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Cat smell..how do I make it go away?
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<blockquote data-quote="flutterbee" data-source="post: 67381"><p>They also seem to like plastic grocery bags, too. Don't as me why. But, at least you can throw those away.</p><p></p><p>WW - is your female spayed? The urine from an unspayed female is very strong. Same goes for an un-neutered male, too, though. Cat urine, period, is just strong. Bleck. But when they're not fixed, it's 10 times worse.</p><p></p><p>Cassie would go through spells where she wouldn't use the litterbox. Her urine, however, didn't have a lot of odor and by the time I noticed a smell, she had been going somewhere else often. Fortunately, it was always the same spot and it was always in a corner. I would just pull up the carpet there, replace the affected piece of padding and soak the heck out of the carpet with the steam vac. She wouldn't go there again.</p><p></p><p>We did have one male cat growing up who was neutered at 7 months and started spraying when he was 8 years old. We had several cats, but they were all male and we had added a female (spayed). That's when he started spraying. I had a spayed female cat that sprayed, too. We had taken her in as a rescue at the age of 3 years and she was very uncomfortable with our other cats. She needed to be an only cat.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="flutterbee, post: 67381"] They also seem to like plastic grocery bags, too. Don't as me why. But, at least you can throw those away. WW - is your female spayed? The urine from an unspayed female is very strong. Same goes for an un-neutered male, too, though. Cat urine, period, is just strong. Bleck. But when they're not fixed, it's 10 times worse. Cassie would go through spells where she wouldn't use the litterbox. Her urine, however, didn't have a lot of odor and by the time I noticed a smell, she had been going somewhere else often. Fortunately, it was always the same spot and it was always in a corner. I would just pull up the carpet there, replace the affected piece of padding and soak the heck out of the carpet with the steam vac. She wouldn't go there again. We did have one male cat growing up who was neutered at 7 months and started spraying when he was 8 years old. We had several cats, but they were all male and we had added a female (spayed). That's when he started spraying. I had a spayed female cat that sprayed, too. We had taken her in as a rescue at the age of 3 years and she was very uncomfortable with our other cats. She needed to be an only cat. [/QUOTE]
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Cat smell..how do I make it go away?
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