Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A cat peeing on couches needs immediate trip to vet

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

Dear Cathy: We recently noticed our rescue cat Chanel has been urinating on our couches. I tried putting ammonia on the spots after washing them and rubbing her nose on the sites. Nothing helps. She keeps doing it. We adopted Chanel and Coco from the same cage at the same shelter. We are afraid Coco will do the same thing. How do we stop Chanel from doing this? — Angie, Henderson

Dear Angie: Many things can trigger improper eliminatio­n with cats, from litter box placement, type of litter and cleanlines­s to anxiety, stress or simply seeing another cat outside. Until you know, you will have to try several things to see what works.

To begin, take Chanel to your veterinari­an for an exam. When animals suddenly begin urinating on furniture and other odd places, it can signify a health problem or illness. Once treated, these improper eliminatio­ns should stop. Rule that out quickly so you know what to try next.

Don’t use ammonia to clean her accidents. Ammonia is a natural byproduct of urine, designed to attract cats back to the exact location or tell another cat to stay away. When you clean with ammonia, you are inviting Chanel (and potentiall­y Coco) to pee on the couch. It’s a common mistake.

To keep both cats from urinating on the couch, use an enzymatic cleaner, which eats up the biological­s left in the furniture, removing all traces of the waste and odor.

Afterward, you could also try to spray the area with Bitter Apple (available at the pet store) to discourage them or put up a roadblock directly over the spot. (Don’t rub your cat’s nose in the urine. I am not sure why pet owners so widely do this, but it doesn’t work and is not a legitimate training technique.

Keep the same number of boxes as cats plus one. Leave the lid off one of the litter boxes in case Chanel prefers to stand on the edge to relieve herself. Place the litter boxes in different areas since one resident cat can block another resident cat from using a particular box. Sift the litter twice daily and use a litter box attractant (available at pet stores) in all three boxes to help lure Chanel back to the box.

If you suspect any of this is stress-related (Chanel saw a cat outside, you had company, you just moved, etc.), use plug-in pheromones in the room with the couch or put pheromone collars on both cats to help take the edge off.

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