File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
okay /an/, I'm about ready to strangle my cat. She's about 6 months old, just had her fixed a week ago. Before I got her fixed, she started peeing on the bed while she was in heat. After she got fixed, she stopped, but half an hour ago she was spazzing and running around the house and peed a fuck ton on the bed. Please, /an/, tell me how to get her to stop without tearing out her bladder. Pic related
>> HURRICANES !KtcwP0gsLk
get a spray bottle, and fill it with water, spray her whenever she tries to pee on your bed.
>> Anonymous
>>214739
Well I dont know when she's doing it. I didn't even notice it until I was getting out of my bed. She PEED on my foot while I was in bed, and I didn't feel it until I got out.
>> Anonymous
>>214740
Put some material on your bed that makes noise when disturbed. Packing paper? Shit like that.
>> Anonymous
>>214741
but I live on my bed, haha. I sit with my laptop on it all day when I'm not at class. Do they sell like, a spray that's bad smelling to cats but human's can't smell it or it doesn't smell bad? I heard cats hate the smell of onion too
>> Kei-chan !!TC9G3mj2n5R
>>214738

Aww, how can you stay mad at that face :3
>> Anonymous
>>214757
I Can't really <:3c gonna talk to people at petsmart, see what they have to say about it
>> Anonymous
Isn't this a problem where you think you got rid of the scent but, the cat can still smell it? It is reduced in potency so she needs to mark it again.
>> Anonymous
>>214771
Hmm I couldn't smell it at all, but when my boyfriend got home from work he complained about it. So I think you're right. She probably thinks it's her territory now or something :/ I don't know what to do to get her to stop, aside from getting another female cat to pee on the bed, haha
>> Anonymous
You need to wash the piss spots with an odor-breaking-down enzyme product. Go to the pet store and ask for Nature's Miracle. Soak any pissed on spots with this and let it dry over night.
>> MiMi
>>214770

Petsmart bitch, you rang?

I'm not saying this to milk money out of you (since I don't get it directly .. haha... ... You wouldn't believe how many people think so, though.), but the thing I've found to work best is a product called Feliway.

There's Boundary, which is a spray you spritz around the area you want her to stay away from - fades for us pretty quickly, but think about how much stronger a cat's sense of smell is - but you have to reapply every twenty-four hours at least, for it to be wholly effective.

Also, if you want her on your bed, but not peeing, that will be a pretty heavy mixed signal.


What I think you might not know yet, given that you've just spayed her, is that while the organs producing the "crazy kitty" hormones have been removed, it's most likely going to take another week or two for them to completely fade from her body. Both male and female cats sometimes still spray for a few weeks after getting fixed. Something to think about.

>>214771is also correct - I'd wash the bedclothes she's peed on asap, preferably pretreated with a product like Nature's Miracle for Cats, or Simple Solution for Cats, to get rid of the strong scent.

The scent is why she wants to mark there again - it's an instinctual reminder that 'this is mine'. Feliway is fairly expensive, the starter thing being about forty-five with tax, but it's well worth it. The funny thing is, I know it works and I haven't ever needed to try it.

I got such good customer feedback on it, that I started recommending it to new customers, and I've personally been singled out in my store by said people, just so they can thank me for telling them about it.
>> MiMi
>>214783

Feliway works, basically, through synthetic cat pheromones. It's a smell that reassures your cat that "this is mine", "all is well", whatever. It de-stresses, makes the whole area smell like they do. (No, that doesn't mean it smells awful. I actually don't -know- what it smells like, but it must not be.)

Out of a good hundred customers or so, I've had perhaps ONE tell me that it didn't work for their cat/s.

The starter thing looks almost like a Glade Plug-In - a diffuser that plugs into an outlet. Like I said, fairly costly, but worth the money.
...

Also, your kitty's only six months old. :) She's allowed to be a spazzy cat for a good few more months before she really starts calming down. Give her time.
>> Anonymous
Clean the sheets as has been said, spray down that spot on the bed...

Clean the litter box. Make sure it's away from the foods. Maybe toss some catnip in there for kicks. If the box is clean and the bed is clean, you need only made sure the box is more desirable!
>> Anonymous
Feliway sounds promising, I''ll ask about that, thanks guys
>> Niggerhusky Guy !!2YW0PJZXbhy
Feliway has been a blessing in this household. It won't make any radical changes in your cats, of course, however it was enough to keep my 7month old kitten from constantly raiding my 16 year old kitten.

My old kitty is battling kidney failure, and it's instinct in cats to drive out the sick and weak due to protecting the group from predators.

And it was also enough to get her to relax back when I had four dogs in the house. $50 start up, $25 a month, it was well worth it.
>> Anonymous
>>214793

Hmm... Maybe that's why some of my cats aren't nice to my 21 year old cat with kidney failure. He's really nice, but the other cats react to him like: "GTF away from me, smelly old man!" And they sometimes bully him when he's trying to eat :(
>> David
DO IT FAGGOT!
>> Niggerhusky Guy !!2YW0PJZXbhy
>>214801

Yeah, pretty much is why.