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well with the glowing eyes i would think it could fly too. i would steer well clear of a cat with laser death eyes.
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Jesus! It's shooting lasers at you. Run.
That said, my dog doesn't eat much on the road. I would let it run around the car and put a litter box on the floor in the back. |
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Fly the Cat Are Shitting me?
Let the cat roam the car while you drive......do not feed it the entire way..may sound cruel, but last I checked cats do not crap when you let them outside like dogs. |
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OH MI GOD!!!
That cat just burned a hole in my arm with it laser eyes! Don't let Al Queida get that animal!!! |
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I have solution. You'll need to get a cork and some superglue...
Just kidding. Won't the cat hold it? Can't you just lock her up in the cage and stop periodically to let it take a dump? I drove from Michigan to Texas with my dog. It took 2.5 days. She just curled up on the back seat (stuck her head out the window every once in a while) and enjoied the ride. When I stopped for gas or food I would let the dog out and she'd take care of business. Then it was back on the road. |
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When I take the cat on longer drives, I let him roam around the car - and have a covered litterbox in the back (just in case). Since cats can go for weeks without eating or drinking, I don't worry too much about a water bowl. Since I drive a stationwagon, I fold down half of the seats and just let him roam around the entire car (with the covered litterbox way in the back). Most of the time, he'll just find a dark place and hang out there anyway - like on the floor, behind one of the front seats.
You just need to be careful (obviously) when you are stopping and getting in/out, that she doesn't escape. I GUESS the cat would be in trouble if I got in a collision, but it's a small risk I'm willing to take. Plus, if the box isn't secured, it woudl be flying around the cabin as much as the cat anyway - so I'm not sure he would be that much better off in an insecured box (and, even in a secured box, he woudl be violently flung up against the side of it). So I just try to not be in a collision. |
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I'd keep it in the crate for it's own as well as your safety. I travel with my small dog and he always stays in the crate. Take a leash so you can stop and let it out for a stretch.
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If you shove real hard... should fit in the glove box easy enough
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Under stress a cat will poop like crazy and in a small car that means SMELL! Also don't let it run around free as you drive. It will freak and get under your brake pedal sooner or later. Can you put her in the back of the truck?
Go to your vet and have him give you some happy pills that you'll cut up as directed. Give some to the monster every AM before you start off. Crate's are good. Any way you slice it, it won't be much fun for either of you. |
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Another thing that you could do is just leave the cat on the porch of your house in ID and let it wander out to the east coast on it's own. I saw that in a movie once.
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I have travelled with cats before. Be prepared for the cat to scream like it is dying, at least in the first part of the trip. After awhile they will settle down. Also be prepared for the cat to get sick. It doesn't matter if you don't feed it before you travel as they can still throw up stomach juices. Only one of my cats did this, it didn't do it much when it was younger but as it got older it couldn't make a 20 minute drive without getting sick.
I second letting the cat roam around the car, eventually it will find a place to settle down in but that first hour will probably be rough. Just make sure it doesn't get under the pedals or in the steering wheel. I would only bring a little water for it to drink while traveling and only feed it if you are stopping for the night. The cat will most likely be too stressed to eat anything anyway. |
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I drove from Colorado Springs to Fairfax, Va., via San Antonio, Tx with a Siamese as a companion back in 77. We were in a '69 Camaro. Cat box behind passenger seat, scooper and a can of
Glade handy. Going into Tenn., the muffler fell off my car. By the time we made it through Tenn., I was noddin hard, and that cat started pukin', I hadnt realised it was more than fatigue, but it must have been monoxide poisoning causing me to nod. Havin that cat along probably saved my hide. He hadnt started pukin', and I would have just kept goin' till I passed out and wadded it up. DaddyDett |
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Cat-apult?
My g/f puts the little monster in a small dog carrier for car trips, she (the cat) usually sleeps once the car is on the highway. You read stories about cats getting moved by U-Haul in dresserdrawers, so I guess they are up for it |
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If the cat gets wet for any reason, secure him out the window by his tail. Act like your drying some laundry. It works.
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None of those things have ever happened to me - so I don't think it is an absolute statement, but definitely something to worry about (and plan for). And I have driven quite a bit with my cat during this last year. Never gotten under the pedals or under my seat, and has never actually used the litterbox that I bring along (in 12 long trips this year, at least). |
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I hauled two cats and a dog from Florida to Utah in a Uhaul. Oh yeah, it was fun. Actually, it wasn't bad at all. Planning is the key. Motel 6 takes pets and make sure to have a small litter box for stops. Make sure food and water are on a strict schedule. Cats will walk on leashes and those little harnesses. However, I would advise against doing it with two cats at a time. They will be tangled up in seconds.
ETA: Oh yeah, and a small can of mace works well when someone's dog gets a taste for pussy (cat) at the rest stop. The owners get pissed but the same can works on them, too. |
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My advice is the same a Swire's and DK-Prof's, based on similar experiences. My only comment is that I box the cats up all the time. For some reason, they ALWAYS head right for my footwell, and they try to come back after being pulled out. If my wife is in the car, she will ocassionally let one out of his carrier and hold him for a while. I've never had a cat puke, crap, or pee inside the car.
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I travelled successfully several times. However, the first hour or so is an absolute nightmare every time. One cat foams at the mouth like he's Cujo and the other WILL, I REPEAT, WILL shit somewhere. The last trip to the vet it was on top of the back seat between the seatback and the rear window. Fortunately that spot is all plastic but it was rotten as hell until I could get stopped and clean it. |
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Friend of mine has evacc'ed from the MS coast a few times with two cats. Vet gave him sedatives.
Depends on the cat though. Try taking the little bugger for a 60-90min car trip, see how he reacts. I've had some that would just curl up on your lap and sleep. |
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Not a bad idea to have someone ship your cat via an airline and you meet it on the other end. I've never done it, the weather was too hot the time I considered it. Otherwise, I really would have tried it.
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Eeeew. I like my cat even more now. He doesn't freak out at all - he just meows for about ten minutes, and then gives up. |
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When I moved from Ohio to Oklahoma, my cats had free roam of the car. I have a litter box that is basically a 20-30 gal sized rubbermade tub with a hole cut in the top. The cats hop in from there. I use Tidy Cat Crystal Blend litter which really does a good job of covering odor. Scoop it every time you stop and there really isn't an issue.
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Yeah, the foamer squalls at the same time. It sounds absolutely terrible, like he feels like i'm killing him. I'm pretty cold about stuff like that, usually, but he gets to me when he does it. It makes me feel like shit. Well, right up until the other cat takes her mystery crap somewhere. |
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How much stuff are you moving? Are you renting a truck? Will you trailer your car? I did and I got the rental truck with the extra space behind the seats in the cab. It was really large enough for a lot of stuff. I used it for the cats and dog, though. I built it up with boxes and then blankets on top and the litter box on one side. It was high enough that they could all see out, which seemed to calm them a little.
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My vet gave me very mild tranquilizers for my cat when I needed to travel with her. It might make things easier on you (and the cat).
I kept mine in the cage, but between the seats so she could see me, and let her wander around outside on a leash when we stopped. Make sure the motel you get accepts pets, and bring her litter box into the motel. She may not even go the whole way (mine didn't, and I drove from Atlanta to Boston). Mine didn't eat much either. She was amazingly very good on the ride. I put something of mine in the crate with her (and old t-shirt, a pillow case, whatever) so she has a comforting scent to sleep on. |
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The real question is what is a self respecting man doing with a cat?
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Who said anything about self-respect? I used to be married. |
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Hey, I have 14 firearms...doesn't that balance out the cat?
Besides, I love my widdle cuddly-pie cutsie pooh! |
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If the cat won't ride for an hour or so without yowling, I wouldn't do it again.
Before the trip is over you will give serious thought to pulling onto the shoulder to put the cat and yourself out of misery. |
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Try 30-60 minutes or so in the car to see how the cat reacts.
Only cross country drive I took with a cat, she did fine just left to roam in the car... sometimes would look out the window, occacionally would curl up on someone's lap, but actually spent most of the time sleeping either under a seat or under a blanket in the back seat. Bring a small litter box for hotel room or whatever, crumpled up newspapers worked ok but she wanted something litter box like to know that it was ok to go there. Cats won't go on command, or while being watched, you have to give them the litter box and let them go when they feel alone. |
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I drove from Northern California to San Antonio. I made reservations at motels that would let a pet stay with you. I stayed at Howard Johnsons. I drove about 7 hours a day. The cat rode in its carrier. I gave it food and water and the litter box at the motel. It did just fine on the road. John
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Good. Fucking. Luck.
If you drug her, make DAMN sure it knocks her out, or you will be sorry. Don't fly her - a bigger risk of death/abuse than you would think. Cats like to hid under the brake pedal when they are scared, by the way. You might try to let her roam, but if I were you, I'd get a cage/carrier just in case. |
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When I read this, I pictured a litter box pull of shit and piss exploding inside your car as your rearend a garbage truck. I had a friend rear end a truck years ago, and he had a 5 gallon bucket full of big treble hooks in the back. When he awoke (with whiplash), he looked up to see hundreds of hooks hanging from the roof just above him. He also said that there were some on the back of his seat, but thankfully none in his scalp. |
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Years ago, my office cat, Scooter, would go on flights with me. I use to keep him in a cat cage, but he'd make a fuss. So I left him out of his kitty cage on a flight one day, and he just curl up on the rear hat shelf in the cockpit and went to sleep. Clients got a kick out of him. Never tried the negative G's thing with him. In the truck, I'd put him in a cage and he'd sleep away the trip.
He was a great cat and a pal. Friggen neighbor poisoned him. |
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Different cats will do different things in a car trip. My advice is to try the cat out first across town and see how she reacts. For most cars this means getting sick and puking or just laying down and feeling miserable. A car ride can really fuck with a cat's gyroscopes. Plan on several hours of really lowd crying and the possibility of puke at a minimum.
Dave |
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