Indoor / Outdoor Cats: Can Outdoor Cats be Safe?
courtesy of Alley Cat Rescue: The National Cat
Protection Association
The Indoor/Outdoor issue is a very controversial one
among animal caretakers and humane societies.
Approximately 50 percent of U.S. cats now live indoors
and most shelters and humane societies would like to
make that 100 percent. In fact most will not adopt
cats into homes if the cats will be allowed outdoors
at all, and this even includes feral cats and barn
cats.
Now let me start by saying that we believe cats should
be kept safe at all times. Having said that I also
believe that their lives should be of the highest-
quality, and that they should enjoy their lives.
To me this means that if you keep your cats indoors,
they be provided with toys, scratching posts, a window
seat, and a cat tree for climbing.
The cat is very adaptable and most cats, if they live
in a house where their caretakers are sensitive to
their feline needs and who have created a happy and
pleasant environment for their cats, will live a happy
and contented life.
However, there can be some problems for certain cats,
and Dr Nicholas Dodman of Tufts University School of
Veterinary Medicine and Roger Tabor, British biologist
and cat expert, both note that American cats sometimes
have higher rates of anxiety-related problems which
they think may be related to cats living indoors with
no effort being made to find outlets for their natural
instincts.
Holistic veterinarians Dee Blanco and Don Hamilton
feel that most cats confined indoors will not attain
their healthiest and happiest state. In their practice
they have noticed an increase of urinary tract
problems, vomiting and stress-related problems, which
they attribute to the indoor existence.
Author Patricia Curtis notes in her book THE INDOOR
CAT: "This is not to say that confinement can create
no problems at all. The indoor cat of an uninformed
and negligent owner may be neurotic, extremely
unhappy, and in poor health. Some owners have
unrealistic expectations of their cats; some are just
indifferent. It is known that among zoo animals
confinement can be a powerful stress factor… . A
domestic cat confined to a house or apartment will, in
certain circumstances, develop stress symptoms. "
The indoor cat may present an unwary owner with
problems that stem from its situation. It may tend to
chew up house plants when its craves grass, sharpen
its claws on furniture for lack of tree bark, and
climb the draperies or leap to the top shelf of a
cabinet of breakable treasures to achieve the lofty
vantage point cats enjoy. All of these traits can be
dealt with successfully, to the satisfaction of both…"
One of the major reasons that nonlethal control of
feral cat colonies is so contentious in the U.S. is
because of the prevailing attitudes towards outdoor
cats in the U.S. Many shelters find it difficult to
accept ANY outdoor cats, even feral cats. Loretta
Smith called me from a rural area in Pennsylvania.
Loretta and her husband owned a farm and loved cats
but both were allergic to cats, yet enjoyed their
company, so they usually kept a few barn cats. After
the last two died of old age, Loretta went to her
local animal shelter and asked to adopt a few feral
cats or any cats with behavioral problems who were
likely to be euthanized, to live in her barn. Her
offer was rejected. She was told the shelter would
rather euthanize the cats than allow her to take barn
cats. A few weeks later she read about ACR needing
farm homes for ferals and called me They had a perfect
setting for ferals: an excellent large barn with a
large cage for the short confinement period. The
couple spent a lot of time during the next month
befriending the ferals I took them. They sent me
weekly updates about the progress being made! In fact
two years later, we are still in touch and Loretta
loves sharing the latest stories about her barn cats!
Our position is NOT that everyone should open their
doors and allow their cats out to roam around outside!
We do believe that many cats, especially if given a
stimulating environment, can live quite contentedly
indoors, especially in areas that are unsafe for
outdoor cats. For those who want to allow their cats
outdoors, we promote a safe cat fence, or an outdoor
enclosure.
What we do have difficulties with, however, is
accepting policies that would rather euthanize ferals
than allow them to live a good life in responsible
care in an outdoor situation. Or when policies are in
force that do not to allow nonlethal control of feral
cats on the basis of "no-outdoor-cats" policies.
One of the main problems with outdoor cats is not that
they are living outdoors, but that many outdoor cats
are NOT neutered. This is the main cause of cat
fights, and thus wound infections and viral
infections, roaming across busy roads, getting hit by
cars, and getting lost. If colonies of feral cats are
sterilized, most of these problems do not exist to any
great extent.
This brings us to address the question of managed and
controlled feral cat colonies. Most adult feral cats
are very unhappy living in homes. Some do adjust,
others spend their lives living under beds and
couches. These cats are impossible to medicate and
trips to the veterinarian are difficult, if you can
even catch the cat at all. Also, with the sheer number
of feral cats living in colonies, it would simply be
impossible to find enough homes or sanctuaries for
them.
Authorities must begin to accept outdoor feral cats as
part of the urban landscape so the millions of
volunteer feeders and caretakers will be better able
to quickly and expediently sterilize the feral
population to help make them healthier and safer.
article reprinted with permission
copyright © Alley Cat Rescue