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mine are not chippd (have to do that b4 we move) bu wont bother putting collars on them, when u cchip them can u have a phone number put on instead of an address??? |
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I don't have collars on my two. Buster goes out occasionally when the weather is good as I can garantee he will come back because he is very food orianted (sp). I let Tilly out once so that she would know how to get back. She is am indoor cat until I can get a house with a cat proof garden as she sits in the road and I don't wan to risk her getting run over. Buster has got good road sense so goes out more. I don't have collars as I personally don't like them. Both are chipped though. They are alway shut in at night as well. Sally |
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Hi will just chip in with my 5 pence worth, all of the cats that go out wear collars, they are chipped as well, the thing i don't have are tags on the collars, i buy the type that can be written on with an idelible pen either white,yellow or pink collars so can be easily read, as tags come off. I have tel numbers & a do not feed me written on collar! the cats that don't go out are not collared. x K |
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My three indoor cats all wear collars and are microchipped. Nine years working for a vet I never saw one collar related injury on a cat but saw many many many lost cats never find their way back home. Not worth the risk of losing them in my opinion. Besides, if you can't hear the bell tinkering, how do you know when they are into something they shouldn't be? |
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I think this is one of the most finely balanced of the perennial cat questions. Do the potential benefits outweigh the potential dangers? Difficult to say. Personally, I don't like cat collars and none of mine have ever worn them. The boys are chipped. However, Bentley appears as if he is going to be an intrepid hunter. So, do I use a collar to hang a bell and save birds? Don't know yet. The only thing I'd say to you specifically Jenny is to make sure you get one with a very easy 'snap' so it will break off easily. I am seeing a situation with a tenacious breed of cat and a tenacious breed of dog having a wonderful rough and tumble when Indie puts her jaws round the cat's neck and gets a long tooth caught in the collar. What happens next? Both panic, cat scrags, bites, screams, ..... goodness knows what ensues. Or, cat twists and twists to get free and risks strangling itself. Sorry, that sounds just awful but I think it is a significant risk with those two breeds. |
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Cassie always wears a collar and is also chipped...... she has always worn the safety catch type which I always test before I buy for it's ability to come undone easily. As she can be a bit of a hunter I attach an extra bell to her collar ........ not only does it help save the birds, I can hear where she is when she's out of sight.... My previous cat, Sam, also wore an ordinary collar for twelve years with no problem.... I think it is up to personal choice |
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Mine are more or less indoor cats and never wear collars, Chancer goes out and about, but he doesn't wear one either.... |
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