cats, Misc.
To Collar, Microchip or Both? That Is the Question. – Petful
The collar was a rich, deep purple and had a brass star-shaped I.D. tag. It would look well against Emrys’s ruddy Abyssinian fur, I thought. Only Emrys didn’t want any part of it. He didn’t bite or scratch — he just looked up at me, totally bewildered.
Now, my cats don’t go outside. They don’t even have
Emrys had never worn a collar before and looked miserable, as if he were being punished. So after a while, I removed it and tossed it into a drawer. Emrys then acted like the fairy-tale prince who had just been awakened from an evil spell. The light came back into his eyes, and he leapt around the room and up onto his cat tree, rejoicing in his freedom from neckwear.
A Study on Collars and Cats
In 2010, Dr. Linda Lord of The Ohio State University, Dr. Margaret Slater of Texas A&M University, Dr. Julie Levy of the University of Florida and Brenda Griffin of Cornell University conducted
“A lot of people start out with the dogma that cats can’t wear collars, that they won’t tolerate them or that [the collars are] dangerous,” noted Lord. “Now pet [people] can look at this research and, if they [have] a cat, maybe they will consider that they will be able to put identification on them. A collar with an I.D. tag is probably a cat’s greatest chance of ever being re-homed or brought back if it is lost.” Less than 2 percent of lost cats make it home, Lord added. Collars and proper identification would, she believed, change that.
Pamela Merritt, author of the
Merritt mentions that less-than-2-percent figure but explains that it actually refers to the number of
That figure, by the way, comes from an ASPCA study, and Merritt is closer to the mark: 2 percent of lost cats turned up at shelters. The others either returned on their own or were found by their people.
Safety Collars
We put these on our first 2 kittens, Cricket and Kilah. Then, one morning, as Tim and I were about to leave for work, we heard a noise — it was Kilah trying to
Years later, I tried another breakaway collar on Circe,
Safety collars, according to my vet, work better on
Microchipping is a pretty quick procedure for cats:
The Microchip Way
Microchipping is painless and it also ups your chances of seeing your lost pet again. And if someone steals your cat or takes them in, thinking that they’re a stray,
An indoors-only feline is probably fine with just the chip, though some people will do both the chip
Saba, one of the Burmese, had snuck out and started chatting up the neighbors round the corner. They, in turn,
So it’s not exactly a clear-cut issue. What is clear, however, is that even an indoor cat needs some sort of safeguard in case they pull a Harry Houdini escape on you. And if your cat is an indoor-outdoor one, they need it all the more. It could mean a world of difference for both of you.
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