They are looking for food. Lure them away with a food source. If you overfeed nutered and spayed cats they will get so fat they will not bother to climb into your garden railway.
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What about the human animal? Humans are a vital part of the ecosystem as a predatory species. We are part of this world too. I love all 5 of my cats and spend a lot of money feeding them and ensuring they have proper medical care, but if it came down to the cats or me, well then the cats gotta go.
I agree 100% that irresponsible people have created a problem, but there is no way to prevent dumb people from doing dumb things. It's a part of life we deal with every day. The trick is to find the balace between preserving the environment and preserving our own species without destroying both.
I support the Trap Sterilize and Release program, it's the least of all the evils. The last resort should be extermination, it should remain on the table as a viable option.
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Rene Schweitzer
Classic Toy Trains/Garden Railways/Model Railroader
Feral cats are a huge problem in many neighbborhoods. But it is a problem that people have created. A feral cat is a cat descended from a stray or abandoned pet. If people would stop letting their cats go when they decide they don't want them anymore, we would have fewer ferals.
In addition, the trap, sterilize and release (TSR) program that many counties practice is the most humane way to slow the feral cat population. Feral cats live very short lives but once they are past 8 weeks old, it is nearly impossible to domesticate them. TSR allows feral cats to live but does not allow them to procreate. Thus slowing the population growth.
I understand many of you were joking about how you would stop the cats in your garden, but animal lovers ( I will proudly say that I have hugged a bunny, thank you) do not find poison or hunting a joking matter.
Remember, feral cats are around because of people. When we stop causing the problem, the problem will go away. Until then, please find humane ways of keeping them from your trains.
Jennifer
I don't know what you would do but i think illing them is a good thing but i dont think it will do you much good as they may only ne replaced by others, moving into a now vacant territory and the new one maybe worse than the old one.
Warding them off some way is surely the best!
Rgds ian
Lionel collector, stuck in an N scaler's modelling space.
Ah, hoist on my own petard!
The point is that the fix and release approach which seems to be quite popular around here also has it's flaws and really should be utilized in conjunction with other programs. Fix and release still leaves too many roaming around.
I do agree that there is a need for some as preditors, but I still get a mess of field mice every fall; even though I'm surrounded by cat owning homes!
Point of order, Bob, they are not "tree huggers", they are "bunny huggers", different agenda, same annoyance factor.
I agree that without predators (mankind being a very important one) the ecosystem is unbalanced. In the case of the feral cats, capture, sterilization and adoption is the best course of action. A last resort action is to wipe them out, and I do mean last. Even feral cats work to reduce the bird and mouse population as a predator species.
BB gun works, just say you thought it was a groundhog or a tree rat! The ammonia should work! You could also get a dog that hates cats!
Darn tree huggers, they have a couple of towns around here overrun with cats. Can't walk down the streets without smelling cat pee! It is a law of nature that when you take away the natural preditors, a harmless animal will become a pest. Just look at areas where the foxes & other carnivores have been killed off and look at the skunk population! They're all over the place! Don't hear the tree huggers running campaigns to "save the skunks!"
Whilst I agree cats are a pain my moss gets disturbed by birds looking for insects - not by cats . I have a cat problem but mostly resolved by lights with sensors that kick in at night - they dislike that - or by planting to cover free soil.
Not sure nails or screws are best idea - i did try wood cocktail sticks in my garden- discourages birds and cats .
Someone has suggested getting animal droppings from the zoo - lion / tiger etc to discourage animals . not tried it but I guess it might work provided the smell is not a big problem.
Modeling the Pennsylvania Railroad in N Scale.
www.prr-nscale.blogspot.com
ElMik wrote:A BB gun? A water gun filled with ice water? An electric fence strung 5" off the ground? A nice bowl of tuna and antifreeze?I planted some specimens of that plant that was SUPPOSED to repel cats...It tried to take over the garden, and the cats slept in it.Your best bet is probably to catch (live trap?) them and take them to the pound.
I like the first and fourth ones. To truely resolve a problem, you must eliminate the source.
Well now that is a problem when building a garden railroad, we have to contend with wild animals of all kinds (I had a bout with raccoons and frogs not too long ago). I don't think there are any 100% effective methods of preventing wild life from getting on or damaging the railroad. Rabbits will pass through a fence without hindrance, birds will find your fish pond attractive, and humans will do the worst damage of all. Unless you armor plate the railroad with electric wire screens and 18ft high privacy fencing, you’re going to have to live with a certain amount of animal damage from time to time.
For the cats, perhaps live trapping is the best and most humane option that I see. Repelling them with chemical or natural methods still leaves a feral cat in the environment to breed and produce more feral cats. More than likely there is a cat rescue society or something similar in your area that will take the cat at no cost; some will also provide you with a humane trap at no cost.
Whatever you do, please don’t kill or poison the cat, this will create more problems with decaying animal diseases and probably isn’t legal.
GP-9
I dumped red hot pepper around my GARDEN RAIL ROAD where the cats started to dig . I have not seen the cats around for a while , if they come back, i'll do it again. Ben
Torby wrote:cats smell better than we do.
That's not quite what I meant to say
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