Liz- I meant to respond to you the other day, but was on my phone and its too hard to type on that thing!!
My experience- some cats can manage it, some can't. The ones that can't manage it, still are safer than outdoors. Take Minnie, for instance. It is going on 9 or so years with her. Maybe only 8. LOL. She still hides 90% of the time, but she has fresh food, water, litterbox and 3 beds to choose from, all underneath my queen sized bed. I do see her in the evenings, most of the time, she still scurries away. BUT, it is still, IMO, a better deal for her.
I have these four fosters right now. One of them was an outside kitty. He is 6 months old, already, he is showing positive signs....he will probably be fine in 30 days.
Somewhere inbetween probably lies your kitty. In case you aren't aware, please know that cats can panic/flip out in ways you would never, ever imagine. I would be certain, if you aren't trapping her, to wear a thick, long sleeved, coat/jacket, sweatshirt. I would encourage you to consider leather gloves, but sometimes the gloves freak the cat out. It might be easier to trap her, in a humane trap, and take her inside. Also, make sure you have multiple litter boxes in the room you plan to put her in. I would add some Cat Attrack, too. If kitty is used to going where she wants, re-acclimating her to a litter box is crucial.![]()
With the kittens, the feral one pee'd all over Jonah's bed.I added one more box (for total of 2), and doubled the amount suggested of Cat Attrack in the boxes and this kitty is completely trained. So, it is possible, easy...but you need to think it out first.
Make many safe places for her to hide, too.
Good luck!
Bookmarks