The Bird Garden Blog

Here are some of the older “Birdman” columns from Saturday's Times and Transcript, they appear in the Life and Times section of Moncton’s newspaper. Also pictures from blog followers, customers and friends; along with reviews of new birding products and answers to frequently asked questions.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Outdoor Cats

When you write a weekly bird column you eventually have to come around to the topic of outdoor cats. It’s a very touchy subject that pretty much divides the population. I admit the disappearance of a favourite cat was the initial reason we had for keeping our cats indoors, we searched for weeks, my wife would get up in the middle of the night to call and rattle the food container in an attempt to lure the cat home. Even years later when we saw a similar looking cat we would stop and check it out.

The fact is though when you let your cats outside they are going to be injured or killed, it’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of when.

A few months after we lost Bob our new cat escaped from the house. I made posters and offered a $50 reward, people thought I was nuts, “50 bucks for a cat?” For me it was simple economics, if we didn’t get Marble back, I’d have to get my wife another cat. Then I’d be looking at 3 vaccinations at $50 bucks a shot, the neutering at $150 and the sleepless nights that my wife jumps out of bed every time a mouse scratches in the walls, oh yes, and I’d miss the cat.

Indoor cats live longer healthier lives and in my experience make better pets. Marble is 18 years old now, his house mate was also 18 when she died.

Outdoor cats face many dangers, cars, disease, poison, people, dogs, coyotes, fleas, ticks and mites. They say the number one disease in outdoor cats is abscesses caused by a bite from another cat. I can only guess what that costs today to be treated, anesthesia, surgery (although minor still costly), and drugs. Most of these problems are eliminated or at least greatly lessened by simply keeping your cat indoors.

An added bonus, if everyone was to keep cats in, the second biggest cause of the decline of bird populations (next to habitat loss) would be gone.

Cats will kill anything they can regardless of need; healthy well fed cats kill more than under nourished ones.

I’ve had people tell me that it’s “just nature”, it may be in a cats nature to kill, but they aren’t a native species so our birds haven’t evolved in ways to defend themselves.

I’ve also had countless people stop by to tell me they don’t feed birds because their cat goes outside and they aren’t going to feed birds only to watch their cat kill them. The old out of site, out of mind defense, just because you don’t see them, they’re still killing birds.

One of the reasons I chose to write about cats was, Sunday when my son came home from riding lessons he was toting a new kitten that was dumped off at the stable. This guy is extremely happy to stay inside, even shying away from outside doors. I can only imagine the terrors he faced in the couple weeks he was abandoned. We’ve also rescued adult cats that were formerly used to going outdoors, every one of them has been content to stay inside and watch the bird feeders from the comfort and safety of the window sills. So it can be done, of course the cat is going to cry at the door for a day or two, that’s what they did when they wanted out.

There are a few companies that specialize in outdoor cat enclosures, these are accessed from a window or pet door and cats can come and go as they wish. We chose to build a screened in sun room so we can enjoy it with them, when cats want out they meow at that door now, they spend 3 seasons in the sun room and 1 in front of the wood stove.

Enough of the lecture on cats.

Coming up on October 10 is the 16th annual Big Sit, this “listing” event may be right up your alley. You create 17 foot diameter circle, sit inside and count all the birds you see and hear for 24 hours. Sounds good to me, choose a circle you don’t have to walk to, the mosquitoes should be scarce, maybe I could even work on some bird houses on the quiet times. The big downfall for me is the whole 24 hour thing, but the organizers have that covered too, you have teams, so all I need is someone who can stay awake past 9 p.m. to listen for owls.

The Big Sit makes a great fundraiser for clubs, you can get sponsors for a few cents per species. You don’t have to tally any rare species, counting the common birds on this day during fall migration will, over years, show trends and identify declining or increasing populations.

It could be argued that events like the Big Sit are more friendly to the environment than other bird-a-thon events like a Big Day or the World Series of Birding that have birders driving here, there and everywhere in search of another species. It’s likely easier on the birds too, that’s my reasoning, as a lazy birder, and I’m sticking to it.

In closing, I’d like to share with you how my week started--my son comes down stairs Sunday morning (the same day the new cat arrived, I should have stayed in bed and not answered the phone) while I’m reading up on Big Sits and I say, “Hey Buddy, you want to do a Big Sit?”

He says, “Just did one upstairs.”

“No, I said, ‘sit’ Son, a Big ‘Sit’.”

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