Guess she would be a
>good mouser too. Just hate to see the chipmunks get it and know that it
>might not be good for her to eat them and other wild things. She gets food
>in the morning and evening. Its not like she is starving.
>
>Anyone with opinions and ideas?
>
>
>Thanks,
>Paulette
>
Cats by nature are predators.
There is really not much you can do except keep her inside away from
her prey.
At least she is eating them and bringing them half-dead into your
house saying "look at what a good girl I am!" and then letting them go
so that you have to chase and capture the prey as the cat sits there
and smiles at you while you give the cat entertainment.

June 1st 04, 05:00 PM
On Tue, 01 Jun 2004 15:57:55 GMT, wrote:

>On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 09:02:09 -0400, "Mermaid" > wrote:
>
>>About 2 months ago I rescued a stray cat that came to my house. She is very
>>loving and sweet but we need to keep her outside because we have a bird. And
>>another reason is she is an avid hunter for which I would not like to see my
>>bird a meal.. In the last 2 days she has caught and eaten 2 chipmunks. I
>>tried to put a breakaway collar on her with a bell for which only stayed
>>maybe 30 minutes on her. Yesterday we found the collar. How can I curtail
>>her instincts. One good thing. The squirrels have not come around since she
>>moved in. Seems like the birds are too fast for her. Guess she would be a
>>good mouser too. Just hate to see the chipmunks get it and know that it
>>might not be good for her to eat them and other wild things. She gets food
>>in the morning and evening. Its not like she is starving.
>>
>>Anyone with opinions and ideas?
>>
>>
>>Thanks,
>>Paulette
>>
>Cats by nature are predators.
>There is really not much you can do except keep her inside away from
>her prey.
>At least she is eating them and bringing them half-dead into your
>house saying "look at what a good girl I am!" and then letting them go
>so that you have to chase and capture the prey as the cat sits there
>and smiles at you while you give the cat entertainment.
>
>
Should read NOT bringing

June 1st 04, 05:00 PM
On Tue, 01 Jun 2004 15:57:55 GMT, wrote:

>On Tue, 1 Jun 2004 09:02:09 -0400, "Mermaid" > wrote:
>
>>About 2 months ago I rescued a stray cat that came to my house. She is very
>>loving and sweet but we need to keep her outside because we have a bird. And
>>another reason is she is an avid hunter for which I would not like to see my
>>bird a meal.. In the last 2 days she has caught and eaten 2 chipmunks. I
>>tried to put a breakaway collar on her with a bell for which only stayed
>>maybe 30 minutes on her. Yesterday we found the collar. How can I curtail
>>her instincts. One good thing. The squirrels have not come around since she
>>moved in. Seems like the birds are too fast for her. Guess she would be a
>>good mouser too. Just hate to see the chipmunks get it and know that it
>>might not be good for her to eat them and other wild things. She gets food
>>in the morning and evening. Its not like she is starving.
>>
>>Anyone with opinions and ideas?
>>
>>
>>Thanks,
>>Paulette
>>
>Cats by nature are predators.
>There is really not much you can do except keep her inside away from
>her prey.
>At least she is eating them and bringing them half-dead into your
>house saying "look at what a good girl I am!" and then letting them go
>so that you have to chase and capture the prey as the cat sits there
>and smiles at you while you give the cat entertainment.
>
>
Should read NOT bringing

Tracy
June 2nd 04, 02:42 AM
Hi Paulette,

If you keep her outside than you can't really blame her for using her
instincts. She needs them to live outside! She won't be harmed by
eating wild things. That's what she's supposed to eat. She sounds like
an excellent hunter - my two are pretty incompetent and mostly just
nibble on bugs. Although Callie once found a gecko! (It was released
unharmed).

Let her be, unless bringing her inside is an option and that can be
difficult with an outdoor cat. Just be vilgilant in looking for her if
she isn't around her usual haunts and make sure she gets regular
vetinary care.

Tracy
June 2nd 04, 02:42 AM
Hi Paulette,

If you keep her outside than you can't really blame her for using her
instincts. She needs them to live outside! She won't be harmed by
eating wild things. That's what she's supposed to eat. She sounds like
an excellent hunter - my two are pretty incompetent and mostly just
nibble on bugs. Although Callie once found a gecko! (It was released
unharmed).

Let her be, unless bringing her inside is an option and that can be
difficult with an outdoor cat. Just be vilgilant in looking for her if
she isn't around her usual haunts and make sure she gets regular
vetinary care.

June 2nd 04, 03:10 AM
In article >,
wrote:

> There is really not much you can do except keep her inside away from
> her prey.

Wow, she sounds TERRIFIC! You should see if there is anyone nearby who
has a rodent problem and rent her out! Let her earn her keep doing what
she loves!

There aren't enough cats with hunting skills like the one you've got.

June 2nd 04, 03:10 AM
In article >,
wrote:

> There is really not much you can do except keep her inside away from
> her prey.

Wow, she sounds TERRIFIC! You should see if there is anyone nearby who
has a rodent problem and rent her out! Let her earn her keep doing what
she loves!

There aren't enough cats with hunting skills like the one you've got.