Category Archives: Living with cats

Respect Your Cat Day

Today is Respect Your Cat Day. We asked our humans, what this meant for them.
Zorro281
Respect your cat is….

  • treating him like a cat
  • taking good care of his health
  • meeting his specific needs
  • giving him good quality food
  • providing him a clean litter box (several in multicat houses), enough toys, and enough room to live
  • catifying your house
  • taking time to play with him
  • petting him every day
  • trying to think like a cat to make him happy

Pixie playing with feather toy
Do you have other ideas ? What are your top 3 items on that list ?

Our friends from Pawesome Cats asked the same question to several people, click here to read the answers !

How to enclose my garden so that my cats can safely go out ?

The use of electric fencings not visible by animals as well as the use of anti-runaway devices compounds of a thread buried on the verge of the ground and of a necklace which sends an electric shock to the cat as soon as it approaches this invisible limit are strictly forbidden in Switzerland. We thus do not speak about it in this article.

PIXIE : Look, Zorro, look at the gift that offered me Claire and Momo ! It’s immense ! We have now access to all the garden in front of the house !
ZORRO : Pixie, you exaggerate … This present is not only for you.
PIXIE : Yes it is ! It was my birthday on Wednesday, it’s MY park !
ZORRO : *sigh* The fate makes that our new fence was installed the same week of your second birthday, Pixie, that’s it. We already had an enclosure (see here and here for the story of the enclosure), but for financial reasons, it was small. This time, our humans made every effort to offer us a dream enclosure !
enclos 2016

What are the characteristics of a good fence for cats ?

  • It is high enough : cats can jump on average until a height of 1 m 80 (5,9 ft).
  • It has a “return angle” of 60 cm (23,6 in) : cats climb everywhere. Without a “return angle”, a cat can easily cross a 2 m (6,5 ft) high fence by climbing and passing over.
  • It goes up to the ground : a motivated 4 kg (8,8 lb) cat passes easily under a 8 cm (3,1 in) high space (we tested !).
  • It has stitches from 3 to 5 cm (1-2 in) wide : young cats manage to sneak through wider spaces (if the head passes, all the cat passes).
  • There is no tree, no table, or no wall too close which allows the cat to jump directly on the return.
  • It is in compliance with the local regulations : it’s better to ask competent authorities before building a special fence : it would be really stupid to have to remove it hardly installed, right ?

cloture haute avec retour
If you have a garden, did you secure it in one way or another for your cat ? Or can your cat walk as he pleases ?
Pixie and Zorro on the apple tree

Why does my cat scratch around his bowl ?

Any human can remain perplexed in front of this behavior, and wonder : what is my cat trying to tell me ? Is the food I serve him really as bad as that ?
Pixie explains why she scratches around her bowl
No, not at all !

Zorro rarely scratches around the bowl, but me, I do it very often. It’s an ancestral reflex, a vestige of my wild life. In the nature, when a cat did not finish a prey, he buries it to hide it and be able to come to finish it later. By scratching the ground, he recovers his prey, but in more he deposits pheromones thanks to the glands he has under the paws. The cat so tries to conceal the smell of his food, and also indicates to the other predators that this meal belongs to him.

Thus, when I scratch around my bowl, even if I scratch the stone floor, I show Zorro that I have not finished my meal yet and that this wet food is MINE !

Do you also scratch around your bowl ?