It depends if your cat likes being on a leash. If not walking your cat around the yard would be more like following the cat. If you held it that would be a different thing. You wouldn't exactly be "walking" your cat.
Yes you can, though cats more often want forms of wheat grass and can find the type themselves if you let them walk around the yard.
The predicate of the sentence "The dog chased the cat around the yard" is "chased the cat around the yard." It includes the verb "chased" and provides information about what the dog did, along with details about the action and its context.
No. Hold on.............No.
Around the block or around the yard or in a park
Yes strange.
you cannot leave your cat in your back yard, he/she will find a way to leave and start roaming around, the average cat loses 5 years from his life as an outdoor cat in comparison to an indoor cat, take your cat out on a leash, (have patience) for a little walk, cats are roamers, and very independent so when they re out unsupervised you will lose the cat, they may come back when they are hungry, just do not take a chance.
They will eventually get it.
The Cat Walk was created in 1962.
Maybe because it's hurt somewhere. Have a veterinarian come over and have him/her examine your cat.
Walk around the forest it can be anywhere in the forest on the edges and in the both half parts
Only if they actually mate, and both have not been spayed or neutered.
Feline StayAway is an environmental product and is not applied directly to the cat. However, you can use it in your house or around your yard to keep your cat away from areas you don't want it in.