on 05-09-2014 11:58 PM
Master Puss has reached puberty and has started weeing inside.
Will desexing stop these behaviours?
on 06-09-2014 12:53 AM
on 06-09-2014 01:30 AM
It should help. However, if you don't keep the cat box clean, all cats will go outside of their box.
Also, now that the spray scent is already in other places in your home, he might think that it is okay to continue to spray those places.
Clean the sprayed areas with pet urine cleaners. Empty the clumps in the cat box daily, and change the litter completely once a week or so.
Have him neutered as soon as possible. He will be much happier after you do that.
The bad news is that some male cats continue to spray after they are neutered, especially if they are not neutered when they are kittens. Some male cats stop as soon as they are neutered.
I've had several male cats over the years, and none of them have sprayed, or clawed my furniture. I do know that I'm lucky.
Good luck.
As Julie suggested, call your vet, or spay clinic(if you have them), and they will give you good information.
on 06-09-2014 06:26 AM
on 06-09-2014 07:49 AM
The only way to find out for sure is to have him done and see what happens. It will have some effect. Hopefully for you it will stop it all together.
My man cat was about 5 when I got him and has not sprayed since he lost his valuables. Well not that I have noticed.
on 06-09-2014 08:10 AM
The only cat I had that was a real problem spraying was castrated when he was less than 3 months. When we lived on acreage we had up to 10 cats (most of them dumped strays, but all coming inside) and had little problem; once I forgot to castrate my Chinchilla cross, and he never sprayed inside. I only realised he was not castrated when he got a stick tangled in his fur near his tail, and by then he was over 2.
But the castrated male pee does not smell as bad as entire male.
on 06-09-2014 08:28 AM
We have three male cats and all of them were neutered when they were about 4-5 months old. We've never had any problem with spraying, although one of them acts like he is going to spray, by shaking is body and his tail, but nothing ever comes out. It's the weirdest thing.
on 06-09-2014 10:32 AM
on 06-09-2014 11:03 AM
uh oh, too late now, his hormones have kicked in and you really should have had him done earlier.
They never stop spraying once they start. Sorry.
on 06-09-2014 11:25 AM
@***super_nova*** wrote:The only cat I had that was a real problem spraying was castrated when he was less than 3 months. When we lived on acreage we had up to 10 cats (most of them dumped strays, but all coming inside) and had little problem; once I forgot to castrate my Chinchilla cross, and he never sprayed inside. I only realised he was not castrated when he got a stick tangled in his fur near his tail, and by then he was over 2.
But the castrated male pee does not smell as bad as entire male.
Did you really get your cat 'castrated' ?
ouch LOL