Guide

Is your garden the neighbourhood cat toilet? Here’s what you can do

Darina Schweizer
26.5.2023
Translation: Veronica Bielawski

Crap! They’ve done it again. Many garden owners are no stranger to the struggle of clearing cat poo from their lawn or flowerbed time and again. Here’s what you can do to keep the felines at bay.

Communicate

The simplest option, which also costs nothing, is to seek out a conversation with the cat owner. Perhaps they could do something against it, like set up a litter box outside for their cat to use instead of your garden. But neighbours can’t always influence their cat’s toilet habits – or may not want to.

Chase them away

If your neighbours don’t want to hear you out, then maybe their cat will. Another option that’s free of charge is to scare the animal away from your yard using auditory cues such as a hissing sound or clapping.

Hose them down

Scatter away

Plant away

Sound the alarm

Certain cats are a tough cookie to crack – neither scaring them away or hosing them down, nor coffee grounds or repellent plants will deter them. In this case, there remains a slightly more expensive, but quite effective option: an ultrasonic cat repellent. It comes equipped with a motion detector and emits high-frequency sounds when movement is detected. These sounds aren’t audible to humans, but are extremely unpleasant for cats (and other animals as well).

Alas, if the neighbour’s cat proves such a Rambo that it continues pooping away in your garden despite all attempts to deter it, then I suppose I have just one more (not-so-serious) suggestion for you: perhaps it’s time to drive your neighbours away with hissing sounds or clapping instead of their cat. But you didn’t hear that from me.

How do you manage to keep cats out of your garden? Let me know in the comments!

Header image: Shutterstock

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I love anything with four legs or roots - especially my shelter cats Jasper and Joy and my collection of succulents. My favourite things to do are stalking around with police dogs and cat coiffeurs on reportages or letting sensitive stories flourish in garden brockis and Japanese gardens. 


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