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>>>>>>> "Wayne Boatwright" <wayneboatwri...@arizona.usa.com> wrote
>>>>>>>> Killing a cat or dog is cruel and needless unless it's rabid. >>>>>>> Dogs and cats, like humans, can do things that forfeit their right to >>>>>>> live. Such things as attacking people, biting children, being >>>> aggressive >>>>>>> as a common behavior, and others. Yes, relocation or adoption is an >>>>>>> option, but sometimes the problem just follows them, and the new >>>>>>> owners >>>>>>> have a hospital bill. Sometimes the animal can be rehabilitated and >>>>>>> trained out of the unacceptable behavior, and that falls under either >>>>>>> category, relocation or termination.
>>>>>>> To me, any dog that bites me or a child goes either out the door, or >>>>>>> in >>>>>>> the ground. Saves on drama and second guessing later. Too many good >>>>>>> dogs that love people and who are sociable and loveable to tolerate a >>>>>>> chain saw who may go off at any time.
>>>>>>> Just MHO, YMM(and probably does)V
>>>>>>> And don't give me any shit about poor pet owner. I currently own a >>>>>>> Corgi who the adoption agency would not accept because he's a biter, >>>> and >>>>>>> a Lab who's dying of cancer. I like dogs. Just not ones that I have >>>> to >>>>>>> stay awake over.
>>>>>>> Steve >>>>>> I don't totally disagree. However, putting down an animal humanely is >>>> far >>>>>> different from poisoning, shooting, or beating them to death. >>>>> Absolutely. Don't forget that a large % of cattle are killed by >>>>> shooting >>>>> before slaughter.
>>>>> Steve
>>>> Speaking of which, one of my favorite cats had some sort of episode last >>>> night, either stroke or heart attack. We took him to the vet at 7:00 >>>> this >>>> morning. The vet concurred, and we had to have him put down.
>>>> --
>>>> ~~ If there's a nit to pick, some nitwit will pick it. ~~
>>>> Wayne Boatwright >>> My condolences. I have a pussycat Labrador that has cancer, and I will >>> have to load her in the car one of these days and take her for her last >>> vet visit. I hope someone can do that for me when it's my time. Just >>> give me a shot and let me doze off. I have had two cousins in the past >>> month do Death With Dignity in Washington state.
>>> When it's time to go, it's time to go. Cat or human, and no one should >>> have to suffer.
>>> Steve
>> Wow!...I had no idea Death with Dignity existed. Good for Washington! It's a >> step in the right direction.
>> Jim
> Not familiar with Jack Kevorkian?
Jack ain't death with dignity- he is a freaking ego-driven circus. In this age of the internet, a few minutes online can probably get you all the technical instructions you need for a painless exit, rather than some rube goldberg contraption in the back of a VW microbus.
>> Dan Musicant wrote: >>> PS Dogs are another animal. They crap on my property and they are not >>> welcome. Not many running around unleashed (it's illegal here), but >>> neighbors seem to let them crap on my front lawn. I'm not ready to >>> build a fence in front, though. >> One of my neighbors has a dog who occasionally takes a poop on my lawn. >> She not only picks up that poop, but she'll pick up poop left from other >> dogs, too. I asked her why she did it, and she said it was to make sure >> that people don't get the bad idea from the idiot owners.
>> I thought that was pretty cool.
>> Jon
> Unfortunately,that sort of people are rare. > Most dog owners find the closest piece of grass not near -their- abode for > their dog to dump on,and walk away without qualms about not cleaning up.
> That's my 30 yr long apartment experience with neighbor dog owners. > Maybe 5-6 owners in 30 yrs who picked up after without being asked or even > knowing anyone was watching them.
> I've had neighbors who let their dog crap on the entryway sidewalk,on the > sidewalk to the mail kiosk,on the concrete pad in front of the > mailboxes,right at the bottom of the stairwell,in front of patio doors... > and they don't see any problem with that.
> But they sure get mad when it's dumped right back in front of THEIR doors.
> B-)
You don't dump it at their door, you squish it into the cabin air intake of their vehicle. Mashing it up into the door handles of their ride is another good way too. One good asshole deserves another.
>>>>> "Wayne Boatwright" <wayneboatwri...@arizona.usa.com> wrote
>>>>>> Killing a cat or dog is cruel and needless unless it's rabid.
>>>>> Dogs and cats, like humans, can do things that forfeit their right >>>>> to live. Such things as attacking people, biting children, being >>>>> aggressive as a common behavior, and others. Yes, relocation or >>>>> adoption is an option, but sometimes the problem just follows them, >>>>> and the new owners have a hospital bill. Sometimes the animal can >>>>> be rehabilitated and trained out of the unacceptable behavior, and >>>>> that falls under either category, relocation or termination.
>>>>> To me, any dog that bites me or a child goes either out the door, or >>>>> in the ground. Saves on drama and second guessing later. Too many >>>>> good dogs that love people and who are sociable and loveable to >>>>> tolerate a chain saw who may go off at any time.
>>>>> Just MHO, YMM(and probably does)V
>>>>> And don't give me any shit about poor pet owner. I currently own a >>>>> Corgi who the adoption agency would not accept because he's a biter, >>>>> and a Lab who's dying of cancer. I like dogs. Just not ones that I >>>>> have to stay awake over.
>>>>> Steve
>>>> I don't totally disagree. However, putting down an animal humanely >>>> is far different from poisoning, shooting, or beating them to death.
>>> Absolutely. Don't forget that a large % of cattle are killed by >>> shooting before slaughter.
>>> Steve
>> Speaking of which, one of my favorite cats had some sort of episode >> last night, either stroke or heart attack. We took him to the vet at >> 7:00 this morning. The vet concurred, and we had to have him put down.
>> --
>> ~~ If there's a nit to pick, some nitwit will pick it. ~~
> My condolences. I have a pussycat Labrador that has cancer, and I will > have to load her in the car one of these days and take her for her last > vet visit. I hope someone can do that for me when it's my time. Just > give me a shot and let me doze off. I have had two cousins in the past > month do Death With Dignity in Washington state.
> When it's time to go, it's time to go. Cat or human, and no one should > have to suffer.
> Steve
I'm sorry about your Lab, Steve. And I share the same feelings about our own fates.
--
~~ If there's a nit to pick, some nitwit will pick it. ~~
>>>>>>> "Wayne Boatwright" <wayneboatwri...@arizona.usa.com> wrote
>>>>>>>> Killing a cat or dog is cruel and needless unless it's rabid.
>>>>>>> Dogs and cats, like humans, can do things that forfeit their right >>>>>>> to >>>>>>> live. Such things as attacking people, biting children, being >>>> aggressive >>>>>>> as a common behavior, and others. Yes, relocation or adoption is an >>>>>>> option, but sometimes the problem just follows them, and the new >>>>>>> owners >>>>>>> have a hospital bill. Sometimes the animal can be rehabilitated and >>>>>>> trained out of the unacceptable behavior, and that falls under >>>>>>> either >>>>>>> category, relocation or termination.
>>>>>>> To me, any dog that bites me or a child goes either out the door, or >>>>>>> in >>>>>>> the ground. Saves on drama and second guessing later. Too many >>>>>>> good >>>>>>> dogs that love people and who are sociable and loveable to tolerate >>>>>>> a >>>>>>> chain saw who may go off at any time.
>>>>>>> Just MHO, YMM(and probably does)V
>>>>>>> And don't give me any shit about poor pet owner. I currently own a >>>>>>> Corgi who the adoption agency would not accept because he's a biter, >>>> and >>>>>>> a Lab who's dying of cancer. I like dogs. Just not ones that I >>>>>>> have >>>> to >>>>>>> stay awake over.
>>>>>>> Steve
>>>>>> I don't totally disagree. However, putting down an animal humanely >>>>>> is >>>> far >>>>>> different from poisoning, shooting, or beating them to death.
>>>>> Absolutely. Don't forget that a large % of cattle are killed by >>>>> shooting >>>>> before slaughter.
>>>>> Steve
>>>> Speaking of which, one of my favorite cats had some sort of episode >>>> last >>>> night, either stroke or heart attack. We took him to the vet at 7:00 >>>> this >>>> morning. The vet concurred, and we had to have him put down.
>>>> --
>>>> ~~ If there's a nit to pick, some nitwit will pick it. ~~
>>> My condolences. I have a pussycat Labrador that has cancer, and I will >>> have to load her in the car one of these days and take her for her last >>> vet visit. I hope someone can do that for me when it's my time. Just >>> give me a shot and let me doze off. I have had two cousins in the past >>> month do Death With Dignity in Washington state.
>>> When it's time to go, it's time to go. Cat or human, and no one should >>> have to suffer.
>>> Steve
>>Wow!...I had no idea Death with Dignity existed. Good for Washington! It's >>a >>step in the right direction.
>>Jim
> Not familiar with Jack Kevorkian?
Oren, were you born an asshole, or did you just practice a lot?
You don't dump it at their door, you squish it into the cabin air intake of their vehicle. Mashing it up into the door handles of their ride is another good way too. One good asshole deserves another.
> >> > "Jon Danniken" <jondanSPAMni...@yaSPAMhoo.com> wrote in message > >> > news:7ksti9F3aqr27U1@mid.individual.net... > >> >> Any suggestions besides trapping and drowning or shooting the little > >> >> pieces of sh*t that poop in my garden and pee in my carport?
> >> >> I'm considering getting one of the "havahart" electric fence jobs and > >> >> zapping them until they get the message they are no longer welcome > >> >> here.
> >> >> Any other suggestions?
> >> >> Jon
> >> My friend used to have a problem with the neighbor's cat. He borrowed a > >> live trap from the city and caught the cat. Then he pissed all over it > >> while it was in the trap. Left it to soak in the piss for an hour and > >> then > >> let it go. Then he pissed into a bottle and sprinkled a bit of piss > >> around > >> the fence line. Cat never came back. Besides effective this method was > >> very > >> satisfying.
> > Same principle. Cheap. Humane. Effective. And sanitary:
> >> > "Jon Danniken" <jondanSPAMni...@yaSPAMhoo.com> wrote in message > >> > news:7ksti9F3aqr27U1@mid.individual.net... > >> >> Any suggestions besides trapping and drowning or shooting the little > >> >> pieces of sh*t that poop in my garden and pee in my carport?
> >> >> I'm considering getting one of the "havahart" electric fence jobs and > >> >> zapping them until they get the message they are no longer welcome > >> >> here.
> >> >> Any other suggestions?
> >> >> Jon
> >> My friend used to have a problem with the neighbor's cat. He borrowed a > >> live trap from the city and caught the cat. Then he pissed all over it > >> while it was in the trap. Left it to soak in the piss for an hour and then > >> let it go. Then he pissed into a bottle and sprinkled a bit of piss around > >> the fence line. Cat never came back. Besides effective this method was > >> very > >> satisfying.
> >Same principle. Cheap. Humane. Effective. And sanitary:
> Explain to me why I should have to pay $14.95 plus shipping to keep the > neighbor's cat out of my yard -- instead of the neighbor keeping his damn cat > in his *own* yard.
Cats roam. That's what they do. They cannot be trained to do otherwise unless they are raised exclusively indoors. There are safe, effective, humane ways of dealing with that without shooting, poisoning, trapping and driving them 50 miles away, pissing on or otherwise torturing animals that do not have the capacity to understand that Doug's property line is somehow more inviolable than Frank's.
The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the critter you're trying to shoo away.
bob < hofm...@att.net"> wrote: > On Oct 30, 11:17 pm, spamb...@milmac.com (Doug Miller) wrote: > > In article <301020091424294630%warn...@verizonDOTnet.net>, > > warn...@verizon.net wrote: > > >In article <Xns9CB38381EBC44R...@69.16.185.247>, Reno > > ><nos...@somewhere.com> wrote:
> > >> > "Jon Danniken" <jondanSPAMni...@yaSPAMhoo.com> wrote in message > > >> >news:7ksti9F3aqr27U1@mid.individual.net... > > >> >> Any suggestions besides trapping and drowning or shooting the little > > >> >> pieces of sh*t that poop in my garden and pee in my carport?
> > >> >> I'm considering getting one of the "havahart" electric fence jobs and > > >> >> zapping them until they get the message they are no longer welcome > > >> >> here.
> > >> >> Any other suggestions?
> > >> >> Jon
> > >> My friend used to have a problem with the neighbor's cat. He borrowed a > > >> live trap from the city and caught the cat. Then he pissed all over it > > >> while it was in the trap. Left it to soak in the piss for an hour and > > >> then > > >> let it go. Then he pissed into a bottle and sprinkled a bit of piss > > >> around > > >> the fence line. Cat never came back. Besides effective this method was > > >> very > > >> satisfying.
> > >Same principle. Cheap. Humane. Effective. And sanitary:
> > Explain to me why I should have to pay $14.95 plus shipping to keep the > > neighbor's cat out of my yard -- instead of the neighbor keeping his damn > > cat > > in his *own* yard.- Hide quoted text -
> > - Show quoted text -
> buy the stuff and use his name and address and have it sent COD, then > ask him to take delivery for you.
Knock yourself out. But I have no need of cat repellant so make it the raccoon/possum repellant. I'm almost out. I used to have a huge problem with those pests until I tried this stuff. It works exactly as advertised and I haven't seen a raccoon or opossum in my yard in nearly five years.
> In article <hcga7n$8d...@news.eternal-september.org>, Doug Miller > <spamb...@milmac.com> wrote:
> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to > prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the > critter you're trying to shoo away.
Agreed. I no longer have any outdoor cats and the rodent population has grown horrendously in just two years. I'm in the boonies and for 25 years all my cats were feral strays who wandered up to the house and decided that beds and canned food were really great things to have, at least at night. During the day, however, even in the dead of winter, most of the feral kitties were killing machines. My remaining three are indoor-only cats that I inherited when a relative died. They've never been out and since we have coyotes I just don't want to let them out since they don't show any interest anyway. They do just great with the occasional indoor varmint, but I would LOVE to have the closest neighbor's cat come over and clear my yard. Unfortunately that kitty is getting old and rarely leaves his own acreage, plus there are enough rodents within a few feet of his porch that he has no need to come all the way over here. I WISH I had the OPs "problem".
In article <031120091649584396%warn...@veriSPAMMERSDIEzon.net>, Frank J Warner <warn...@veriSPAMMERSDIEzon.net> wrote:
>In article <hcga7n$8d...@news.eternal-september.org>, Doug Miller ><spamb...@milmac.com> wrote: >> Explain to me why I should have to pay $14.95 plus shipping to keep the >> neighbor's cat out of my yard -- instead of the neighbor keeping his damn cat
>> in his *own* yard.
>Cats roam. That's what they do. They cannot be trained to do otherwise >unless they are raised exclusively indoors.
Well, there you go. The neighbor should keep his damn cat exclusively indoors. My yard is *not* a litterbox for the neighbor's cat.
> There are safe, effective, >humane ways of dealing with that without shooting, poisoning, trapping >and driving them 50 miles away, pissing on or otherwise torturing >animals that do not have the capacity to understand that Doug's >property line is somehow more inviolable than Frank's.
You sound like one of those people who allow their cats to roam free, and then blame your neighbors for getting upset when the cats come in their yards.
Explain to me why I should have to put up with the neighbor's cats coming into my yard and crapping in my flower beds.
>The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to >prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the >critter you're trying to shoo away.
Explain to me why I should have to pay anything to keep the neighbor's cat out of my yard -- instead of the neighbor keeping his damn cat in his own yard or house.
Keep your damn cats at home. If I catch them in my yard, I'll dispose of them.
>> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to >> prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the >> critter you're trying to shoo away.
>Agreed. I no longer have any outdoor cats and the rodent population has >grown horrendously in just two years. I'm in the boonies
In other words, no nearby neighbors to piss off with your cats.
>> >> > "Jon Danniken" <jondanSPAMni...@yaSPAMhoo.com> wrote in message >> >> > news:7ksti9F3aqr27U1@mid.individual.net... >> >> >> Any suggestions besides trapping and drowning or shooting the >> >> >> little >> >> >> pieces of sh*t that poop in my garden and pee in my carport?
>> >> >> I'm considering getting one of the "havahart" electric fence jobs >> >> >> and >> >> >> zapping them until they get the message they are no longer welcome >> >> >> here.
>> >> >> Any other suggestions?
>> >> >> Jon
>> >> My friend used to have a problem with the neighbor's cat. He borrowed >> >> a >> >> live trap from the city and caught the cat. Then he pissed all over it >> >> while it was in the trap. Left it to soak in the piss for an hour and >> >> then >> >> let it go. Then he pissed into a bottle and sprinkled a bit of piss >> >> around >> >> the fence line. Cat never came back. Besides effective this method was >> >> very >> >> satisfying.
>> > Same principle. Cheap. Humane. Effective. And sanitary:
>>> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to >>> prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the >>> critter you're trying to shoo away.
>>Agreed. I no longer have any outdoor cats and the rodent population has >>grown horrendously in just two years. I'm in the boonies
> In other words, no nearby neighbors to piss off with your cats.
What, exactly, do the cats do that "pisses you off"? Cats bury their output and kill off rodents. What's not to like?
>>>> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to >>>> prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the >>>> critter you're trying to shoo away.
>>>Agreed. I no longer have any outdoor cats and the rodent population has >>>grown horrendously in just two years. I'm in the boonies
>> In other words, no nearby neighbors to piss off with your cats.
> What, exactly, do the cats do that "pisses you off"? Cats bury their > output and kill off rodents. What's not to like?
Bury their output? Someone forgot to tell the cats that relieve themselves on my lawn.
My wife is trying to run them over. She got one of them.
>> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to >> prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the >> critter you're trying to shoo away.
> Agreed. I no longer have any outdoor cats and the rodent population has > grown horrendously in just two years. I'm in the boonies and for 25 years > all my cats were feral strays who wandered up to the house and decided that > beds and canned food were really great things to have, at least at night. > During the day, however, even in the dead of winter, most of the feral > kitties were killing machines. My remaining three are indoor-only cats that > I inherited when a relative died. They've never been out and since we have > coyotes I just don't want to let them out since they don't show any interest > anyway. They do just great with the occasional indoor varmint, but I would > LOVE to have the closest neighbor's cat come over and clear my yard. > Unfortunately that kitty is getting old and rarely leaves his own acreage, > plus there are enough rodents within a few feet of his porch that he has no > need to come all the way over here. I WISH I had the OPs "problem".
Doug Miller wrote: > In article <031120091649584396%warn...@veriSPAMMERSDIEzon.net>, Frank > J Warner <warn...@veriSPAMMERSDIEzon.net> wrote: >> In article <hcga7n$8d...@news.eternal-september.org>, Doug Miller >> <spamb...@milmac.com> wrote:
>>> Explain to me why I should have to pay $14.95 plus shipping to keep >>> the neighbor's cat out of my yard -- instead of the neighbor >>> keeping his damn cat
>>> in his *own* yard.
>> Cats roam. That's what they do. They cannot be trained to do >> otherwise unless they are raised exclusively indoors.
> Well, there you go. The neighbor should keep his damn cat exclusively > indoors. > My yard is *not* a litterbox for the neighbor's cat.
>> There are safe, effective, >> humane ways of dealing with that without shooting, poisoning, >> trapping and driving them 50 miles away, pissing on or otherwise >> torturing animals that do not have the capacity to understand that >> Doug's property line is somehow more inviolable than Frank's.
> You sound like one of those people who allow their cats to roam free, > and then > blame your neighbors for getting upset when the cats come in their > yards.
> Explain to me why I should have to put up with the neighbor's cats > coming into > my yard and crapping in my flower beds.
>> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay >> to prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than >> the critter you're trying to shoo away.
> Explain to me why I should have to pay anything to keep the > neighbor's cat out > of my yard -- instead of the neighbor keeping his damn cat in his own > yard or > house.
> Keep your damn cats at home. If I catch them in my yard, I'll dispose > of them.
And what do you do about the birds that poop on your car? Just asking.
> >> > "Jon Danniken" <jondanSPAMni...@yaSPAMhoo.com> wrote in message > >> >news:7ksti9F3aqr27U1@mid.individual.net... > >> >> Any suggestions besides trapping and drowning or shooting the little > >> >> pieces of sh*t that poop in my garden and pee in my carport?
> >> >> I'm considering getting one of the "havahart" electric fence jobs and > >> >> zapping them until they get the message they are no longer welcome > >> >> here.
> >> >> Any other suggestions?
> >> >> Jon
> >> My friend used to have a problem with the neighbor's cat. He borrowed a > >> live trap from the city and caught the cat. Then he pissed all over it > >> while it was in the trap. Left it to soak in the piss for an hour and then > >> let it go. Then he pissed into a bottle and sprinkled a bit of piss around > >> the fence line. Cat never came back. Besides effective this method was very > >> satisfying.
> >Same principle. Cheap. Humane. Effective. And sanitary:
> Explain to me why I should have to pay $14.95 plus shipping to keep the > neighbor's cat out of my yard -- instead of the neighbor keeping his damn cat > in his *own* yard.- Hide quoted text -
> - Show quoted text -
if you were my neighbor and my cat was bothering your garden, and $15 would solve the problem, I'd be happy to pay for the stuff...
> >> > "Jon Danniken" <jondanSPAMni...@yaSPAMhoo.com> wrote in message > >> >news:7ksti9F3aqr27U1@mid.individual.net... > >> >> Any suggestions besides trapping and drowning or shooting the little > >> >> pieces of sh*t that poop in my garden and pee in my carport?
> >> >> I'm considering getting one of the "havahart" electric fence jobs > >> >> and > >> >> zapping them until they get the message they are no longer welcome > >> >> here.
> >> >> Any other suggestions?
> >> >> Jon
> >> My friend used to have a problem with the neighbor's cat. He borrowed a > >> live trap from the city and caught the cat. Then he pissed all over it > >> while it was in the trap. Left it to soak in the piss for an hour and > >> then > >> let it go. Then he pissed into a bottle and sprinkled a bit of piss > >> around > >> the fence line. Cat never came back. Besides effective this method was > >> very > >> satisfying.
> >Same principle. Cheap. Humane. Effective. And sanitary:
> Explain to me why I should have to pay $14.95 plus shipping to keep the > neighbor's cat out of my yard -- instead of the neighbor keeping his damn > cat > in his *own* yard.- Hide quoted text -
> - Show quoted text -
if you were my neighbor and my cat was bothering your garden, and $15 would solve the problem, I'd be happy to pay for the stuff...
>>>>> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to >>>>> prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the >>>>> critter you're trying to shoo away.
>>>>Agreed. I no longer have any outdoor cats and the rodent population has >>>>grown horrendously in just two years. I'm in the boonies
>>> In other words, no nearby neighbors to piss off with your cats.
>> What, exactly, do the cats do that "pisses you off"? Cats bury their >> output and kill off rodents. What's not to like?
> Bury their output? Someone forgot to tell the cats that relieve themselves > on my lawn.
> My wife is trying to run them over. She got one of them.
I hope someone saw her and I hope she gets arrested.
>>> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay to >>> prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the >>> critter you're trying to shoo away.
>> Agreed. I no longer have any outdoor cats and the rodent population has >> grown horrendously in just two years. I'm in the boonies and for 25 years >> all my cats were feral strays who wandered up to the house and decided >> that beds and canned food were really great things to have, at least at >> night. During the day, however, even in the dead of winter, most of the >> feral kitties were killing machines. My remaining three are indoor-only >> cats that I inherited when a relative died. They've never been out and >> since we have coyotes I just don't want to let them out since they don't >> show any interest anyway. They do just great with the occasional indoor >> varmint, but I would LOVE to have the closest neighbor's cat come over >> and clear my yard. Unfortunately that kitty is getting old and rarely >> leaves his own acreage, plus there are enough rodents within a few feet >> of his porch that he has no need to come all the way over here. I WISH I >> had the OPs "problem". > no animal shelters near you?
I already have 3 INDOOR cats. I simply can't afford to care for any more cats, plus there's no guarantee that a cat up for adoption would be suited to going outside (used to dealing with coyotes and badgers, etc.)
>>>>>> The above is one of those solutions. $14.95 is a small price to pay >>>>>> to >>>>>> prove to the rest of the world that you're slightly smarter than the >>>>>> critter you're trying to shoo away.
>>>>>Agreed. I no longer have any outdoor cats and the rodent population has >>>>>grown horrendously in just two years. I'm in the boonies
>>>> In other words, no nearby neighbors to piss off with your cats.
>>> What, exactly, do the cats do that "pisses you off"? Cats bury their >>> output and kill off rodents. What's not to like?
>> Bury their output? Someone forgot to tell the cats that relieve >> themselves on my lawn.
>> My wife is trying to run them over. She got one of them.
> I hope someone saw her and I hope she gets arrested.