Flashwave wrote: More serious note, and possibly a good idea anyway, maybe you could try folding coversthat could collapse. also prevents cat drawers (mice etc.) from camping out in tunnels. ^Not feasible on large island layouts
More serious note, and possibly a good idea anyway, maybe you could try folding coversthat could collapse. also prevents cat drawers (mice etc.) from camping out in tunnels.
^Not feasible on large island layouts
Maybe you can teach your cat to sneak through the tunnels and make sure they are unoccupied prior to running the trains.
Just a thought.
Dave
Lackawanna Route of the Phoebe Snow
Phoebe Vet wrote: Flashwave wrote: More serious note, and possibly a good idea anyway, maybe you could try folding coversthat could collapse. also prevents cat drawers (mice etc.) from camping out in tunnels. ^Not feasible on large island layouts Maybe you can teach your cat to sneak through the tunnels and make sure they are unoccupied prior to running the trains. Just a thought.
Where I have tunnels? not gonna work. Now, turning the sound all the way up on the biggest steamer you have, THAT will clear a tunnel.
-Morgan
SOMETHING NOT TO DO WITH A CAT---APPLY BEN GAY TO YOUR LEGS AT BED TIME!!!!! About 2 years ago we had a cat, rather nice one at that. It would tolerate us playing with her for about 45 minutes a day and when we were done she was as well. Anyway, I was having some muscle issues with my calf muscles so I decided to load up on the BEN-GAY to try and alleviate the pain a bit. About the time I started dosing off into the world of sleep I feel the cat climbing under the blankets. I figure ok, she is entertainin herself.....next thing I know is she had her legs wrapped completely around my one leg and she attempted to eat my leg! She spent the night in the basement. Next night she was sitting on the bed when I applied the BEN-GAY and she started acting like she overdosed on caffeine. Running around the bed (like a dog chasing its tail), jumping at the ceiling fan, attacking the alarm clock, etc.... It was at that point I put 2 and 2 together about the cat and BEN-GAY.
I think I still have scars on my legs......
My first cat didn't bother with the layout much, mainly because he was older, and wouldn't jump up there. When he was a kitten though, that was another story. He was *constantly* stealing things from my train room--bits of wire, string, an HO scale Jaguar E-type, etc. But, once I moved, and brought him home...even with the layout room open 24/7, he ignored it.
My new kitty, Snow, only got up on the layout once. She wanted to look out the window, jumped up onto the table. 3 months later, she's quit doing that.
Yesyesyes, this is a good cat thread just like I said yestrerday - keep them coming!!!!!!
Actually, jgotts, the guy with the cat problem needs to get together with railroadnut675 who has a mouse probem, see "MICE and VERMIN hiding out in tunnels"
George In Midcoast Maine, 'bout halfway up the Rockland branch
hi
Mark P.
Website: http://www.thecbandqinwyoming.comVideos: https://www.youtube.com/user/mabrunton
I took time to build a enclosure on our porch with wire and the quality control boss... one of the cats will examine every single inch of my work. Any flaws he found allowed him to break out into the yard.
The time that little jailbreaker and his brother both examine the screen and fastenings. Each and every one. When given sufficient time, they will learn how to get out. Worse, they remember exactly which spot too. If you replaced a section with brand new wire and made sure of no flaws, they will go straight to that spot and bounce off trying to hop out.
Then patiently spend hours examining the situation. And then work together on a bad section. One will apply tension and haul and the other will throw it's 32 pounds and shove. Eventually that metal got tired and broke.
Now we have house birds that use these holes as access to a nest every year in one corner.
I was very happy for my cats for getting away for doing what they want to do not what we wanted them to stay in.
Unfortunately once inside cats get outside they can never be really happy inside again. They start examining the house for flaws to exploit to get out.
The mind is like a parachute. It works better when it's open. www.stremy.net
Teditor wrote: Get a dog!Teditor
Get a dog!
Teditor
Naaaaa....won't work. We've got a pitbull and a dalmation...the cats allow them the use of their house, if they behave. Attempting to influence the behavior of cats is slightly more futile than trying to trap sand with a chain link fence.
Reality...an interesting concept with no successful applications, that should always be accompanied by a "Do not try this at home" warning.
Hundreds of years from now, it will not matter what my bank account was, the sort of house I lived in, or the kind of car I drove...But the world may be different because I did something so bafflingly crazy that my ruins become a tourist attraction.
"Oooh...ahhhh...that's how this all starts...but then there's running...and screaming..."
I don't have a cat (both parents allergic), but i would say A: make a plastic guard that's high enough to stop him/her, B:raise up the layout, or C: if the layout's in a seperate room, keep him/her out.
N Scale Rules!
Sawyer Berry
Clemson University c/o 2018
Building a protolanced industrial park layout
larak wrote:
Wonder if that will work for Geckos and little brothers.
Vincent
Wants: 1. high-quality, sound equipped, SD40-2s, C636s, C30-7s, and F-units in BN. As for ones that don't cost an arm and a leg, that's out of the question....
2. An end to the limited-production and other crap that makes models harder to get and more expensive.
I didn't know there were any n-scale rules. Hope I haven't been breaking any of them.
My train room is away from the main house, so I never really had a problem with my cat or cats coming in contact with my layout. I know that a lot of other people use either a water pistol or a spray bottle. After a couple of well aimed shots all you'll have to do after that is grab for the gun or bottle and they'll run for the hills...
Tracklayer
Yeah that should do it! and when its not scaring the proverbial out of the cats it could be used to apply static grass.
I recommend modeling the Butte, Anaconda and Pacific. Then it's just a question of aquiring an anaconda of suitable length for the layout room. That takes care of the cat problem.
jgotts wrote:If anyone has any suggestions or tips on things they did to "Cat-proof" their layout I'd love to hear them. I've threatened to return the beast to the great outdoors from where he came but that was met w/ less then enthusiastic approval from the rest of the family. He's ripping up all of my trees on my n-scale layout & I'm at my wits end.
ROFL! Muahahahaha!!!!!
Actually the Tesla Coil will scare the Beejejus out of the cat, but wouldn't really phyisically harm it...your wife would kill you though when you got your electric bill.....
Newyorkcentralfan wrote: I recommend modeling the Butte, Anaconda and Pacific. Then it's just a question of aquiring an anaconda of suitable length for the layout room. That takes care of the cat problem. jgotts wrote:If anyone has any suggestions or tips on things they did to "Cat-proof" their layout I'd love to hear them. I've threatened to return the beast to the great outdoors from where he came but that was met w/ less then enthusiastic approval from the rest of the family. He's ripping up all of my trees on my n-scale layout & I'm at my wits end.
Yeah, but the loco takes a bigger risk in the tunnel with that than a cat on the layout. You might have to wait a bit for that 2-6-6-4 to be regurgitated.
Rotor
Jake: How often does the train go by? Elwood: So often you won't even notice ...
Packer wrote: larak wrote: Wonder if that will work for Geckos and little brothers.
I'm not sure, but it would definitely do a number on every semiconductor in the house...
Nelson
Ex-Southern 385 Being Hoisted
SteamFreak wrote: Packer wrote: larak wrote: Wonder if that will work for Geckos and little brothers.I'm not sure, but it would definitely do a number on every semiconductor in the house...
I guess that's not DCC friendly!
Too bad you are not modelling G scale- depending on the size of your cat it could make a wonderful hanging side of beef for your meat packing plant.
I know, sick, sick ,sick.
I once caught a train in my pajama's. How it got in my pajama's I'll never know... (sorry, Groucho)
I find it's helpful if you give him a martini and an ebay account... keeps him out of the train room...
Lee
Route of the Alpha Jets www.wmrywesternlines.net
Ryan BoudreauxThe Piedmont Division Modeling The Southern Railway, Norfolk & Western & Norfolk Southern in HO during the merger eraCajun Chef Ryan
Rotorranch wrote: SteamFreak wrote: Packer wrote:Wonder if that will work for Geckos and little brothers.I'm not sure, but it would definitely do a number on every semiconductor in the house... I guess that's not DCC friendly! Rotor
SteamFreak wrote: Packer wrote:Wonder if that will work for Geckos and little brothers.I'm not sure, but it would definitely do a number on every semiconductor in the house...
Packer wrote:Wonder if that will work for Geckos and little brothers.
You can get the same effect if you pet the cat really hard during the Winter.
wm3798 wrote:I find it's helpful if you give him a martini and an ebay account... keeps him out of the train room...Lee
Is he a Tyco fan, or is that just the martini talking?
Unlike his owner, he has an affinity for Chessie diesels for some odd reason... regardless of manufacturer...
I think he may have dated Chessie when he was in High School...