loki100
Posts: 10920
Joined: 10/20/2012 From: Utlima Thule Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Freyr Oakenshield If they aren't fully domesticated at an early age when they're still kittens, it's hard to do so later when they've become mature. They've developed habits and ways of behaving that are hard to eradicate at that stage. You're lucky they let you stroke them. thanks for this, its my fear. We have always had cats from rescue centres or even off the street strays but never real feral cats before. I don't think anyone just with experience of rescue cats understands the difference (hence the less than helpful comments above), we certainly didn't. Our last batch of cats came from a house where they started trying to breed kittens for sale and lost control. So we got 3 toms who had grown up in a house, but were basically human indifferent (they hadn't been mistreated, just ignored). So getting them to accept us was slow but based on a solid foundation. I think we are stuck with 2 cats that roughly hang around, will tolerate some interaction but have become completely out of doors cats again. ... and so glad you decided not to leave the forum, always like your posts and posting style quote:
ORIGINAL: Zovs I don't have much experience with feral cats, all of mine have been pets in and out of the house. But I found this article interesting. https://blog.udemy.com/feral-cat-behavior/ Don't know if it will help, but its another piece of 'research' to hopefully aid you. My sister-in-law's husband won't let cats live in the house, they live on a farm and she feeds them, they let her pet them, but they live and sleep outside on the farm. It gets very cold in Michigan, so my brother-in-law who was a contractor, built then a "log cabin" for the winters. Its made out of 6-8 inch diameter logs and is about 4 foot by 2 foot in size and about 3 feet high. He used foam insulation and places for them to sleep and put carpet in it. It has a removable roof and they put water in food in the winter inside. So these 3 cats may be free roamers they don't mind humans petting them for a bit but enjoy their freedom outside and supplements from the human care takers (my brother and sister in law) lol as they hunt mice, moles and birds for meals. thanks for the link, yes I think we inadvertently have ended up with the type of farm cat that tolerates/expects some interaction. No idea what to do, we can (just about) trap them, but its a grim process and I'd rather leave it for emergencies. See little point in dragging them in and stopping them going out as that isn't going to shift their attitudes, Roger
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