Cat question--need answers sort of quickly

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badboob67
badboob67 Member Posts: 2,780
edited June 2014 in Life After Breast Cancer

Do any of you have experience with a young female cat that likes to pee/poop in places other than the litter box even though she has (supposedly) been box trained for several months? In the last week I have caught this less than a year old kitty "spraying" my bedroom window (I had never seen such a thing and thought she was having a seizure or something until I saw the liquid fly out of her nether-regions and onto the windowsill), found poop under the desk, and just a short while ago she perched herself atop the bench at the end of my bed and peed all over my laptop case. I am freaking out!

This cat belongs to my 17 year old son and dh is insisting she go...like, NOW! She is a 100% healthy indoor cat who gets lots of love and attention and is never left home alone more than an hour or two. When caught in the act, she "finishes" before running away and hiding. Is she trying to mark her territory? Is there a fix for this that we can try to put into action before we have to find her another home?

Thanks in advance!

Diane 

Comments

  • LAphoenix
    LAphoenix Member Posts: 452
    edited June 2008

    Diane,

    Quick possible answers: Is the litter box less clean than usual?  Or has the litter brand changed?  Or have you changed the placement of the box?  Or is there anything about the box that has changed?  Are there any other changes in the household?  New pets?  Other pets coming into your yard?  I had a male cat that started spraying (not pooping) around the house, because of the arrival of a female cat.  It doesn't sound like a UTI, since she's pooping too, but I suppose it could be an infection of some sort.  If it hurts, they'll keep trying different places.  

    Hope you figure it out soon!  I know how upsetting that situation can be.

    Amy G.   

  • badboob67
    badboob67 Member Posts: 2,780
    edited June 2008

    Nothing changed with the litter box; I have talked to son about getting her checked for a UTI even though it seems unlikely.

    Thanks! 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2008

    Is she spayed? I know male cats are more likely to spray when they aren't neutered to mark territory, but my female cat from many years ago sprayed before being spayed (say that ten times fast!) - but only on my dad's pillow! He didn't like her and let everyone know it. I'd say she got the last laugh for certain...

    Hope all returns to normal soon...

  • dhettish
    dhettish Member Posts: 501
    edited June 2008

    Hi Diane,

    Cats Spray. That is just a fact. Are there other cats in the household? Are there possibly neighbor cats walking around outside that she sees and so she is spraying? I do not know about the pooping. If she is really skinny, she probably has worms. Sometimes small kittens forget where their litter box is and it helps to confine her until she realizes.

    I had a kitten that went on antibiotics and it gave him diarhea. Apparently, it freaked him out, because he would go flying through the house dripping all the way. He is fine now. We have a two story house and when we had kittens, we had to have a litterbox upstairs and down so they could make it to it in time.

    On the other hand, some cats are just really bad markers. We have to watch Banjo when she comes in. Anything on the floor she will pee in. She peed down the heating vents! We had to have our duct work cleaned. Now she is an outdoor cat except on cold winter nights. We let her in, but she usually goes right back out and she is not allowed in certain rooms where we know she has peeing problems.

    I have 11 cats and once a week I go around with my urine off and clean up spray marks. It works really well and friends say they don't smell cat urine in my house. I beg them to tell me the truth.

    Good Luck. Cats are a mystery.

    Debbie 

  • Harley44
    Harley44 Member Posts: 5,446
    edited June 2008

    I would also wonder if she has been spayed yet.  I only have had MALE cats, but I have heard that even females can and do spray occasionally.

    I have read that any time a cat is not using the litter box, you should have them checked by your vet to make sure that they don't have any health problem that is making them go outside the box.  

    Also, they say that you should think like your cat, and if there is anything going on, like any additional stress, or if you or your family members have been fighting...  any thing could cause your kitty to be upset, and that may cause her to stop using the litter box.

    Good Luck!!  

    Harley 

  • SLH
    SLH Member Posts: 566
    edited June 2008

    In my experience with cats, they seem to spray and mark when there are too many cats around.  My sister has 3 cats who originally didn't spray, but she let a neighbor's cat come in to visit through the cat door, and now all of her cats are marking.

    I've never had a problem with cats spraying, and I've owned a lot of cats.  But I had a male kitten who had extreme problems with peeing and pooping everywhere.  From the time he was just a baby, he would poop and pee in the wierdest places.  I placed litter boxes all around the house, but he would go on a pile of my financial papers, or in the kids' puzzle box, on top of the folded up rubber wading pool, and on stacked clothes.  I had him tested for any health problems and he was fine.  After 1 1/2 yrs, I was pretty impatient with it, and then he jumped in the big plastic tub of legos, while my son was sitting there playing with them, and peed all over a million legos!

    My husband took him to a no-kill shelter.  I felt bad, because I'd never given up on a cat before.  But he was impossible.

    sally 

  • OneBadBoob
    OneBadBoob Member Posts: 1,386
    edited June 2008

    Okay Diane, this is way out of left field. . . but worth a try.

    A friend of mine started having that same problem with a young cat that she adopted from a shelter, took it to the vet and it checked out healthy.

    She was so frustrated that she took the cat to an animal communicator to see what the problem was.  The cat told the animal communicator she was from a line of ferral cats and preferred to pee/poop on dirt and that the litter that was used in her box.

    So, my friend started putting dirt from outside onto the top of the litter box, and the cat started to again use only the litter box.

    Maybe worth a try?

    Okay--so I never believed in animal communicators either until I took by dog to one and it was shocked at the accurate things my dog told this lady.

    Good luck!

  • abbadoodles
    abbadoodles Member Posts: 2,618
    edited June 2008

    My vet told me once that if the cat pees outside the litter box it needs to be checked for a urinary tract infection or other problem.  It seems that if the cat is experiencing pain when it pees (or poops) in the litter box, it will associate the pain with the box.  Then, it will avoid it and do it's business anywhere.

    We found this out because, years ago, our elderly, spayed, female cat was peeing ON THE RANGE TOP!  We'd get up in the morning, go to make the coffee and find dried pee in the burner wells!

    Once treated, the cat was fine and no more illegal peeing.  Good luck.

  • Hanna60978
    Hanna60978 Member Posts: 815
    edited December 2011
  • Maple
    Maple Member Posts: 21
    edited June 2008

    I have a male cat that went through peeing outside the litter box for awhile.  I placed litter boxes right where he was peeing and he would pee right next to the litter box.  We wanted to find a solution prior to replacing the subfloor.  I tried just about everything that I could think of and just about everything that people recommended to me and the combination that worked in my case was using "cat attrack" litter.  There is some scent to it that they like.  I have two cats with three litter boxes.  At first I only put the new litter in the two boxes that he never used - and he actually started using them. So I changed the litter in the third box too (I had been using the same litter since he was a kitten).  The other thing is that I put pheremone plug in into the room that the downstairs litter box is in (his preferred litter box).  It is like a glade plug in, but you get it at the pet store.

    Anyways, he started using the litter boxes again, even with the pee scent very prevalent which allowed us to be more comfortable in replacing the floor boards. 

    We had taken him to the vet early on and there were no medical causes.

    Good luck!  It can be soooo frustrating.

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