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15th June 2011, 12:03 AM #1
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Maine Coon cats as wanderers?
Do Maine Coon cats have a tendency to roam? Do they accept being kept inside as house cats?
Anna
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15th June 2011, 12:25 AM #2
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My Samantha was an indoor only kitty for her entire 16 years, when I left the door open she never stray very far from the door.
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15th June 2011, 01:15 AM #3
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I leave doors and windows open but Buddy has no interest in going out. He may stray as far as the doorstep to sunbathe buts that's about it. Following advice on here I built an enclosure in the garden to give him freedom but he hasn't used it. That said there was a coonie reported missing in here recently. Think like most breeds its individual.
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15th June 2011, 01:57 AM #4
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Do you love your cats?
Do you want them to live a long healthy lifes?
Make them indoor kitties.
Indoors VS Outdoors - Cats Really Are Safer InsideLast edited by cooncatbob; 15th June 2011 at 02:02 AM.
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15th June 2011, 04:25 AM #5
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Thanks for the replies. I ask because I had one who was such a tyrant about going out that he dug the weatherstripping out from around the back door in an effort to get it open. He would also leap at and try to grab the door handle. I wondered if they were all so intent on going outside. I'm happy to hear that they're not, because I'd like to get another one.
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15th June 2011, 04:54 AM #6
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15th June 2011, 09:46 AM #7
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Have to agree with cooncatbob!
Franklin, our boy that passed away 3 years ago, was obssessed with being outside and even though we cat-proofed the balcony (we lived in a first-floor flat) whe managed to escape and was gone for 9 months, surviving a Swedish winter. He was fine when we found him though, and we later moved to a house out in the sticks so we let them out, there was no harm whatsoever and he LOVED being outside. We knew he was a happy boy and his favorite pass-time was catching birds, voles or other large creatures and sleeping in the sun or bouncing through the snow! :D
Ours now are indoor only, only allowed out in the garden if on a harnessMummy to;
Sooty 9.6.1996 - 28.4.2011 Rest in peace my love
Storm
Benji
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15th June 2011, 06:53 PM #8
I think it's a tough decision though.
I've only ever owned moggies before now and it felt cruel to keep a cat that so desperately wants to be outdoors inside (and they ALL wanted to be outdoors). I wouldn't dream of it. But now I have Poif I really want her to be an indoor cat. At 12 weeks she's showed little interest in going outside, but i don't think she's worked out what the cat-flap does yet!
When she does work it out and if she wants to go out, I don't feel like it would be fair to stop her. And even if I did that means that I'd have to shut my normally free-roaming cats either in or out, which doesn't seem fair either...
Like I say...it's a toughie!
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15th June 2011, 08:35 PM #9
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The research has been done, indoor only cats live over twice as long as cats that roam.
It can be an unfriendly world to a cat outside and the dangers are numerous.
When I was a child we had cat's that got run over and cats that ate something that poisoned them, we also had cats just disappear.
Since Samantha died I've been trying to wean Chiquita from going outside, I let her out then 15 minutes later I call her back in, most of the time she's either in the garage laying in her place on top of my convertible or close by.
To me the cruelty is exposing them to unnecessary dangers that could deprive them of years of life.
Indoors VS Outdoors - Cats Really Are Safer Inside
If you provide your cat with something to do and play with they can be perfectly happy spending their entire life inside.
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15th June 2011, 08:53 PM #10
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I don't know if I mentioned this on here before but there was a massive scare in the village I used to live in - some guy was leaving out poisoned cat food and lots of cats were killed or made very ill by it. After that I swore that I'd never have a cat which could roam. One of our cats disappeared (we've assumed it was because he got ill and died) and the other was very ill and afterwards she wouldn't go any further away from the house than our back garden.
I think if a cat has been bred to be inside then they don't know any better and you're not denying them anything by keeping them indoors, you're protecting them. I'd love to have a garden enclosure or something like that but we live in a flat so can't have things like that at the moment. I'm sure if we ever move to a house with a garden we will do something like that.
I'd never dream of letting Teddy roam free.
(Just my two cents based on my personal experience!)
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