I’ve got a cat who recently started using one of our litter boxes while facing the wrong way, so the nasty cat poop falls on the floor instead of in the box. Box is covered with just opening to get in/out, so other cats go in and turn around to face outside.
How do I get this one cat to turn around again?
PS never had problems until box broke (self-cleaning model) and sent for repairs. Came back, then cat started pooping “outside the box”.
I’ve heard some people putting up a piece of duct tape horizontally across the opening high enough so it has to be stepped over, so the cat has to either be in or out. Worth a try.
They make top-entry litterboxes, which are essentially a rubbermaid container with a lid with a hole in it. They cost like $60 though, so you can just do what we did: get a regular rubbermaid container, remove the lid, and use it as the litterbox. Same result, but for about $5. The walls should be high enough to catch any poop or pee, but the cat should still be able to jump in and out without any problem.
I haven’t had the problem, but I do have the problem of the cats tracking litter out of the boxes. So I bought this igloo-looking domed box with steps that wind around from the let to an enclosed entrance, that way most of the litter on their paws gets caught by the steps, and they can’t do any business anywhere but in the litter.
This worked for me too. One of my former cats was 20 years old and getting very feeble. During the last few months of his life, all four paws would be inside the box, but his ass end would hang over the edge. A deeper box was the solution.
Actually, I have one of those - it’s by Booda but it’s one step above the Booda Dome. I got it because my dog likes to eat cat shit, so I had to get a damned spiral staircase for the cats.
From the pics it looks fairly small, as if the cat has to have his head out of the box in order to line up correctly. If I’ve got that right, he may be feeling too exposed in that position. You might try taping a cloth of some sort around the top of the entrance, so that his head is safely in the enclosure while he goes.