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#1 (permalink) |
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Jr. Cat
![]() Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 43
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We rescued a 3 year old stray (not a feral) that had been on her own for some time. For various reasons, including the cat's strongly expressed wishes, she has remained an indoor/outdoor cat. She does not like going outside when its raining, but seems unfazed by the cold and gets annoyed if she cant go out. She does get over it easily enough, but its clear she wants to go out if allowed to do so. I have several times let her out when its a bit below freezing during the day, on the theory that she knows how to get our attention and get readmitted if its bothering her, and she doesnt seem to change her behavior at all. She has also been out on nights when it might fall to say 28 degrees without any ill effects or diminished desire to outside the next day.
We have no outdoor shelter for her, and dont really know where she hangs out outside. She is a classic tabby domestic short-hair, with a thickened winter coat. What do you think the temperature cut-off should be? We are in bed by 11, and it obviously can fall 5-10 degrees after that, so its not like we can trust her to come back before 11 if she is cold. I'm not likely to build her a shelter, so its really a question of just whether to let her go out for the night when its going to fall below X temperature. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Tom Cat
![]() Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: near Washington, DC
Posts: 358
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Thank you for rescuing and taking care of the stray cat.
In so far as how cold is too cold: cats are survivors and know where to find the warm(er) places. Bushes, near buildings where there is some escaping heat. My cat survived a 20 inch snow storm before being rescued. I think it in part depends on how healthy the cat is, how well he is being fed. You can buy discs that you microwave for around five minutes and are suppose to stay nice and warm for up to 10 hours. Some posters say the disks stay warm for ten hours, I found it to be less than that. You can place the disk any where, perhaps in a cardboard box, with a nice blanket in it near your house. Then she can decide to go in the box or not. I feed a feral cat colony and when possible, feed them warm food. Don't know if it helps keep them warm, but I like to think it does! |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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Jr. Cat
![]() Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 43
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#4 (permalink) |
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Cat Addict
![]() Join Date: May 2010
Location: Utah - USA
Posts: 1,509
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I have heard that humans can get hypothermia at 50F, without windchill. Though I don't know what sort of outfit that would be in (I would assume just a regular shirt & jeans type).
I don't let Xanthe go out if it's below 40... but then, I like to pamper my pets! There is a little box for her, made of insulating styrofoam (the kind that meat is shipped in) with straw in it, but it's only warm after her body heat gets it that way...but then it stays relatively warm from the straw/foam. I also have these boxes for the ferals, though obviously they stay out all the time in temps that got to 5F last year! I think Disco got some frostbite on her paw, as she had a weird dark gray spot that sloughed off after a week or so... I felt so bad for her! |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Cat
![]() Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 255
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I cut off at 60 for the dogs. Anything below that and they only get a quick go pee and come back instead of their usual hour of playtime before coming in for bed. For the kitten, anything below 50 she has to come in like it or not because I'm too scared of a sudden temperature drop, but I'm in Texas so my definition of cold is very different. I don't think you can get blood thinner than mine.
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#6 (permalink) |
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Tom Cat
![]() Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Edmonton, AB
Posts: 453
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Our cats are all indoor, but way back in the 80's & 90's we had an outdoor cat. They are survivors and will find warm places. Here it can get to -40F before windchill. That's fairly rare, however it's common to have daytime temps at -13F and lower. Ginger lived to be 20, outside all her life.
Now as an adult, I know better, and if I had an indoor/outdoor kitty, I think I would cut it off at the 10F level. Anything colder than that I would imagine she wouldn't want to go outside. I guess everyone's version of cold is different depending on where they live lol. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Super Moderator
![]() Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 27,448
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That's for sure! I was worried about the outdoor/feral kitties that hang out next door, but the girl who sits next to me said where she grew up, there were feral cats (in Utah) and they were just fine.
It gets down to the 30's and 40's here, though. Brrrrrrrrrrrrrr!
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Marie, and ![]() Always in my heart, my lovely Cinderella, running free at the Bridge. http://www.catforum.com/forum/member...signature2.jpg |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Tom Cat
![]() Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 474
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Midnight, the wild cat, has an insulated outside house under the porch and an insulated house in the garage that has a heating pad. He roams day and night in all weather. Now that it is cold, we lock him in the garage at night if he returns. If he doesn't, he will use the outside house. After an early breakfast, he leaves again. He goes out in below freezing and even below zero weather for hours in the snow. Drives me crazy that he won't stay where it is warm, but he is just not bothered by the cold. He has been doing this for the 2+ years he has been here.
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#9 (permalink) |
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Senior Cat
![]() Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: north carolina
Posts: 647
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my outdoor cat has a low level heated bed in insulated house in his kennel. my parents semi feral colony live on their patio that has a roof above,, several insulated houses and a heated bird bath are placed there.. the rest of the area is stacks (4-5ft tall) of fire wood, most of the wood is covered with tarps for protection from the blowing snow(this is mn.)the colony started with yeti's mom having kittens in the woodpile before they even knew about her.. the bird bath was there and acted as a source of not frozen water.. the cats live out there 24-7 , -20f is not uncommon out there.. cats can handle the cold if a safe place is available(the fact that they didn't have to go far for water helped here) yeti and his sister were playing out there at 10f at 3months old..
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yeti cat: two toes short of the record books eons ago there must had been a creature with a roar like a vacuum cleaner,it most likely ate cats. jolene,emma,tammi,smokey and yeti |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Tom Cat
![]() Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: near Washington, DC
Posts: 358
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The discs are called Pet Supply Imports SnuggleSafe Pet Heating Pad, available at Amazon and other outlets.
[hope I linked correctly]
I think it also depends on how use the animal is to living outside; Ritz, my strictly indoor cat, would not fare well. The ferals I take care do survive, and even in this weather, dumpster dive for food. |
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