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Coyote tore out our lanai screen, took cat
Last night between about 11 p.m. and 5 a.m., a large animal tore through the screen on our lanai and took our young Siamese cat, Timmer. I believe it was probably a coyote, because no other animal here would have been fast and powerful enough to grab Timmer before he could get away and come back in through the cat door to the lanai. I had not realized Timmer was in danger, or I would not have let him go in and out at night through the cat door; I thought he was safe with the screen door shut tight, the lanai and birdcage well screened, and a cat door to escape back into the house if something scared him. We are very sad; he was a beautiful, sweet young cat and we loved him very much.http://lawmarkets.com/images/10-2-sc...-by-coyote.jpg http://lawmarkets.com/images/timmer.jpg
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Sorry for your loss. How awful.
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Oh, how terrible!! I am so, so sorry! Poor Timmer, what a beautiful cat! This is my biggest fear with our kitties. What village are you in?
Thank you for posting a picture of the screen. I have been pondering what to do with ours for weeks. We are having an additional cage put in and hoping they can install some cross bars along the bottom screen panels. |
Terribly sad to lose a pet. What village are you in?
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When we lived in Port Charlotte, FL an alligator tore through a lanai screen to get a dog, fortunately unsuccessful. Coyotes, bobcats, aligators are part of our Florida wildlife as as we encroach on theit territory these unfortunate incidents will happen. Be aware and protect your pets.
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Our hearts are broken for you. So hard to lose a pet. Priscilla & Glen.
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Very sorry for your loss. If I lost Zac or Zoe I would be devestated also.
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So the cat taken last night was the one who refused to go outside after the first cat was taken? Mighty strange happenings. |
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So sorry for your loss especially how it happened.
As a pet lover, I have a range of emotions right now, so sad. |
This sure is confusing. You posted on 9/14/2015 that your cat was taken on 1/15/2015.
Now you are saying that last night 10/1/2015 your cat was taken again. What the heck??? |
Strange looking lanai. Trying to figure out the mulch on both sides configuration.
Sorry, I just don't buy it. The coyotes have enough wildlife here to feed them ten times over. A small dog loose in a yard would be fair prey to a coyote. A cat in a screened lanai that smells of humans would not be worth the risk unless the coyote were starving. |
If it's true sorry for your loss...BTW your lanai looks more like a birdcage screen...am amazed you would allow your other cat out if you already lost one....
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When I lived in Los Alamos, NM I had friends who lost several siamese cats to coyotes. Be very careful with your siamese cats if coyotes prowl your area.
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I was very sorry to hear that you lost a cat from your lanai in January to coyotes. Very sad. And that you lost a second cat a few days ago to coyotes. Very distressing. And this happened in the Village of Bonita? Do you back on a Preserve?
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Is it possible that the cat tore though the screen and left?
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A lanai that has no floor, only mulch? Looks kinda strange
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Managing cats outside #20 Report Post Old 07-30-2010, 01:24 PM su2009 su2009 is offline Junior Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Posts: 17 Default Managing cats outside I walk my cats outside in our own yard. It was a lot of work to train them. I did it starting with the head cat - the older, braver one: stand and hold him for three minutes on the back patio slab, then walk back into the lanai. Repeat several times a day for several days while the other cat watches from inside the sliding doors. Prevent struggling by holding a front leg firmly out and away from the cat (you must be reasonably strong and his claws must be clipped). Tell him: "stay with me!" repeatedly and praise him. Then the other cat: stand and hold on the patio slab, back into the lanai. Move up through stages, one cat at a time while the other watches: cat sitting on patio slab next to you sitting on the slab, with your hand holding him down, then cat walking slowly in garden next to lanai with you walking next to him, then cat on side of house. If the the cat runs, yell "No! Stay with me, [his name]!" Talk to him sternly if he moves away from you, praise him if he walks slowly with you next to him. Cats like big flower beds, dislike being exposed, so keep a big flower bed in the front and back or side and wear old shoes to walk around with the cats in it. (Bark it instead of using rock, as cats will not walk on rock. Keep your plants tall and fluffy so cats can stay mostly hidden (abelia and lorapetalum are good choices), no spikey roses or spikey holly or juniper bushes.) Eventually you will be able to walk each cat around the house. Then you take them out together in stages - back flowerbed for five minutes, etc. Constantly tell them "Stay with me!" and praise them when they do. Always keep the lanai door propped open while they are out so they can rush inside if they become frightened, rather than running away from you. If you see a dog anywhere in the vicinity, yell "Oh no! Dogs!" Scoop a cat up, point to the dog and run inside, acting panicked. The other cat will follow. Once inside, act frightened and run into the bedroom with the cats. Tell them you are glad you all are safe and you are proud of them for not getting caught by a dog. Eventually, you can yell "Oh no! Dogs!" and the cats will rush back into the lanai whenever there is, for example, a large truck barelling down the street, or a neighbor stopping by -- anything that might otherwise cause a cat to bolt. When they hear "Oh no! Dogs!" they will run back inside. When you are out with the cats, always act wary. Make it clear that it is very dangerous outside and you are watching out for them. Caution them constantly. Eventually, they will not go outside without you, even if the door is open for furniture delivery, or to bring in groceries, or whatever. Never take a cat out when it is getting dark because you just can't monitor them closely enough. If you take them out and they both stay beside you, stay out for longer and then praise them lavishly when you come back in. Then, be prepared for your cats to meow from morning until dark, for the rest of your life, in the hopes they will persuade you to take them out not just twice a day, but 1,000 times a day. They will be relentless. You will need nerves of steel. You will wonder why you ever started this foolish cat-walking project instead of taking the advice of all the nice people who told you the cats would eventually be happy on the lanai. |
Sorry, taking this thread with a great big grain of salt. I assume the coyote took the cat, then brought it back to take it again. :ohdear:
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But the cat came back the very next day,
The cat came back, we thought he was a goner But the cat came back; it just couldn't stay away. |
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Two different cats, people.
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and don't know it This thread is destined to be featured on an upcoming episode of the twilight zone. It has all the necessary components----alien highly intelligent cats that can be trained to obey commands and understand English, ghost cats returning from beyond, time travel, good Samaritan coyotes, and deja vu, similar to "Groundhog Day"----to quote the Monkees--I'm a daydream believer |
I'm really having a hard time buying this. Between last night and this morning, every question I had was brought up by posters, even the one about a lanai with mulch on the inside.
If one lost a cat to being on a "lanai" all night, don't allow the remaining one... oh, but everything's already been said. Rinse and repeat. |
our torn screen
We noticed yesterday that our lanai screen was torn and shredded. Our kitty loves the lanai and doesn't have claws. We will have the screen repaired but we are more concerned with how to protect Molly yet let her out there. I even thought about ugly chicken wire.
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I am a nervous wreck about this coyote/cat thing! I am so afraid to let the cats on the lanai unless one of us is out there with them. It seems most of you are skeptical of this post, and I get some of the reasons, but what I don't get is WHY would someone post this if it's NOT true? What do they gain? I'm serious...just confused and petrified for my kitties. I would just die if something I did caused them harm. I am ready to get bars on my screens!!
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Screens do get old and need to be replaced. Get several estimates. You will be glad you did. It is quite inexpensive. |
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Villagetinker had a fence (of a sort) on the inside of his porch. He also had screen designed for critters on his birdcage. Search his posts or PM him.
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In answer to your very sincere question about why would someone DO that, make this up? The answer is that for some these kinds of forums are a game, and they enjoy getting people upset. I think you should continue what you have been doing and I believe your kitties will be safe. I understand your love for them, they are family to us too. |
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Thank you for some reassurance. For now, I think I'll still stay out there with them. :undecided: |
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And as far as the other, I still can't comprehend that. You know I speak my mind, and am not afraid to be known as who I am...right or wrong...but I just don't get people outright lying and making sh-- up! CRAZY, if you ask me. What is their gain? Oh, well... |
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They eat Purina roadrunner chow |
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Wow! I bet the OP will never post here again! I hope they read the thread about "Thin Skin Villagers". Such negativity....
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