Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Raising a stink over people not picking up after pets

- CATHY ROSENTHAL Send your pet questions, stories and tips to cathy@ petpundit.com. Please include your name, city and state.

Dear Cathy: At our condo complex, we have a problem with dog owners who violate the rules relative to walking their pets. Some, very few, allow their pets to defecate or urinate on lawns without picking it up. While our condo is pet-friendly, there are rules about dog walking. Is there an effective and humane deterrent that will prevent a dog from this offensive action? Someone suggested that the grass areas be “sprinkled” with red pepper. — Mike, Amityville, N.Y.

Dear Mike: I have never heard of red pepper thwarting dogs from peeing outside, but why would you want to do that? The problem is not dogs peeing and pooping outside, which is a perfectly natural thing for animals to do. The problem is their owners not picking up after them when they do.

It’s sad people that need to be reminded about this, but they do. It’s not a trivial issue either since neighbors can get very confrontat­ional with each other over this matter.

Talk to your homeowners associatio­n about posting informatio­n in your community newsletter or email. Maybe get a group of people to pick up poop one day, tally it, and offer it as “news” in the next newsletter. In our neighborho­od, our HOA set poop bag waste stations every half mile. It serves as both a reminder and resource for dog owners.

Dear Cathy: We have a 17-year-old cat who over the past few months sometimes neglects to use the litter box. Sometimes, he’ll leave a surprise right next to the litter box and sometimes elsewhere. It seems to happen whether the litter box is completely clean or not. What’s the reason? — Rich, Rockville Centre, N.Y.

Dear Rich: If you haven’t moved the litter box, changed the substrate or had any changes in your household (new baby, mother moved in, etc.), I am inclined to believe that your senior feline may have a health problem. She could be constipate­d or have an intestinal problem that is making it difficult for her to go.

Cats also get into different positions when they are peeing or pooping. If she is arthritic, the position for pooping may be causing her some discomfort, and so it may be easier for her to go outside the box. Health problems can be treated, so

Since being found in an alley, Snickers has since been fostered, loved, neutered, chipped and vaccinated. The 4-month-old is good with other cats and calm children, but dogs tend to scare him. He must be an indoor-only cat, and a safe-home check is required. There is a $50 adoption fee. To take him home, email kim@tixcorp.com.

take her to the veterinari­an — and take a sample of the poop with you.

Dear Cathy: My older cat, Sonney, has a bump or nodule above his left eye. I don’t know how he got it; it could have started from a scratch from one of our other cats. He did have a small scratch close to the bump that healed before I noticed the bump, which seemed to grow since I first noticed it. It is not getting any bigger, and it has been about three

months since it started. It does not seem to bother him. Is there some kind of cream I could put on it? — Bob, Las Vegas

Dear Bob: I don’t think there is any cream to fix that nodule. Generally, veterinari­ans say if a nodule moves freely, it could be a benign cyst; if is it attached it could be cancer. There is only one way to know for sure, though, and that is to take Sonney to a veterinari­an to have the nodule examined and biopsied.

Dear Cathy: I have a friend who received a dog from a shelter. This dog was previously with a breeder. Whenever the dog rides in my car, he usually poops (ugh!). I don’t know if he was crate-trained or not, but in such a confined space of the back seat, you would think he wouldn’t go, even if he gets walked before. He’s a young adult, not a senior dog. Most dogs love rides; this one gets carsick. — Tim, Chesterton, Indiana

Dear Tim: Just like people, dogs can get carsick. Most of the time, they feel nauseous, which results in vomiting or drooling. But sometimes, their queasiness may result in an unexpected defecation in the car. The dog doesn’t mean to poop in the car; it just happens.

There are over-the-counter and prescripti­on medication­s that can reduce the carsicknes­s symptoms, which may reduce this involuntar­y reflex and make car trips more pleasant for both of you.

Also, put down a blanket in the car that can easily be washed, and open the window a crack, since fresh air sometimes helps.

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