Well try opening the door and letting them in!
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It is not advisable to let a cat go outside if it has no front claws. A cat uses its claws for many things: defence, climbing, stretching and communication. A cat that is missing its claws will not be able to defend itself or escape to safety (climbing a tree for instance), which ultimately can put the cat in great danger. For this reason declawed cats are kept indoors where no harm can come to them.
Start be taking him/her inside more often. After a few nights keep him/her inside during the night. Make sure ther is a litterbox available, and he/she knows the location. Then keep him/her inside but let him/her outside occasionally. If he/she is a very social cat, make sure ther is always someone there for him/her.
It is a noted fact that cats that live indoors live longer lives. If your cat is just outside for half an hour or so and will come when you call it then there should be no problem. If your cat is outside then they are going to the bathroom outside (probably in your garden or a neighbor's garden.) You should always have a litter box in the laundry room or an out of the way place that people can't see without it being too difficult for the cat to get too. Clumping litter is excellent for clumping the poo and urine and you can scoop it out and bag it and save on wasting litter. Wal-Mart or Costco has some cheaper brands of clumping litter that work well. If you're worried about a silica in the air that is very bad for your family and also for your cat, then you can also use what i use: world's best kitty litter (that's the name of it) - it's made of corn or wheat or some grain sort of thing. it clumps like the regular clumping scoopable litter you can find in groceries, but it lasts a lot longer than that. So when you buy it, it "feels" expensive, but once you get the hang of using it (adequate amount in the litterbox, etc) you'll see that it lasts longer than regular scoopable silica based kitty litter, so overall the cost comes out about same.
Increased thirst, excessive urination, and urinating outside the litter box can be signs of various health issues in cats, such as diabetes, kidney disease, or urinary tract infection. It's crucial to take your cat to the vet for a check-up to determine the underlying cause and start appropriate treatment.
Slowly let your cat outside less and less until the cat doesn't go out at all.
Most cats don't like to be kept indoors, so she's wanting outside to do her think! Because your cat goes outside it doesn't mean she's looking for a tom cat, or a tom cat is looking for a female. My cat Molly loves to go outside just around our gardens and sit in amongst the ferns and loves it when I go out and garden and will watch me for hours. She does have her 'friends' come around every so often. LOL
Let her go outside and be available to let her in--if she was an outdoor cat to begin with, that is.
The cat wants to come in if he is outside or go out if he is inside.
like this - Matt loves rachel a lot. there you go :)
My cat has done this before. When my cat did this She needed some food and water. My cat is Not an outside cat but i know about them she may need to go outside! Or she is in pain.
It is not because he doesn't go outside. drink it's pee,
No, your cat will just go outside.
You should let it go outside but watching or you can buy a cat harness and leash. That way, they go outside but are safe.
if your cats going outside and bring strays home. you should try to keep your cat in the house as much as posible. but if it has to go outside put it on a leash a lot of people do that way you don't get strays and dead things in your house.
weafadsfasdf
i think a reptile, bird, rodent and maybe a cat (if an inside cat) because they don't have to go outside