When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet?

   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #21  
Or maybe instead of shooting the cat, take it to a no kill shelter? There are OTHER answers to difficulties in life than shooting them with guns. :laughing:

Ditto ... if you can't find a no-kill shelter then just take the cat to any shelter. Even in kill shelters cats are kept longer than dogs since cats need less room/food. You pull-the-trigger when there is no other alternative.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #22  
If you were unwanted would you want someone to 'pull the trigger' on you? Come to think about it, in some cases, might not be a bad idea.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #23  
OP, the cat is looking for attention. I don't think you said whether the cat is 'fixed' or not. Sometimes that will calm them down.
Bad behavior is usually a shout out for attention. If giving it lots of attention doesn't work, then a barn cat it should become, long before you shoot it.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #24  
I don't think exterminating stupid people is ok? Exterminating a stupid cat isn't either.

That's about all the reply I can give that wouldn't get deleted.

Other than perhaps a call to authorities in Maine.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #26  
Same story here, young female showed at our door in the dead of winter, we started feeding her , she was skiittish at first but was soon willing to come inside. So pretty we couldnt resist, she is strictly an inside cat now, how much this creature loves us is unreal.
View attachment 657786

Totally agree.

Carrot was a stray a number of years ago. He's become my little buddy.... feed him on my desk, he'll lay on my desk when I'm working. I was gone for two days. Wife said he was looking all around for me (probably looking for a mouse but she's trying to make me feel good)

When I got home, I was laying on the couch.... he comes up, lays next to me with his paws wrapped around my arm as though he was hugging or simply holding on to me.


IMG_0246.JPG
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #27  
I love animals. Come cival strife or disaster, it's THEM I think about. Helpless victims.

Trouble with pet ownership is often sadly "When To Pull The Plug?"
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #28  
Animals ofen cause humans to lose ability to use common sense.. I've kept a few mean cows and horses that had unusualy redeeming traits but those were exceptions. Pets should adapt to the owner's life,not the other way around. Most homeowners would call the cops on a neighbor for peeing on their flowers but dogs and cats get a pass..
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #29  
Humans have kind of sheit on the whole planet.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet?
  • Thread Starter
#30  
Animals ofen cause humans to lose ability to use common sense.. I've kept a few mean cows and horses that had unusualy redeeming traits but those were exceptions. Pets should adapt to the owner's life,not the other way around. Most homeowners would call the cops on a neighbor for peeing on their flowers but dogs and cats get a pass..

I have the same feelings...

I have had a few nasty Rams on my farm, but they did not live very long. They take out a person's back, or a person's knees, and the copay on that FAR exceeds the $150 the Ram is worth. It is not worth having a mean animal that is going to hurt a person. It is not worth it for the owner in regards to their own safety, and is certainly not worth the liability.

I do not pass bad animals off to anyone else either. So many people just do not have the moxie to be responsible and do what is right, and instead pass it off to unsuspecting others. I know, because I have had nasty animals dropped off on my farm. Sometimes they do not tell you it is mean, and other times you just wake up in the morning and there is a horse, pony, cat, dog, sheep etc in the pasture or around the barn.

But this includes end of pet life care. Some just cannot take an animal to have it put down when even they know it is time. But that is just how it works, we out-live our pets for the most part, and unfortunately there will come a day when we must do the humane thing. Now for me, I fully understand a person not putting down their own pets, but it does not matter if a vet does it, or I do it; dead is dead.

I do not like it, but I can do it.

But as for care, I doubt few animals and pets are as well cared for as they are here. We spoil our pets.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #31  
But as for care, I doubt few animals and pets are as well cared for as they are here. We spoil our pets.

That's the way that it should be. I hunt, fish, and trap; yet I strive to do each in the most humane way possible. I know people who look down on me, yet aren't above live trapping a squirrel or even a mous in the middle of winter and dropping it off 10 miles down the road... to die a harsher death there. Any animal I have gets the best life I can give right until the point where it's gone... and I have no use for a mean animal. (That's my role. :D)

Years ago on my way to a friend's house, I took a shortcut up a seldom used road on a cold night in January and came across a little kitten sitting in the middle of the road... I don't think that it had moved since somebody opened their door and dropped it there. I took it to a nearby farm, explained what had happened and they were good enough to take it in.

I wish the person who did that could have been dropped off on the end of some road in the middle of winter in their shirt sleeves, and told to tough it out.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #32  
Trouble with pet ownership is often sadly "When To Pull The Plug?"
Animals ofen cause humans to lose ability to use common sense..

And vets are as much to blame as anyone, often laying on the guilt trip when the end is near, making you feel like a neglectful owner if you don't do something to give it a couple more months of life.
Now maybe they see a lot of people who can't let go and assume everyone's that way, but to me it's sleazy.

Had a cat (it was probably 18 at the time) beginning to experience kidney failure, I got the 3rd degree from the vet when I wanted it put down. No excuse for that IMHO.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #33  
Red tailed hawks compared to bald eagles?

Not even close.

Red tailed hawk males are about 1.5-2.9 pounds. Females are about 1.7-3.7 pounds.

Now compare that to bald eagles.

Baled eagle males are about 6.6-13.9 pounds! Female bald eagles average 25% larger than males.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #34  
Sounds like outside cat material to me. We had one in the house a few years ago. First time ever in my life. (Now we have two inside, one expensive one and one we rescued from a greedy uncaring breeder). Anyways, the first one was fine except she would poop on the floor. Right outside the litter boxes. After a couple months she went outside. She is an amazing outside cat. Still lovable, but will kill anything that痴 smaller than her (except her kittens). Only problem is she stays pregnant and the local spay and neuter clinic will not fix them if they are nursing or pregnant. Between bought cats and her kittens from multiple litters, we have 16 cats. 2 inside 14 outside. Frogs, mice, mole rats, birds, or any other insect they can catch is dead. Killed several baby snakes over the last several years as well. They get a heat lamp or two when it is cold out, away from vehicles. We probably put out 30 pounds of cat food a month and they still kill anything that moves. Our inside dog loves em all. I used to hate cats, now I think it is quite the opposite.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #35  
We (spouse) picked up a kitten at Cooper's Feed Store a few years ago. Cutest little thing, and so fragile, but nobody wanted it. The feed store was unfortunately its last stop. We brought it home, named her Cooper, and nurtured her until she became healthy again, and spayed. She turned out to be a Maine Coon breed weighing 22 pounds! She was an inside/outside cat.

During the day she would roam the woods, catching ground squirrels, chipmunks, mice, bugs, and birds for food. She was one bad gal for sure. She liked to show off showing us how high up a tree she could jump. And she was definitely a fighter. No roaming dogs or whatever could whip that cat. But when it started getting dark, she'd come in through the 'cat door' for the night.

Sadly, at age 5, while showing off her jumping and climbing skills, she out of a 30' tree and broke her back. Very sad situation, but we had to let the Vet put her down. 'Coop' was the first cat I'd ever owned, and she was a wonderful cat at that. We were totally devastated to loose her.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #36  
Red tailed hawks compared to bald eagles?

Not even close.

Red tailed hawk males are about 1.5-2.9 pounds. Females are about 1.7-3.7 pounds.

Now compare that to bald eagles.

Baled eagle males are about 6.6-13.9 pounds! Female bald eagles average 25% larger than males.

That’s what I was thinking.
And furthermore, how is a 3 pound lb hawk swooping down and taking a 15lb cat :confused2:
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #37  
We got a cat from Hades.<snip>But when is enough, enough?
Enough is enough when other options don't work.
Has the cat been spayed?
A close relative lived at our house for a couple of years. She had a little snappy dog that was a PIA. Besides nipping people he was an escape artist. He'd slip out the door, go running like heck and require up to an hour chase all while the relative was moaning about her poor puppy. After about 3 or 4 years she had the dog neutered.
Complete change of character. Became a loving calm dog that didn't run away.
 
   / When Do You Pull the Trigger on a Pet? #38  
Enough is enough when other options don't work.
Has the cat been spayed?
A close relative lived at our house for a couple of years. She had a little snappy dog that was a PIA. Besides nipping people he was an escape artist. He'd slip out the door, go running like heck and require up to an hour chase all while the relative was moaning about her poor puppy. After about 3 or 4 years she had the dog neutered.
Complete change of character. Became a loving calm dog that didn't run away.

Agree on temperament and attitude changes for cats. Spay and neuter works here at our farm. All our cats are "adopted" and fixed. Any other cat showing up and disturbing their world is welcome to stay as long as it gets shots and fixed. Over the years about three have undergone the trapping, procedures and then let loose on the barn to never returned. Working on feral cats ain't easy. "Ours" seem content.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2016 CATERPILLAR 311FLRR EXCAVATOR (A60429)
2016 CATERPILLAR...
2005 MACK TRI AXLE DUMP TRUCK (A52707)
2005 MACK TRI AXLE...
Land Pride FDR1660 (A53317)
Land Pride FDR1660...
gps trailers (A56859)
gps trailers (A56859)
2022 Coras Predator Steel End Dump Trailer (A56438)
2022 Coras...
Honda EM3500S Portable Gasoline Generator (A59228)
Honda EM3500S...
 
Top