I have at least two neighbors with outside cats, we live in the mountains and somehow, so far at least, these cats have avoided the coyotes, mountain lions and bob cats. It is very clear in speaking with my neighbor that they are willing to take that risk as they do not want the cats in the house. So besides the obvious carnage to the local wild bird populations the cats are trespassers. If I leave my garage open I get cat prints on my cars, I have had one spray pee on my backdoor. These cats are about 5 years old and for 5 years I have chased them away, tossed pinecones near them to scare them off yet they still come around. This year I put up a really nice wood fence and it has slowed them down but they still trespass. Last week I saw one ON MY FENCE looking down on my chicken yard and I threw a pinecone at it and it left.
So I have decided to get carpet tack strip, paint it the color of my fence and screw it along the top of my fence (I tested a small section and it paints right in, barely noticeable). That will keep the cats and wild birds off the fence and should my chickens ever decide to fly up there hopefully they learn quick to stay off the fence. I am thinking the tack strip will likely slow down any critter attempting to scale the fence.
So here is the question, for those of you who consider free roaming cats to be predators and pests what do you do to repel them?
Thanks
Gary
So I have decided to get carpet tack strip, paint it the color of my fence and screw it along the top of my fence (I tested a small section and it paints right in, barely noticeable). That will keep the cats and wild birds off the fence and should my chickens ever decide to fly up there hopefully they learn quick to stay off the fence. I am thinking the tack strip will likely slow down any critter attempting to scale the fence.
So here is the question, for those of you who consider free roaming cats to be predators and pests what do you do to repel them?
Thanks
Gary