r/cats Dec 12 '19

Discussion Gotta love tesla❤

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20.3k Upvotes

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192

u/[deleted] Dec 12 '19

if someone is traveling with a pet and they need to do their business how do they do it ??

208

u/hazel919 Dec 12 '19

I used to travel with a cat more and we just had a smaller litter box. It stayed in a hard Carrier so that she didn’t get litter all over. Then she free roamed the car

119

u/Tj4y Dec 12 '19

We once had a 20+ hours roadtrip and my mother's boyfriends cat was leashed on a small cat tree in the middle back seat. Apart from one incident she was ok with being let out the car (on a leash of course) and do her buisness every 3 hours.

87

u/v0idness Dec 12 '19

Also every 3 hours is really plenty, cats are pretty good at holding it in.

(No travel experience, but my cat has a talent for sneaking into places getting locked up 12+ hours like over night or working day in the basement and such and there's never been any messes.)

6

u/Seicair Dec 12 '19

Was very surprised when a few months after my roommate got a couple of cats one of them didn’t come for breakfast. Since usually even opening the food closet resulted in a stampede and circling howling vultures.

We were kinda worried since both of them had a penchant for escaping, but eventually we found him in the upstairs office. He’d taken a nap under my desk when I was playing video games the night before, and since there’s only a couple inch gap I didn’t think to check under it before closing the door.

No mess in the room, and he didn’t even visit the litterbox until after breakfast. Had to’ve been over 12 hours.

20

u/Tj4y Dec 12 '19

she was given the opportunity every 3 hours

16

u/v0idness Dec 12 '19

Sure! I guess she didn't go every 3 hours, that would be quite excessive for most cats. I just wanted to highlight that it is not such a difficult thing, thankfully. Then moving a bit every couple of hours is good for kitty and hooman.

5

u/Tj4y Dec 12 '19

Exactly

2

u/dancer15 Dec 12 '19

Yep, our cat once got outside and stuck on our Chimney for almost 24 hours. She snuck out the night before while my husband was going on to our balcony, and then we noticed the next evening that we had not seen her. We didn't notice at first because it was shortly after adopting her and she was prone to hiding quite a bit still. Finally when we saw her we got her inside, and she did go use the litter box shortly after we got her in, but it didn't seem to be her first priority even. Though I suppose she had not had food or water, either.

7

u/Pufflehuffy Dec 12 '19

My boys held it for two 7 hour flights (per break on the layover though).

88

u/Car_weeb Dec 12 '19

yeah but how do they exit the litter box at mach 9 tho

21

u/ienjoymen Dec 12 '19

I'm glad to know my cat isn't the only one that does this

63

u/wwynterrstorm Dec 12 '19

I've heard letting your pets free roam in the car isnt the safest? Because any accident could lead to them just flying out of the car because they arent properly held down like we are with seatbelts.

Not trying to be rude or anything, just dont want anyone losing their pets in car accidents

42

u/Pufflehuffy Dec 12 '19

They also become high velocity projectiles that could kill or injure other passengers.

36

u/vvooper Dec 12 '19

you’re correct - the safest place for a kitty on the road is in a carrier that is secured. if kitty needs to stretch their legs or use the litter box, it’s just a matter of more frequent stops.

7

u/suite-dee Dec 12 '19

Yup. I was trying out a new harness that clipped into a seatbelt buckle for my Finley, who likes to look out the window and enjoys car rides. He did fine with his old harness and never wriggled out, but he's growing. We were on the last leg of our 20 minute trip, on a non busy road, and Finley wriggled out of his new harness and crawled up front and sat in my lap. As cute as it was driving with a happy kitty on my lap, it's not safe! He is going to have to sit in his hard crate from now on with his brother.

2

u/macphile Dec 12 '19

This has been a concern of mine, too. Cats will get thrown from cars (or hurled into people as deadly, clawed projectiles) just as easily as adults and children--maybe easier.

I have hard-sided carriers and sometimes try to put a belt around them, even though I know it wouldn't really hold in a wreck (maybe if I had to brake hard). I'm planning to get a soft-sided carrier with seatbelt compatibility (it's on that list of things I need to buy that keeps getting ignored over all of my wants :-p) so at least the cat won't go anywhere if something happens.

Of course, I realize how hard it is for people in RVs to keep their cats shut up when they're on the road for hours at a time and their entire vehicle is the cat's house. I feel like at least some kind of secured kennel would be a good idea there, something to keep them from actually being flung a great distance.

1

u/mariekeap Dec 13 '19

You're right. My cat cannot stand a carrier - he will yowl incessantly and soil any clothwe put in it. So, we use a secure harness and tether him to a seat. Yes we know about carrier training but we adopted him at age 11 and he doesn't like any treats or toys, so at this point it's about getting him from Point A to B as safety and comfortably as possible. Has worked well so far!