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25 May 2008

Cat on a leash? My indoor cat is really interested in hanging out outside.[More:]The other day I saw a woman sitting on her porch with a long leash in her hand. At the other end of the leash was her cat, pawing through some bushes. Has anyone ever tried this?

Sadie is definitely not cut out to be an outdoor cat, even if I believed that was a good idea, which I no longer do. She came to me as a foundling, already declawed on her front feet. She has no street sense. I've taken her outside from time to time and just hung around nearby her, but I'm nervous that she'll see something interesting and go tearing off and get lost. A leash seems like a good solution.

Her main interest outside seems to be finding stuff to eat that she can yak up later. But even so, she seems to enjoy it, and it might help allay her housecat boredom. Anyone ever tried a cat leash? Any advice?
All her cat friends will laugh at her.

But it is practical, I guess.
posted by BitterOldPunk 25 May | 16:49
I tried that with my cat. It did not go well.

My cat has always gone through periods of bolting for the door whenever it's opened, so we figured we'd give it a shot. We tried using a harness. I can't remember what led us to believe that that was better than just slapping a leash on her collar, but there was some reasoning behind it.

So first there were a few wrestling matches getting that on. We'd also heard or read that you want to give kitty some time to adjust to the harness. Like a week or more. She definitely didn't seem to be getting used to it, so after a few days we decided to give it a go and take her outside. It's possible that we jumped the gun there.

So after all that, once we got her outside she basically just froze. We tried putting her in spots we thought she'd find more compelling, near bushes and such, but outside of a few sniffs here and there, she really did not seem to be enjoying the outdoors at all. So that was the end of that.
posted by 2or3whiskeysodas 25 May | 16:54
We just visited with my husband's grandmother who takes her cat for walks on a leash. I was skeptical, but he really seems to like it.
posted by gaspode 25 May | 16:57
I have trained several cats to walk o a leash. (I'm a good cat trainer, it seems).

You'll need to find a harness that agrees with the cat first. Some cats are fine with the stupid heavy man made material variety, they are usually the bigger kitties with muscle or fat. Others get annoyed at the weight and un-supple-ness these types of harnesses cause. For them you need something made out of faux suede (I forget what that supersoft material is called in english but it weighs nothing and has worked on so many of my cats). I know they are more expensive but I've had mine for 17 years now and three cats have used it.

Start with a necklace, uh, collar. They'll hate that but a week later, let them try the harness. Make it clear that the harness is only for walking outside and thus a temporary contstraint. If the cat starts making all weird moves with his her backlegs s/he's either complaining that the harness is too heavy/tight or just being whiny. Wait it out for at least ten minutes. Take the harness off, replace with collar and give cat treat (ham or shrimp). Talk about the leash that goes on harness and that you can take them outside with it.

They'll get it.

Next time you'll put it on they'll be more co-operative (you only need to wait a day really). Walk around the apartment with it. Give treat after removing. Repeat.

Now, wait another day, do leash and go outside. Cat might be freaked out but it's not about the leash anymore, it's about being outside. Take walks as far as the cat will go with leash. Repeat.

So, One of my cats would walk around a lot with me, we even went into the city and the parks, another cat would go up and down the block. A third would simply tolerate the leash but not "walk with me", which is also fine. He did the "I'll ignore you and you pretend not to know me while I be all cat-like checking out the birds out here" -thing.

I can not stress this enough though, never ever ever ever loose the leash when the cat is on it. They run across the street and a car comes, presto, instant broken neck when the cat forgets they are dragging a leash behind them. Very sad.
posted by dabitch 25 May | 16:59
Mine like it. I use harnesses (not collars) and attach their nice long leads to a water-filled plastic jug - light enough to move easily but heavy enough so they don't drag it away. I'll have them out with me when I'm doing miscellaneous yardening, so I can keep an eye out if they've tangled themselves. I've also seen some hawks in the neighbourhood and I wouldn't want them sizing up my (8 lb.) little old lady cat as a tasty treat. My younger guy sometimes gets spooked by a loud truck going by and pulls himself out of the harness (fortunately he heads straight back into the house.
posted by hangashore 25 May | 17:05
The Bees is remarkably good about putting things on, but i've found she's much happier (as most cats) just walking next to me. She's been startled on a leash, in which case you have for a moment a kite or a flying cat. i need a longer leash, but the longer the leash, the easier to get caught around things.
interrobang also has some cat leashing experience.
Collars choke or are too easily escapable, but harnesses can be "heavy", man.
≡ Click to see image ≡
posted by ethylene 25 May | 17:20
"sämsskinn" is the "faux suede" I'm talking about. It's elk leather that they've removed practically everything from, which makes it super soft and water absorbant and you can buy it buy the sheets around here to polish stuff with, from old silver to cars. Can also be made of goat leather, I have no idea what it's called in english but trust me it's worth the extra coinage.

And yes, harness because collars choke, always make sure that the leash connects to the back of the harness not the collar-part.
posted by dabitch 25 May | 17:50
We started Oliver and Abigail on harnesses as kittens. They love it. They don't get to go out often and get really excited when they see me pull out their harnesses.

Oliver is the really adventurous type and would be out for hours if I let him. Abigail is more tentative and stays close to home. She wants back inside within an hour or so.

When gardening I'll attach them to one of those screw in tie-out thingies that are usually used for dogs. If you do this make sure Sadie has some shade to relax in and a bowl of water.
posted by deborah 25 May | 18:57
Forgot to say:

Harnesses are better than collars because a collar can slip over a cat's head quite easily. Also, when you try this for the first time, do it in a contained area such as a backyard. It'll be much easier to track down an escapee.
posted by deborah 25 May | 18:59
Wow, very thorough tips everone, thanks! I'll search for the comfy harness dabitch is suggesting and try to acclimate Sadie to it soon. I love the idea of anchoring her to something so I can work outside while she is outside too. Thanks!
posted by Miko 25 May | 19:06
Make a kitty run or "cat enclosure"?
posted by shane 25 May | 19:21
dabitch, I think that's chamois in English.
posted by occhiblu 25 May | 23:19
yes, that totally sounds like the stuff. Very soft and supple, won't annoy sensitive kitties bellies. I've tried velvet too, some kitties are OK with that.
posted by dabitch 26 May | 02:43
Her main interest outside seems to be finding stuff to eat that she can yak up later.

≡ Click to see image ≡
posted by BoringPostcards 26 May | 11:05
BP ftw! I swear Oliver and Abigail think they're cows while they're outside.
posted by deborah 26 May | 15:46
I think encapsulating Sadie in a rolling plastic bubble is the sanest solution.

There can be interactive ports built into the sides for access to yak-producing material.

yes i know i'm not helping
posted by Lipstick Thespian 27 May | 13:45
Writing about brain death || I'm having problems handling a clingy friend.

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