Okay: A Sunday morning challenge for all the would-be cat psychologists out there. Kali is the queen, calico at age 17+. Murph is a tabby; age 13. Last week, two incidents, a day apart, Murph pees on the carpet. Litter boxes (3) are clean. Nothing unusual going on. This is the culmination of an increasingly troubling situation over the last few months, as she has been peeing outside of the box many times. (We have one litter box inside a huge cardboard box, lined with a shower curtain. We have another litter box in the basement, on a plastic sheet. So no damage when she has done that, in either of those two cases. And the third litter box is enclosed, so I guess she hasn't thought to pee outside of it yet.) She has peed on rugs before, but now she's going on carpets, and we cannot just throw carpets away willy-nilly.
Vet says is it not a medical problem. She's not in pain; nothing wrong with heart, lungs, whatever. She does have some neurological problems -- has had them for most of her life -- that cause her some difficulty going down (only) stairs. She does walk strangely, as well, of course. However, again, nothing has changed in that regard, and there is no correlation between her neurological problems and this behavior.
For a few days, now, we've had her locked up in the basement. (We have a cat door between main level and basement, so the two cats could come and go as they please, and one of the litter boxes is down there.) She clearly doesn't like being kept apart from us when she can hear we're in the house, but we do both visit her down there so she's getting probably even more "face time" with us than she had in the past (but of course she's not getting as much "back of head time"). We've made a little domain for her down there.
We have put some additional rugs out, down there, not just for her comfort, but also as a test. Unfortunately, she has already peed on one rug instead of the (clean) litter box.
I don't mind cleaning the rugs as she pees on them (they're washable, no problem), but I guess I'm getting to the point where I am wondering if this is what the rest of her life is going to be, locked up in the basement, with us "visiting" her a few times a day, instead of her being able to spend time "with the family" as she likes. I'm probably more "upset" about it than she is, but I don't know.
So, if you were in my position, what would you do?
Vet says is it not a medical problem. She's not in pain; nothing wrong with heart, lungs, whatever. She does have some neurological problems -- has had them for most of her life -- that cause her some difficulty going down (only) stairs. She does walk strangely, as well, of course. However, again, nothing has changed in that regard, and there is no correlation between her neurological problems and this behavior.
For a few days, now, we've had her locked up in the basement. (We have a cat door between main level and basement, so the two cats could come and go as they please, and one of the litter boxes is down there.) She clearly doesn't like being kept apart from us when she can hear we're in the house, but we do both visit her down there so she's getting probably even more "face time" with us than she had in the past (but of course she's not getting as much "back of head time"). We've made a little domain for her down there.
We have put some additional rugs out, down there, not just for her comfort, but also as a test. Unfortunately, she has already peed on one rug instead of the (clean) litter box.
I don't mind cleaning the rugs as she pees on them (they're washable, no problem), but I guess I'm getting to the point where I am wondering if this is what the rest of her life is going to be, locked up in the basement, with us "visiting" her a few times a day, instead of her being able to spend time "with the family" as she likes. I'm probably more "upset" about it than she is, but I don't know.
So, if you were in my position, what would you do?