Enclosure For Cat

luty 21, 2012

Cat Fence – How can it work?

Filed under: Uncategorized @ 8:35 am and tagged

While cats are great climbers, they won’t climb on unstable surfaces. We provide an almost-invisible barrier (polypropylene netting) that attaches to solid steel stanchions angled to stop escape from your yard, patio or deck. The Affordable Cat Fence… Keeps your cats in your yard Keeps other animals out Types of Cat Fences Lets you move litter boxes outside to any covered area Allows your cats to safely enjoy the outdoors! More Affordable cat fence blogs.

luty 20, 2012

Outdoor cat fence features a unique outdoor cat enclosure design that keep your cats safe.

I wish we’d discovered the Cat Fence in System years ago. We have two cats with litter box problems. Bob (who has a broken spine, so he can not really help his problem, however it still causes messes for all of us to deal with) and Sheeba, who has some misfiring brain wires. She does not act like any cat I have met, and she loves to pee all over the house. We’ve arranged our lives around the problems of these cats. Litter boxes everywhere that are cleansed all the time. We don’t have a settee or soft chairs anyplace because Bob would ruin them. All bedroom doors stay shut constantly to prevent furry intruders doing their thing on our beds. We’ve seen cat behaviorists. We keep the laboratories running a business with how often we submit urine samples, and an acupuncturist for Bob. But I don’t think an elimination issue should equal a death sentence, and so we have lived with it (and cleaned up after it) – for decades. Our other problem was that people don’t live in a safe area for the cats to go outside. We live in a townhouse with a parking lot out front, and a different one behind it. These cats have already been indoor cats their whole lives. I don’t think they’d stand a chance outdoors. I am aware the neighborhood cats pretty well (better than I know our neighbors, my hubby would say) and handful of them stay around for long. It just isn’t a cat-friendly environment. I’m a veterinary nurse of nine years and have helped patch up (or put to rest) way too many cats from the bad end of encounters with cars, dogs, or unfriendly people to just take outdoor life lightly. So when we made a decision to start out permitting them to outside, I was torn up about it. I couldn’t emotionally handle them anymore, but was frightened for their safety. I began to research if there have been any safe methods to teach older cats some street smarts, with the goal of making a safer transition to being outdoor cats. I discovered the Cat Fence-In System. I was shocked that in my almost twenty years of working with animals that I’d never heard about such a thing. It’s great! It’s a netting system that goes around the top of your fence, and keeps the cats from being able to climb out. They stay safely in the yard. Basically the netting is mounted on the fence and also to brackets that hold it at an angle, to the yard. If the cat tries to climb the fence, they encounter the netting with no way to bypass it. There are two versions. The one that just shines in to your yard, and keeps your cats in, called the Strato Barrier. It can be utilized on fences over 5 feet tall. The other, called the Combination Barrier, also sticks upward, and will prevent other cats from to be able to enter your yard. The fences only need to be three feet tall for the Combination System to work. This is the system we picked. Seemed like a bad idea if other cats could easily get into our yard, although not straight back out again. We’d have a little feline cage match on our hands. We’ve an arduous fence. It’s irregular high, goes up an abrupt slope, and is very short in places. Probably on the worst case scenario side as far as instillation is concerned. I can not say it went up effectively, but it was straightforward, the instructions were clear, with no great mechanical knowledge was needed. Having two different people helped. We’ve had our system up for about a month now, also it does work. I have my house back. Now my cats sleep in the grass, chase bugs, and lay in the sun without dying. They still come inside at night and in inclement weather. Bob loves playing outside during the day. Sheeba does not think it’s great, but, like I said before, I’m sure she’s mental problems. No real matter what she thinks, it’s better than being locked in the bathroom the remainder of her life, and that’s her other option now. This technique generally is a lifesaver.

© 2012 Enclosure For Cat   Provided by WPMU DEV -The WordPress Experts.  Hosted by Edublogs.org