Can The Media Learn How To Pronounce...
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My ex wife has 2 Siamese cats now aged about 6 yrs.
We got the male as a kitten, and the female was introduced about a year later. Both are neutered.
She has lived in a different house to the one they previously lived in for over two years. They both get on ok, and he is dominant.
The male cat has suddenly started spraying in the house. There is a cat flap so he can come and go, and there appears to be nothing different about their everyday arrangements, except for the fact that she has put him on a diet, restricting his "iams".
Any ideas on what may be causing the problem and what to do about it?
No best answer has yet been selected by andrewlee. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A few questions...when was he neutered? even neutered/spayed cats can spray if they developed those muscles and/or got into the habit of spraying. He might be spraying due to the new home/territory he is roaming in, it may have other males and he is marking, or the previous owners had a marking type of cat and it left a scent, or visitors. Go to http://www.catsinternational.org/
click on "articles" check out housesoiling and then go to spraying problems article, this might be able to help you.
The reason will almost definitely be that theres another cat on the block. A cat will mark his territory, this is usually (hopefully) the garden outside, sometimes much further - thus warning other cats that they are approaching his patch and watch out.
Sometimes new cats appear that are much more aggresive and force the boundary back, sometimes right up to the cat door itself. Hence your cats boundary is now the house and he will spray to let all know that the house is now the limit of his territory.
You must clean the walls etc with a non-ammonia cleaner - such as a Washing powder, and then get rid of the aggresive cat that is terrorising your cat. How you achieve this depends on whether its ferral or not. Borrow a cat trap from the RSPCA and get it spayed or neutered by the PDSA, that should calm it down.