Cats - How Long To Keep Indoors In New Home?

Discussion in 'Pets Corner' started by shiney, Feb 14, 2016.

  1. shiney

    shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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    Some friends of ours have moved here, three weeks ago, from New Zealand. Their two cats will be flying out in about another three or four weeks as they need to settle into their new house (they're just renting a small flat at the moment). The cost of the flight per cat is more than per human!

    The cats are not only going to be displaced but will have been apart from their humans for about two months so I think they will find things a bit traumatic. The kids are also very upset and missing the cats.

    They're hoping their furniture will arrive, by boat, by the time the cats arrive otherwise the cats won't even have their familiar furniture around them.

    Our friends are wondering how long they should keep the cats housebound before taking a chance that they might roam and not come back. Any ideas? :scratch:

    Where they lived before they had a very long front garden and a type of forest behind their garden. So the cats never went out on the road. Their new place will be in a quiet cul de sac but that will lead out to a fairly busy road.

    I said that the best idea would be to keep them housebound for a short while and then only let them out into the back garden. Apparently the back garden is walled and about 6ft high. I know this isn't high enough to stop a cat so how much higher will they need to put a fence? I'm sure @ARMANDII can answer this one.

    Also, can you wonderful cat people give any other advice. I'm sure the cats aren't going to be very happy with our friends for a while. :sad:
     
  2. silu

    silu gardening easy...hmmm

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    May well be someone else is more experienced than me and offer alternative ideas but when we took on a rescue adult cat who was terrified and didn't know us or the area we lived in, the cat sanctuary owner advised us to keep the cat indoors for 3 weeks. She also advised that for the 1st time the cat was allowed outside to not feed it before it went out so it would be likely to get hungry and return....worked for us and the cat never wandered after we took her on.
     
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    • redstar

      redstar Total Gardener

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      3 weeks sounds good to me. I might also put a small bowl of "dry" cat food out on the porch for the cat so she can see she can get food on "that " porch. and always lift it near dusk, never leave out all the time. I never leave wet (canned ) food out. Letting it sit draws flies and they lay eggs etc. yuck. reading it again, also after three weeks there is some pillow she is sleeping on inside, or towel, that can also be positioned outside for her to smell as she returns for an added security.
       
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      • clanless

        clanless Total Gardener

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        I agree - 3 weeks.

        Our 1st cat (Alfie is our 2nd cat) - refused to use the cat flap and jumped onto the first floor window ledge - so that I could let him in. Keep an eye on the windows for the moggs to return.
         
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        • clanless

          clanless Total Gardener

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          On the issue of keeping the cats in the garden - I've attached willow screening to the 6 ft fences and where the fences are lower than 6 ft or a bit rickety - attached the screening to poles planted just in front of the fences. I let Alfie out today - he can't/wont climb the willow screening - so I know that he is safely confined to the garden.

          The willow screening attached to the poles is particularly effective.
           
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          • ARMANDII

            ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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            Well, over the years I have lost several cats that after less than a year or more went on a jaunt and never came back. I did find one of mine, especially loved, that had been run over while at the same time my brother who lived in the Derbyshire hills on a remote farm lost his cat in the same manner. Also I was coming home to find a neighbour waiting to tell me that one of the cats was on the flat roof of the garages, which meant scrambling up a ladder, while wearing my suit, to rescue the cat...several times.:cat-kittyandsmiley:
            So I took the decision to let my cats have the freedom of the House and my reasonable size garden. That meant raising the height of the fences with posts and slack chicken wire to around 8' in height. I did it a bit at a time, thinking each time I'd covered the area only to find one of the cats testing the fence like the Raptor in Jurassic Park and succeeding in finding a weak spot. I finally decided to raise the height all around despite how unlikely it looked that a cat could breach it. That took several months of part time work but finally for the last years all my cats have stayed in the garden and are still alive and well.
            Having said that, on the very last section of fence where I was raising the height with chicken wire and posts, and had just finished the job, my cat {Jenny] walked along the top of the original fence on the other side of the chicken wire!!:gaah::dunno::cat-kittyandsmiley::heehee:
             
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            • redstar

              redstar Total Gardener

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              so far in the last 12 years of having up to 10 cats, never lost one of them due to disappearance. Have a safe area of the 3 acres for them to roam and all had come accounted for upon return from a vacation. As all were /are fixed none wanted to really leave the area. The cat flap works well with the ones that chose to use it, other wise it is good cat houses for those that do not. Until recent, past January did a sick raccoon invade our area and hurt one. Normally raccoons just keep their distance. But alas I still know what happened to him. Right now I have only one who wishes to remain outside in her heated cat house, and the 3 left enjoy the garden room, with freedom of the cat flap. Even old mom cat the beginning of them all, who still retains a drop of feral has discovered the cat flap on her own and settles her old bones next to the radiator, we think she is at least 14 years old. MomCat is only pettable when looking away from you, she will stand still for a pet near your legs and purr like crazy. But you cannot pet her head on, sure to face a quick swipe of her paw on your hand, so we just respect the matter.
               
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              • redstar

                redstar Total Gardener

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                just as I was writing, there she is, flopped next to the heater. 100_7202.JPG
                 
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                • ARMANDII

                  ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                  It's a hard life.:cat-kittyandsmiley::heehee:

                  [​IMG]
                   
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                  • Redwing

                    Redwing Wild Gardener

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                    I agree that three weeks is the right amount of time to keep them in but don't just let them out and forget about them. For the first few times sit with them and bring them back in after only a few minutes. Then gradually extend the time you let them out but keep close to them for a week or two. I've moved several times with cats and never lost one using this approach. I also found calling them in regularly helped. Good luck.
                     
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                    • redstar

                      redstar Total Gardener

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                      I also call mine on a regular basis too.
                       
                    • Eli

                      Eli Gardener

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                      • Linz

                        Linz Total Gardener

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                        Agree with everything here, 3 weeks may seem like a long time but it's pretty crucial for them to get the smell of house and settle in. If they do start whining to go out like redwing and redstar suggested, stay out with them and keep calling often. A neighbour once said a spoonful of butter on its paws should make him think twice about wandering.. admittedly I tried it and seems to have worked for my cats (minus one)! Mind you, I did buy all expensive treats and cat milk when 2 were kittens. I used to foster kittens until they were homed too, miss doing that so much! Here's my 3.

                        Timmy, my proud boy. Constantly cleaning..
                        20160123_121317.jpg
                        Cecil/Sausage, stray boy came last feb. He just woke up here..
                        14555470696122128672766.jpg
                        And Simba/Ginger, another stray took in in Nov. Shy girl but fights like hell.
                        14555476299701557774284.jpg
                         
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                        • ARMANDII

                          ARMANDII Low Flying Administrator Staff Member

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                          The one on your left, [Jenny] is a ex-farm cat inherited from my brother when he fell ill. The one on your right is Sally, she only has one eye, the right, due to her mother having Cat Flu and only 3 out of the 5 Kittens survived. The Vet gave the surviving Kittens to a Cat Home in Doveholes in Derby......and I bought Sally as a tiny, one eyed, bundle of fluff that was climbing up the chicken wire of her cage saying in Cat language "Buy me, buy me!!"..........so I did!!:dunno::snork::cat-kittyandsmiley:
                           
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                          • redstar

                            redstar Total Gardener

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                            remember the "first" time outside for her is now a scary new place. prompting the door open slightly for her to leave at will so she can quickly return is a good thing. She may only want to stay out at first for a few minutes and return inside quickly. let her dictate the length of time she is comfortable staying outside. Even after 12 years with my gang, in the colder weather they prefer to be out a short time, and in most of the day or in the warm weather napping on the deck rather than being off in the woods.
                             
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