this post was submitted on 10 Apr 2024
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It's not different from nature. Neither are predation, parasites and diseases.
Stationary single point food sources would be rare but if there was one, resource guarding and physical competition would be normal as well, as would behaviours such as marking territory with urine.
Data from the US (where they have predators like coyotes) always give cats in the wild a 2-5 year lifespan.
I think the figures are better here, but cats in their natural state still have much harder lives than most pet cats.
Personally, if I have a pet my aim is to give it a long happy life, but I know mileage varies and everyone draws the line wherever they feel comfortable. I've mostly been lucky enough to have windows I can leave open for cats during the day.
Hmm... Interesting thought from the psychologist. Can't say I necessarily agree or disagree with them as I'm not a cat! 😆
Yes our preference would be to have indoor cats (due to their safety and wildlife safety), and we adopted a senior cat that stays indoors (other than supervised walks outdoors on a leash). Though in the case of our parents cat, we think it's mainly due to him being a stray for the first ~1.5 years of his life, he HAS to go out. Won't go to the bathroom indoors whatever we do for him, and continuously begs to be let outside etc.
What's your thoughts on catios? At first glance they seem like a good compromise, but reckon they'd be worse because the cat would never be able to catch that bird/mouse (kinda like how laser pointers are bad)?
I don't know much about them. I get the impression they're big in Australia, probably because of snakes etc.
To be honest even though it's better for bird life, I've never kept a cat inside all day. My last cat was super old for a really long time though, and didn't get up to anything much on her own except dozing in the sun or peeing under a particular tree.