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No I haven't. If it was up to me it would have been done already, but it's my girlfriend's house and she is reluctant for a variety of reasons.
It's only a very minor part of the problem anyway. The other cat doesn't really get in very often - but it has happened once or twice. The main issue is that it has taken over the garden and made it it's territory.
Sounds like you need a new girlfriend, preferably one without a problematic pussy
😉
Woman's pee works apparently. So get you gf to pee in garden. Failing that tell her cats to man up
Difficult one, our two cats are pretty confident being units of around 7kg each, but a younger female cat of considerable size has started prowling round the garden. Both of our cats will fight and chase her off, but she still keeps coming round. I suspect that a truce will break out when the weather gets warmer and they're least inclined to waste energy fighting.
My own solution would be along the lines, of "go to cat rescue, find the largest feline that you can, bring it home" type of thing. But that doesn't really help.
Got a new full height DG unit made up with a vent hole/cat flap hole for about £70 at a local glass merchant, swapped it and installed sureflap (around £80).
Other glazing firms wanted ~£200 just for the unit.
Keep the old unit to swap back if selling house though.
7kg cat.Blimey. Our old tubby tortie was about 5-6kg at most, she's not that big now. Our 'big' Ragdoll Male is about 4.5kg. The ninja ninja is 4kg, and I'm sure if he was an outdoor cat he'd boss everyone having lived wild for a year. We keep him in so he doesn't spread cat flu to non-vaccinated cats.
You could get a cat littler with a grating in the bottom - this means the litter lasts a bit longer as the pee goes through. Tip the pee around the garden's boarder.