Why do cats find counters so appealing? Take this quiz to
find out:
A. Because they're there.
B. Because cats naturally prefer a three-dimensional
environment.
C. Because cats occasionally find food morsels while
patrolling countertops.
D. All of the above.
Answer D is correct.
The Downside
There are many good reasons why your cat should stay off the
counter. Cats spend a fair amount of time each day in their
litter box, scratching around and covering up their waste.
Although they frequently "wash" their paws with
their tongues, it is likely that some traces of urine and
feces will remain on their paws to be deposited on your
countertops in molecular concentrations. Not a great thought
if you are about to prepare food.
Also, while they are up on counters, cats may pause to lick
the butter or steal nibbles or whole chunks of food that you
have left lying around. It can be pretty annoying to find that
your cooling bacon strips have been dragged to the floor as
cat fodder. In addition, not everything the cat steals will be
good for him – and some things, like chicken bones, can be
downright harmful.
Counterpoint
Some may argue that healthy cat urine and feces has never
poisoned anyone. Urine, as you may know, is normally sterile.
In fact, Mahatma Gandhi used to drink a pint of his own urine
each morning to start the day. When a cat has urinary tract
disease or intestinal parasites (especially Toxoplasma
gondii), however, this safety factor is lost. UTDs are easy to
spot and the presence of intestinal parasites can be
determined by laboratory tests. Both are usually easy to
treat. Just ask your vet.
As far as disappearing food is concerned, cats don’t eat
much and, with the correct dental care, their mouths should be
fairly healthy places anyway.
How To Get 'Em Off
Here are several things you can do to keep kitty where he
belongs:
Make sure that your cat has other places to climb so that the
countertop is not his only vertical challenge. Climbing frames
positioned by a window, providing a perch with a view, may
divert some attention from the counters.
Make sure that your counters never have food items lying
around on them. Always clean up properly by putting unused
food away. A cat that finds morsels of food once in a while
will keep looking for more for many moons.
Make counters unattractive. Cats, generally, do not like the
smell of citrus or disinfectants. Try using a countertop
cleaner with a citrus odor or wash the countertops down with
Pinesol® after use.
Train your cat - preferably using "click and treat"
methodology. Train your cat to jump down to the cue word
"off." First train the cat to touch a wand
(touch-click-food reward) that later serves as a target. When
the wand is positioned over the counter, the cat will have to
jump up on the counter to touch the wand and get the click and
treat. (You can't teach a cat to jump off unless she is up in
the fist place!). The wand is then lowered to floor level. The
cat jumps down to touch it (click-treat). Finally the word
"off" is interjected as the wand is lowered to the
floor. Of course, you do not always need to use the wand once
the behavior (jumping down) has been put "on cue."
But rewards are necessary from time to time if the cat is to
stay trained.
Booby traps/mild punishers. Various booby traps have been
invented to deter cats from counter surfing. Some of these
deterrents include: putting cling film over the countertop,
making a shallow tray out of aluminum foil and filling it with
water, various springing devices (upside-down mousetraps or
proprietary plastic jumping frogs), or attaching a black
thread "trip wire" across the access to the counter
and attaching it to a nearby pile of shake cans.
More severe punishers. Sounding an air horn (boat horn/fog
horn) at exactly the moment the cat's feet touch the
countertop. You should hide when doing this. The idea is that
the cat thinks that the counter made the noise, not you. Some
people have resorted to electric shock pads that give the cat
a mild shock when he jumps on the counter tough these can
cause considerable distress to some cats.
The only alternative is to teach yourself not to worry so much
about your cat being up on the counters. This is the cognitive
approach to therapy – for you.
My cats free range across my countertops while I'm watching
them because they know I don't care. I could yell at them and
chase them off, as many people do, but why bother? All you
teach your cat by this approach is that you are unpredictable,
mentally unstable, and should be watched carefully for signs
of sudden behavioral meltdowns. Then, when you're not around,
your cat will cruise and patrol the counters as if nothing had
changed. The only thing punishment teaches an animal is how to
avoid the punisher … you. With the remote punishers, the
situation's a little more acceptable in the sense that it’s
the counter that they avoid.
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