My cat have be spraying for a while, is it true that once they spray its too behind time to stop it?
My 2 year old cat is an indoor/ outdoor cat who has been spraying for around 6 months now. I really want to get him fixed to stop the problem so that I can keep him indoors. Is it too postponed?
Getting them fixed solves this problem 99.8% of the time. My friend had a 6 year old cat that be fixed but began to spray. After seeing many vets and reading greatly on it they figured it was a chemical imbalance. There be nothing they could do but try and not stress the cat.
I don't know. I had a kitten of about 10 months and he started spraying... even after he got neuter (sp?) he continued to spray.
my dad (I was 12 at the time) was pretty hard on him [as whether he was human and understood what he yelled at him... nutjob]. I don't know whether it was an act of rebellion or what. Often times he'd stir into the litterbox and come out without using it, then pee infront of my father or I.
I'd really like to know whether it's true once they've started it's too late, and why my kitten did this. he was generally an indoor cat although I would tolerate him out (my apartment was ontop of another building so outside my window be a roof) on the roof every couple of days for a few hours. no contact to other animals or street objects obviously.
Never To Late, Never To Early.My Cat Was Spraying So We Fixed Him. Now, He Sprays No More
No, it's not too late. he can be neutered very soon and once he is, he won't spray.
Answers: He may continue to spray after he is neutered. If that happens go and get a spray can of pheromones and use it on his favorite areas. You won't smell the product but he will and it give him a chemical signal to stop scent marking that nouns with urine. He may instead mark those areas by rubbing his muzzle on them which contains scent marking glands but you will not see. Good Luck
he could still spray after he is fixed