So, what is the deal?

Does lemon turn a cat into a sour puss?

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lee A. Stone 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2008 1:15 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Using citrous outdoors




  I thank you much for planning out our " cat war" this is excelent 
  information. we plan on using one additional item and that is a kids 
  super soaker squirt water rifle which I understand holds about a 
  couple quarts of water. should I have a sighted person around during 
  said watch time. I totally agree. that if more folks took better car of 
  their cats then none of this expense and time would be needed. and as 
  you know those stray cats love newely dug flower or garden beds. Lee

  On Mon, Mar 10, 2008 at 09:47:17PM -0500, 
  NLG 
  wrote:
  > CAT WARS! This page reports how well different cat repellents work to keep 
cats out of a yard.
  > 
  > (Click on
  > main site
  > to browse 70 other topics ranging from exotic kaleidoscope designs to the 
strange world of lucid dreaming.)
  > 
  > I like cats. I think they are a better choice than dogs as domestic 
animals. I have two cats of my own. I say this so that no one who visits this 
pages
  > thinks that I hate these noble animals. However, I have a deep distaste for 
people who let their cats, or dogs for that matter, run loose enabling them
  > to relieve themselves on my lawn. I'm sure that anyone who has stepped in 
someone else's pet's leaving will agree that it is a disgusting and 
irresponsible
  > thing for one neighbor to do to another.
  > 
  > Early in 2004 a local cat decided to use my backyard as his personal 
bathroom. Every morning I would find he'd once again soiled my yard. I confess 
that
  > after spending weeks cleaning up after someone else's mess I was tempted to 
resort to drastic measures. Thoughts of trapping the offending animal and 
turning
  > it into the local pound or spraying it with skunk scent and setting it free 
to return home were two of my favorite fantasies. But, I reasoned that such
  > acts would bring me down to the level of the person who was letting the cat 
loose so I resisted those tempting retributions and looked for a more benign
  > solution.
  > 
  > The first step when entering into a war of any kind is to determine the 
enemy. After many hours of fruitless spying, I decided I needed a technological
  > advantage to defeat my enemy's stealthiness so I rigged up a motion sensing 
alarm. Shortly after setting it in motion I was alerted to an intruder and
  > took this picture:
  > 
  > The Enemy
  > 
  > It's an attractive animal and if it had more agreeable habits, like messing 
in his own back yard, I'm sure we could become friends. But this is war and
  > in such endeavors friendship has no place.
  > 
  > The battle begins:
  > 
  > Petco stores sell a product called REPEL, which is a citrus smelling 
granular product designed to repel dogs and cats because it has an odor they 
dislike.
  > It costs $11 for 2 pounds and is enough to treat 200 square feet. This 
presents a problem because it would cost $165 to treat my 3,000 square foot back
  > yard. I purchased a single 2 pound container and spread it over my yard. 
Although this was a much lower dosage than directed, it still worked. For three
  > days the cat did not soil the yard. Then I had to water and all the 
repellent was washed away. The next day I discovered the cat had returned.
  > 
  > Next I tried SHAKE AWAY for domestic cats. This product is available at 
Armstrong Nursery Centers and uses an mixture of dried coyote and fox urine to 
fool
  > cats into running away under the impression that predators are near. It 
worked as well as REPEL but cost twice as much and had an unpleasant odor. 
Besides,
  > I wasn't sure if I liked the idea of my grandchildren rolling around on 
grass that had been covered with animal urine. It also lost it's effectiveness
  > after watering.
  > 
  > An Internet search for cat repellents provided the information that cats 
dislike citrus odors and cayenne. I tested the first by mixing one quart of pure
  > lemon juice with one gallon of water and spraying the entire backyard with 
this mixture. It didn't work. It may be that to be effective I'd have to use
  > 100 percent pure juice. That runs the risk of burning the grass and would 
be expensive. The cayenne powder worked for several days and when purchased in
  > bulk from a restaurant supply store like Smart and Final, was the cheapest 
of the techniques tried so far. However, like all the other applied products,
  > it lost effectiveness every time I watered the lawn and would have to be 
reapplied. For someone who waters everyday this could get to be an expensive and
  > time consuming option. Besides, there's no telling what putting that much 
cayenne, or any of the other products, on a lawn might do to the lawn over the
  > long run. Something better had to be available.
  > 
  > It was.
  > 
  > I found the solution in an electro-mechanical product called the Scarecrow
  > (
  > http://www.scarecrowinfo.com).
  > This is a battery powered motion sensor used to control a water sprinkler. 
When a cat comes within 40 feet of the detector it turns on the sprinkler for
  > a 4 second burst, enough for the impulse-type sprinkler head to rotate 180 
degrees. The combination of sound, sudden motion, and falling water startles
  > the cat and chases it away in the most humane manner possible.
  > 
  > The unit is easy to set up and is 100 percent effective at scaring cats 
away. The only down side to this product is that it costs $59 for a single unit.
  > Depending on the size and shape of your yard several may be required. In 
actual use I found that a nine volt battery lasts three to four weeks. However,
  > this depends on the sensitivity setting. At the highest setting on a windy 
day the breezes will constantly tripper the device and reduce battery life.
  > At the maximum sensitivity the device triggers on a sixty foot radius. I 
found reducing it to two-thirds of maximum stops it from going off from wind yet
  > turns it on if anything walks into the area reached by the sprinkler.
  > 
  > Here's a similar device called Cat Stop:
  > 
  > It has a motion sensor that triggers an ultrasonic noise that scares cats 
away. I used one of these to cover an area not protected by the sprinkler and
  > it's been 100 percent effective.
  > 
  > It only costs 49.00 dollars and one nine-volt radio battery powers it for 
eight months. It's convenient because there are no hoses to fight but it only
  > has a twenty foot working distance over a 45 degree pie-shaped area. 
Although it seems to work outside where cats are on edge and easily scared 
away, I
  > discovered it doesn't do anything to house cats when used inside their 
house. I talked to a representative about this and he explained than under those
  > conditions a house cat is on his own turf and unlikely to be frightened. 
Also, most people who test the device inside will be standing near it to observe
  > the results. This is another signal to the cat that because someone is 
present nothing bad is going to happen.
  > 
  > Information about Cat Stop is also available from
  > http://www.scarecrowinfo.com
  > The Scatmat people at
  > http://www.scatmat.com/Tools/
  > have several products in addition to Cat Stop and Scarecrow for controlling 
pet movements in and outside of the house.
  > 
  > A nine volt battery only lasts one week in the units I have. This is much 
less than the advertised 9 months.
  > 
  > After confirming that both devices work, I set up three of the ultrasonic 
repellers on one side of my yard and two of the water jet repellers on the other
  > to see which is more effective at keeping cats out of my yard. After a week 
of use both have been 100 percent effective.
  > 
  > So, I am happy to announce that the CAT WARS are officially over and I was 
victorious. My only misgiving is that I was forced to spend hundreds of dollars
  > to protect myself from someone letting their pet run wild.
  > 
  > UPDATE!!! One year after writing this article a cat began urinating on one 
small area of my backyard, killing the lawn in many spots. I placed two two of
  > the ultrasonic Cat Stop units to guard the area and within two weeks the 
grass had completely grown back, indicating that the Cat Stops had succeeded in
  > getting rid of the cat.
  > 
  > new frame
  > Cats deterrent
  > Keep Cats Out of Unwanted Rooms & Areas w/ a Catscram. Guaranteed!
  > www.CatScrams.com
  > Control Cat Spraying
  > Products & advice that really work! Get them at CatFaeries.com 
  > ----- Original Message ----- 
  > From: Lee A. Stone 
  > To: Blind Handyman 
  > Sent: Monday, March 10, 2008 20:38
  > Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Using citrous outdoors
  > 
  > 
  > 
  > 
  > Okay. what forms of citrous could one use outdoors, if possible that 
  > would not be destroyed by summer rains? . this is still in regards 
  > the cat problems thanks.Lee
  > 
  > -- 
  > Shit Happens.
  > Do you Jabber? I do. My JID is: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  > 
  > 
  > 
  > 
  > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
  > 

  -- 
  You may be infinitely smaller than some things, but you're infinitely
  larger than others.
  Do you Jabber? I do. My JID is: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


   


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