He’s 15 years old now, and his ears really bother him, but he still brutally murders birds in our garden.
the fur on the sofa is from the other cats lol
He’s 15 years old now, and his ears really bother him, but he still brutally murders birds in our garden.
the fur on the sofa is from the other cats lol
It really isn’t fair to the birds or the cat to allow that. We’re loosing global bird biodiversity due primarily to outdoor domestic cats. Also, outdoor cats have higher disease and mortality risk. I say this as a cat owner myself.
Hi, thanks for replying to this post! I originally had a longer version of this, but I accidentally clicked on “cancel” instead of “reply” because I’m still getting used to this interface.
I understand where you’re coming from. I’m in no way familiar with bird biodiversity, specifically in Germany where I live, but I’ll try and present (what I think is) a argument against this:
We can’t successfully keep the cats out of the garden long-term. We can do it for a few days, but then a neighbour lets them out or they lift up the catflap backwards or something else frees them. It’s, unfortunately, a pointless venture.
There’s also the issue of shrinking living options for the birds in our city’s center (“Altstadt”). Homeowners have started putting up nets and barriers in places where birds have been coming for literal centuries, and because of that, they’re becoming increasingly desperate and come to our garden.
We’ve decided to leave this the way it is for now because
I understand if you don’t agree. But we’ve simply done what we see best, and you are completely in the right to disagree.
I appreciate that you are being thoughtful about this. I’ve known plenty of people that have simply said, “fuck birds.” Thank you for the kind response.