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LadiDadi 0
Try putting out little saucers of dry food on the spots she likes to pee on. You may, in the interim, end up with saucers all over the house but cats will not pee where they eat.
Just because a cat is peeing somewhere other than the litter box doesn't mean that the cat has a UTI and, no, those foods do not cure. Foods high in grain (ie: prescription diets) are not at all what a cat is designed to eat and will, in the long run, make the problem worse.
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Be like the cupcake and suck it up.
skybill 22
'Problem with only "one" cat, try "5!!!" 3 female and 2 male of which one is a "dominant alpha!!" Yup that's my guy Jethro!! Well good luck on dealing with him. Remember, dogs have "owners," cats have "staff!!"
III%,
Deli-out
bury it out in the yard with only it's head sticking out then mow the lawn..
Perry Farrell
LisaH 0
Alex!!!!
MooOOooOoo

Perry Farrell
flygirl1 0
I had a problem just like that with my cat Slider when he was a kitten. He pooped right out side his box a couple times the first week after I adopted him. I thought it might just be that he was stressed from being taken away from his foster home but, when I took him to the vet to get him checked out she said he had really hard poop and it probably hurt him to go. She thought that he might be avoiding the litter box since he had a bad experience in there. She also found out that he had worms. She gave him some medication and recommend I try a litter called cat attract. He got treated, I got the litter and a covered cat box and it never happened again
I'm not saying that is going on with your cat, but it's another possibility. It's probably a behavior issue but, if it doesn't stop she should call her vet or at least call her local animal rescue group to ask for a professional opinion on what to do
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
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