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Do Animals Know To Look Both Ways Before Crossing The Street

  • #1
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I'k a large proponent of keeping cats indoor-just unless they are barn cats, but I know many people let their cats outside. Exercise you retrieve it is possible to teach cats to await both ways for cars?

I feel like it might be. You'd accept to use a harness and practice crossing the street over and over, looking both ways every fourth dimension. I haven't tried this then I don't know. Curious if anyone's cat looks both ways or if anyone has tried this.

  • #2

susanm9006

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Nope. I think they don't have proficient enough vision to gauge the speed of oncoming traffic. I grew upward in the country with outdoor cats. #i cause of expiry, usually by age three was getting hit by a car. Even the ones who made it a couple of years longer somewhen were hit.

  • #3

ReallySleepy

My cat would accept been expressionless many times over if it weren't for the very considerate drivers in this country. On these suburban roads, most of them drive "similar swine", every bit we say, merely they are extremely cautious if there are kids or animals on the route.

The best example, couple of years ago: Turbo was playing with a mouse by the road. A car collection by, and the mouse darted beyond the route but in front end of the car. What did Turbo exercise? You guessed it: he ran later on the mouse. It does not even assist to accept nine lives, because he has done this way more than than nine times.

In short, no, I don't think yous can teach cats to look both ways, and certainly not when chasing a mouse.

  • #4
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My true cat Butterscotch crossed our road thousands of times safely for many years, simply he got hit by a truck and killed. So no matter how careful they are, it can still happen.

  • #5

abyeb

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I don't remember so- it when I've seen outdoor cats crossing the street (fortunately in my neighborhood, drivers are very conscientious), their "fight or flight" kicks into high gear, and they simply cull to run. Cats are also optimized for more than "close up" hunting, like stalking a mouse; they're not smashing at judging farther distances.

  • #6

Levioosa

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I've actually seen cats look both way earlier crossing the street, but those have been the odd very savvy feral cats. But I kind of doubt you could train it to be completely prophylactic. You could probably go the "beliefs" of looking both ways down, just like PPs have mentioned, they wouldn't be able to safely gauge the speed of cars/distance/etc. By and large I see cats encounter the street without looking at all. Sadly, in our surface area I see a couple kitties a calendar month who have lost the race against a vehicle.

  • #seven

Blakeney Green

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I accept to say no on this one. Cats rely too much on instinct, and if they are following a casualty animal or being chased by a perceived predator, for example, their hardwired behaviors will take over and they aren't going to finish and engage in a learned beliefs of checking the street for vehicles.

I'm also non certain exactly how you would model the behavior. The cat can't see where the homo is looking due to the height divergence, and so it would be hard to go the true cat to imitate you. I suppose you could physically plough the cat's head or pull them to the left and right with the leash, but I don't call up the cat would understand the signal of this annoyance or pick upward the habit of doing and then themselves.

I don't think there is any human intervention for this besides keeping pets out of the roadway.

  • #eight

danteshuman

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Also what about cars that start? Chester our semi-feral hangs out in the drive way. However he runs the moment a car starts.... a trait I'm glad he has. Because our older cat that passed abroad got striking by a motorcar (we think when a neighbor was pulling out of the driveway) I am beyond grateful that he is skittish of cars. We didn't train him for that. He came that way.

  • #ix

DreamerRose

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No, cats won't always learn well-nigh cars, and that goes for the ones that are parked. They similar to climb upwardly on the engine where information technology's warm so get plastered when the cars get-go. I personally know of two cats that died this way.

  • #10
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Living out in the country, I take seen cats literally look both ways before leaping out across the road. Other cats aren't then lucky and end upwardly as roadkill.

  • #11

rubysmama

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I don't know if information technology's possible to teach them to await both ways, but I practice believe some cats become "street smart" after a while.

We had a family true cat back in the 80's who lived to well-nigh 20 years old. She was indoor/outdoor her whole life and I remember seeing her stop at the side of the street earlier crossing. Not sure if she was looking or listening, but I do think she recognized at that place was danger. We too think she might have gotten grazed past a automobile in one case, as she came abode with what the vet referred to every bit "road burn" and so maybe she was lucky and learned from that experience.

We as well had another young cat hit and killed by a car, so I know the dangers of roads and cars.

And with my current cat, Crimson, I'm grateful she doesn't desire to go out, because I've seen her almost run across the wall when she's chasing a brawl, so I fearfulness she'd also encounter the street without looking if she was chasing something.

Source: https://thecatsite.com/threads/can-cats-be-taught-to-look-for-cars-before-crossing-the-street.349297/

Posted by: boozeyoring40.blogspot.com

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