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Male cats always mark their territory?
I usually have female pets simply because the 1 male cat and 2 male dogs I've had peed all over everything and I never could break them of it fully. The cat was the worst and that was the only time I've ever re-homed a pet. I'm interested in getting another kitten maybe a male this time because I like their personalities. But I'm really gun shy regarding the territory marking. Can you tell me of your experiences with that, what you did and if you would ever get a male cat again?
I should probably add he was a bad scratcher/biter. He bit me on the face in the middle of the night while I was sleeping and that was the last straw.
I had the cat long before I had my other pets. He was my first pet after I moved out of the house and therer were no other pets in the flat. This was a long time ago. I just want to prevent that situation again.
14 Antworten
- Anna ELv 7vor 2 Jahren
I have always had male and female cats and the females were the ones that always peed on clothes, towels, rugs, etc. One of the male cats sprayed a lot, but I read someplace that if you had them neutered before they reached sexual maturity, that this was not as much of a problem. We had 2 male cats since then, both neutered at about 12 weeks old and neither of them have sprayed and their urine was much less pungent in smell.
- OcimomLv 7vor 2 Jahren
No. If male cats are neutered as a young kitten (3-4 months old) they will never mark territory. The only time they may do this is if they have a UTI (urinary infection) or sometimes if an entire male is outside your house spraying around.
I have owned more males then females and NONE of them ever marked territory. I did have 2 breeding males and I was lucky they were the only entire male cat in the house and didn't mark.
- Anonymvor 2 Jahren
You have to get them neutered really young, at about 4 months old before they develop the spraying habit.
- MaxiLv 7vor 2 Jahren
Anxious untrained animals mark regardless of gender....... as you have not stopped your cat/dogs marking in the past it will make zero difference if you get another pet, that will do exactly the same
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- Anonymvor 2 Jahren
If you get your male cat neutered early, he won't mark his territory. There is NO other way around it. If you wait too long to get him neutered, it could become a habit and may keep doing it even after being neutered.
I currently have a male and he started spraying at about a year old. I got him neutered right away and this solved the problem. I also had one 15 years ago and got him neutered before he sprayed, so he never marked up the house. So decide if you have enough money to get your kitten all of his shots and neutering right away before you decide to adopt one.
Quelle(n): I owned 3 male cats at different times over the past 20 years. - EvaLv 7vor 2 Jahren
Get him neutered early. If there are no other pets in the household, marking shouldn't be an issue. If there are other pets in the household, it may be. If the kitten is stressed and feels in competition with others, it may still mark. I have an older male that was really bad about it when I had other male cats. Now that the other males are gone and there are only females, he's stopped.
- tellitlikeitisLv 7vor 2 Jahren
I've had many male cats, and they will mark their territory unless you have them neutered as quickly as you can, within the age guideline set down by your vet. Male cat urine is very pungent, and once the territory is marked, no amount of rubbing and scrubbing will completely eliminate it, so the cat will go back over and over again and reinforce the marking. All cats want to be clean by nature, so it's always helpful to provide a litter box that's readily accessible, but the neutering is equally if not more important.
- Nekkid Truth!Lv 7vor 2 Jahren
Neuter the cat before the age of 6 months.
A far as dogs marking.. That is a TRAINING issue.
- Karen LLv 7vor 2 Jahren
I've had several male cats and several female cats. The only one that marked in the house, to my recollection, was one of the females. If you get them neutered early enough, and if there is nothing in the household to make them feel they have to stake out a territory, no cat will mark.