We would feed our "barn cats" just a little. to keep them from roaming off. Don't try to keep their bellies full.
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How's the kitten doing today?2 days ago I found a kitten in my barn, it had upset my rooster which had alerted me to 'danger'. It is either feral or poorly socialized. It is currently in a dog crate in the barn with canned food, water, and a box/with towels for shelter (it is still below freezing most of the time). Thinking about keeping it as barn cat but I'm clueless about cats, allergic and more of a dog person.
From what I've read it is best to keep it in the barn to learn it's hone, does that mean in a crate like how I have it or loose? It's a barn so not exactly escape proof for a kitten. Any additional guidance on how to raise a kitten into a barn cat.
You don't sound insensitive at all. I understand that, and it's good from a farm standpoint("The cats are livestock and have a job to do") I personally prefer strerilation like Folly's place for all the reasons listed, but maybe I'm a bit soft as mine are domestic house dwellers.I hate to sound like a insensitive, jerk...
But if you let the mom cat have kittens, then she will hunt harder to provide for them. Then you have multiple cats running around catching rats. Just let the ecosystem find a balance.
That's exactly how I see it. They are livestock and have a job to do.You don't sound insensitive at all. I understand that, and it's good from a farm standpoint("The cats are livestock and have a job to do") I personally prefer strerilation like Folly's place for all the reasons listed, but maybe I'm a bit soft as mine are domestic house dwellers.