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Indoors or Outdoors?By Jean Hofve, DVM Are you thinking about allowing your cat to go outside? To make the right decision, you need to know the facts. The average lifespan of an indoor cat is 15-18 years. For a cat allowed outdoors, the average life is only 2-5 years. There are many dangers that can harm or kill an outdoor cat. If your cat goes outside, or you're considering allowing it, please read this entire list. Then be honest with yourself, and answer this one question truthfully: can you absolutely, 100% prevent every one of these things from happening to your cat? Injury from a fight with another cat (or other animal). A bite-wound abscess can cost a couple of hundred bucks to treat, not to mention that it's very painful to the cat. Diseases from other cats, such as Feline Leukemia, FIV (feline AIDS), distemper, rabies, toxoplasmosis. Injury or death by car, truck, motorcycle or other moving vehicle. Even a bicyclist can injure or kill a cat (and if the cyclist is injured in the accident, you may also be privileged to pay her large medical bills, not to mention replacing the bike!). Stationary cars—yes, even a stopped car can be dangerous. Fanbelts cause the most hideous injuries you can imagine, ripping the fur and skin right off the cat's body and slashing through the muscle. It's not pretty. Those few that survive carry the scars for the rest of their lives. Leaking antifreeze can also kill. A cat walking through a small spill of antifreeze and then licking its paws has ingested a fatal dose—usually within days, although I have seen it take months for a cat to actually die of the resulting kidney failure. Dog attacks. Sometimes cats with seemingly minor injuries will still die from the extreme fear they experience from the attack. Dog bite injuries can be painful and costly to treat. I had to do multiple surgeries on one cat who was severely bitten. Of course, dog attacks often have even grimmer consequences. Stolen to be sold to a lab for "research" or dissection. Many cats dissected in America's classrooms today are stolen from owners or captured off the streets and sold, alive, to biological supply companies. In Mexico, children are given $1 for every cat they catch. "We have irrefutable evidence that the cats cruelly killed in Mexico were going to American biological supply firms who supply public schools with animals for dissection." (Cat Fancy 1995) In 1990, an undercover investigation of well-known biological supply companies documented Class B licensed dealers delivering hundreds of live cats of unknown origin to those companies. (www.neavs.org). Tens of thousands of cats die every year so that children and college kids and nursing students can dissect them. Stolen, killed and eaten by people. In some cultures, this is perfectly normal behavior, just as some people eat beef, which would horrify a Hindu, and others eat pork, which is taboo in Islam and Judaism. Stolen to be used as "live bait" for training fighting dogs (common, especially if you live in or near a good-sized city); live cats are thrown into the pit or tied up and dangled above it to be ripped apart by the dogs, to "blood train" them. Abuse by juvenile delinquents (of any age)—beaten, shot, stabbed, sexually abused, dissected alive, etc. All of these are common and well documented in cities, towns, and rural areas. I personally saw many of these cases, and was involved in others when I worked at the Animal Protection Institute: A kitten with a fever of 107ºF and two shattered, infected hind legs and numerous puncture wounds. The kids apparently dragged her out of the dog's mouth, but didn't tell mom. The injured kitten did not receive veterinary care until it was almost too late. A sexually abused 8-week old calico kitten. A Birman kitten rescued by a street person from a group of kids who were repeatedly throwing him against a brick wall for fun. Numerous cats injured or killed by guns or arrows or, in one case, beaten to death with a golf club by a man walking his dog along a bike path. Why he was carrying a golf club in the first place was never explained. Cats soaked in gasoline and set on fire. A litter of newborn kittens deliberately crushed to death in a trash compactor. A kitten set on a hot barbecue grill for laughs. Rescued by an outraged neighbor, she survived for a few agonizing hours before dying of massive burns. A live adult cat tied into a black garbage bag and thrown into the Platte River, where a passerby noticed the bag moving and pulled it out. Kittens thrown from moving cars. A client of mine behind one of these picked up the kitten and adopted her. Angel was one of the lucky ones. I've seen 2 dead kittens on the median of I-25 in Denver just this year, out of perhaps a dozen trips. Encounters with a poisonous animal. Depending on where you live, the deadly options may include rattlesnake, copperhead, coral snake, water moccasin (also called cottonmouth), tarantulas, black widow and brown recluse spiders, and scorpions. Predators. Besides people, there are a lot of critters that can hurt or kill a cat. You may have several of these in your area: Alligators (if you live in the southeast, you probably know someone who has lost a cat or dog to a 'gator). Broad-winged hawks (wingspan over 4 feet, dive speed over 100 mph) Owls – A friend of mine watched an owl strike and fly off with a large, screaming Maine coon cat in his talons. Eagles (cats are on the menu of Golden eagles, 4 of which were seen circling my town just last week) Coyotes—these resourceful relatives of our domestic dogs live virtually everywhere in the U.S., including Manhattan and downtown Los Angeles. One night, on major thoroughfare in Denver, I personally saw a very large coyote trotting down the middle of the street! Foxes—one of my feline patients was brought in with a clear set of puncture marks across her back and down both sides, in a perfect imprint of a fox's jaws. This particular fox was living in central Denver. A large cat might be able to escape a fox—or it might die trying. Raccoons—they don't necessarily kill, but they can cause devastating injuries. Raccoons also carry rabies in many parts of the country. Adult raccoons typically weight 25-50 lbs. Your cat is no match. Skunks—the danger is not just from the unpleasant end! As members of the weasel family, skunks have vicious teeth and bad tempers. Other large predators -— in my little town west of Boulder, Colorado, there are bears and mountain lions that have been seen near the schoolyard or trotting down Main Street. More than a dozen domestic cats and two dogs have been taken by lions; in just the last week, two cats were snatched within sight of their owners. Diseases from other animals and from the environment (rabies, distemper, feline leukemia, feline AIDS, feline infectious peritonitis, Lyme disease, ehrlichiosis, cytauxzoonosis, ringworm, sporotrichosis, and hundreds of other infectious organisms you've never heard of). Some are merely annoying, others are fatal. Traps and snares. Traps do not discriminate. Thousands of cats and dogs have lost limbs and lives to steel-jawed traps set for raccoons and other species. One of my neighbor's cats had what was left of its leg amputated just recently after being caught in a leghold trap. These traps are legal for control of "nuisance" animals—even in states like Colorado that have banned leghold traps. Few of these nuisance-control trappers are licensed or regulated. They do not care what they catch; if they find a cat or dog in their traps, they usually just kill it and dispose of the body. Impoundment by animal control, an annoyed neighbor, or local cat- hater. At the shelter, your cat will spend a terrifying few days in a metal cage until: you reclaim him (less than 5% of cats in shelters are ever re-united with their families) he is destroyed (the fate of the vast majority of these cats) if he is extremely lucky, adopted to a family who will keep him indoors!
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A man was outside one morning, standing on his deck, with his cat sitting right next to him. He was drinking his coffee and enjoying the sunrise. Suddenly he heard a funny noise and looked to see what it was. He saw, already a long way off, a coyote with the cat IN ITS MOUTH—snatched from RIGHT NEXT TO HIS FOOT. The guy yelled, and fortunately the coyote dropped the uninjured cat and ran away. All concerned were definitely sadder, but hopefully wiser. Did you know that coyotes can run as fast as greyhounds? Cats can't, and neither can you! One lady's cat was outside, on his harness attached to a clothesline. She went inside for just a couple of minutes. When she came back out, she found that the cat had tried to jumped over the fence, and was partially hanging from it. His feet were on the ground but he was slowly suffocating. The cat survived, but the trip to the emergency clinic was both terrifying and expensive, My neighbor's elderly cat, Boots, was sitting on his own porch one summer day, just 2 weeks before his 20th birthday. We had a big party planned for him. He was dragged from the porch and torn apart by two pit bulls, who played tug-of-war with his broken body. Unfortunately, he was not killed outright. His owner (who was in the house, literally only a few feet away) heard Boots screaming, scared off the dogs, and rushed poor Boots to the emergency clinic, where he survived for a few painful hours until he was finally euthanized. Happy Birthday, dear sweet Boots. I miss you so much! I cry every time I think of you. A cat being walked on a leash was chewing on some grass. The cat started coughing, but the guardians couldn't see anything in his mouth. They watched the cat, who was still coughing sporadically, overnight, and took him to the vet first thing in the morning. The veterinarian found a 3-inch piece of grass stalk near the cat's larynx, which she removed. Lung x-rays showed fluid, possibly from lodged grass seeds. The cat eventually recovered. Many years ago, my roommates and I were sitting on the porch one evening with our cat Mr. Crosby, watching our 2 dogs play in the yard, which was surrounded by a 6' wooden privacy fence. Suddenly there were 3 dogs instead of 2; a large Irish setter had suddenly bounded over the high fence like a deer. When he saw us, boing! he jumped back out. We were so stunned we never even moved. (Even though that story had a happy ending, Mr. Crosby did not. He moved out with one of the roommates. As they were moving into their new place, Mr. Crosby slipped out through an open door and was never seen again). Face it—as a human, you simply do not have the ability to react in time to stop EVERYTHING that could possibly happen to your cat. Your cat is faster than you. Your neighbor's dog is faster than you. Cars are definitely faster than you. Granted, some cats do live long and happy lives outside. My neighbor's outdoor cat was 15 and doing fine. Then they got a kitten. Sweetest little black kitty you ever saw. They started letting him out when he was only about 8 or 9 weeks old. I found him outside at 10 p.m. one freezing winter night when I walked the dog. I took him in overnight, then went over to their house the next morning to discuss it with them. They said he could get under the house to stay warm, just like the older cat did; evidently the kitten didn't know that. They also said their older cat would teach the kitten to be street smart. I guess he was a slow learner, because he died right in front of their house, struck and killed by a car on our very busy street long before his first birthday. Think about this: when you have just a handful of cats who reach old age outside, how many other cats have to die very, very young to bring the average age of death down to less than 5? None of these people whose stories I've told wanted or expected these horrible things to happen their beloved cats. But all of this pain and suffering could have been prevented by one simple thing: keeping them inside. It's your choice, but it's your cat's life. A cat who has never been outdoors probably doesn't have the slightest clue that there is an outdoors. I think when they look out a window, it must be like "kitty TV" to them; with smell-o-vision if the window is open! It is never safe for a cat to go out. Rural cats are in at least as much danger as city cats; the dangers are just a little different. Less chance of being hit by a car, but more dangerous predators. A fox or owl can and will easily catch and kill a cat. If you think your cat is safe outside because it stays in your yard or doesn't go "too far", you're only fooling yourself. Unfortunately, that illusion could mean life or death to your cat. When your outdoor cat just doesn't come home one day, you may never know why, and you will only be able to hope and pray that his death was quick and painless. There is another side to the coin, too; and that is the danger that cats pose to birds and other prey animals, including endangered species. Free-roaming cats are superb predators who kill many millions of songbirds and other feathered friends every year. If your cat goes outside, be prepared to deal with the dead -- or worse, dying -- birds and small mammals (mice, voles, baby rabbits), snakes and other wounded creatures that your can may leave on your doorstep! For those who really want to give their cats the outdoor experience, it can be done without the risk. Consider cat-fencing or building an outdoor cat enclosure. It doesn't have to be big. But it will keep your cat in, and danger out. |
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Very intersing...but a lot of the info is only related to the U.S...many things do not occur over here...and many diseases/ilnesses' arent present in the U.K such as heart worm.. |
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Quote:
All my cats have been allowed access to outdoors.. Lucky was 18 years old when I had her pts Jemima 17 years old Gizmo 13 years old I am not quite sure how this person has derived these facts ![]() |
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Well, I see your point, Nat. I really do. But consider this: Ninja could get hurt, yes. But he is happier being let out, and his quality of life is more important to me than how much of it he has. For the same reasons people put their cats to sleep when the quality of life is too poor to be worth it, I let my cat go outside. He has no sense of long-term time. He knows when he's about to be fed and he knows where to find me if he wants fussing. But he doesn't know what it means to have a shorter life. He doesn't know what "tomorrow" means. All he knows is that today he's happy. And that's all he needs to know for me to feel I'm doing my job right. I hope he has many more todays. But ultimately, to him, that doesn't really matter. The only today he cares about is the one he's in, right now. And his todays were miserable when we were keeping him in. Would I feel better if he were an inside cat? Yes, if he were happier that way. But he isn't. I don't feel that any cat who isn't afraid to be outdoors for some reason or another is truly happier being an inside cat, and I don't feel it's ethical to keep them inside unless they've never know otherwise or truly have no desire to go outside. But what other people do with their cats is their business. I won't ever judge them, because they know their cats a sight better than I do, and because they make their choices based on the facts of their lives. I have, in the past, chosen to keep cats indoors - two because we moved to live nextdoor to a couple of dogs who regularly ate cats, and one because she was old, ill and frail (and we lived in a neighbourhood where cats were frequently found after having been skinned alive). It's a personal choice everyone has to make. But ultimately, the risk of a shorter life (which is, as Fran pointed out, a bit dubious - my very first outside cat was at last check still alive - in a different country - and was about 14 years old at the time) is a risk everyone must measure up for themselves and logic out to come to their own conclusions. I'm comfortable with my reasoning and my decision. |
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first off i put this up just cos i thought it was a good read and some ppl are always asking about letting there cat out or not so i thought they would like to read it yes, it is what i think but im not pushing it on any1, im just putting it out there for ppl to see. yes it is mostly USA based but we do have snakes here that can kill cats and owls and the like. i do agree with that he say's about how many cats have to die at such a young age to get an average age of out door cats of 5. people on this list have been very very lucky. i have had 4 cats before Mitten's and i lost all of them before the age of 3. 2 i know that died and i don't know what happened to the other 2. i also have a friend that was having a new kitten every few months cos it would disappear she never did think of keep them in (but her mother does now) Snoof, what you say is true and cats don't know tomorrow or next week and i would never dream of keeping a cat in that is used to going out. |
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We hand reared 3 kittens, all went outide and lived to 19, 16 & 15 respectively. We chose to live in a cul-de-sac as we hope it is safer for the cats, I am aware of other dangers, but I personally believe that outdoor cats have an enjoyable life. We have lived here for 11 years and had no problems whatsoever. Many vets and behaviourists recommend allowing cats outside. Only my Birman goes outside and wanders, the other 3 are quite happy to just stay in the garden. To see them basking in the sunshine under the apple tree is a pleasure I could never deny them. Yes, there are risks, as with everything. We, as individuals have to weigh up these risks and decide what is best for our furry friends. ![]() |
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It's very anti-outdoors. I would be happier with a more balanced view. Surely cats have died indoors as well - by doing things to alleviate boredom (houseplants, crawl-spaces) etc. - but that's not in the article. Just the most horrible outdoor-death cases found in the US during N years. Think it's your heart that has to decide. Whether you'd be less worried with Mittens outside, or kept indoors. (I'm assuming anyone who reads this is a cat person and links their happiness to their cat's.) Rover would be an outside cat if we could put a cat-flap in for him, and if he didn't go streaking off in a blind panic from moving cars (he runs far away enough to get lost - stupid cat), because I believe he would be happier that way. At the moment (until we move) we compromise with harness and lead. |
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