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    Training Your Cat to Use a Toilet

    She can use the toilet...and flush.
    By David Aaron Moore, Networx

    The thought of a feline urinating on a ceramic bowl generally reserved for the passing of human waste seems to conjure up endless reams of laughter among most individuals - both cat lovers and non.

    Call it toilet humor if you like and throw in a joke or two about scatology if you feel so inclined, but for many cat lovers, teaching their four-legged friend how to use a toilet like us humans is serious business. "There are issues to consider when you have a kitty that uses a traditional litter box," says Richard Johnson, a cat owner who lives in Houston, Texas. "It's important to stay on top of it constantly. That's why I chose to toilet train my cat."

    Feline fecal matter, especially when mixed with moisture from cat urine and traditional clay-based cat litter can potentially become a veritable breeding ground for bacteria. It's easily tracked out of the litter box, throughout the house and can ultimately be harmful to humans and other pets.

    Depending on whom you talk with and your individual cat, toilet training for felines can be a breeze or a hellish, screeching, claw-fest nightmare. "My efforts attempting to train a mixed breed stray that I adopted after he showed up at my door one day was a miserable failure," recalls Montreal resident Thomas Monture. "I tried the method everyone suggested, but my cat Pierre just never really caught on. Perhaps he was too old, or maybe he just wasn't clever enough. Every time we broached the subject it began and ended badly. Eventually, I just gave up."

    Although Monture's efforts with Pierre were a failure, that doesn't have to be the case if you decide it's time for your furry buddy to use indoor plumbing just like the rest of the household. "Some cats just aren't as smart as others," says Deborah Tiganila, the owner and operator of Aristocat Bengal, a Bengal Cattery and obedience school in Charlotte, N.C.

    "It can be difficult if the cats aren't bright, but I think any cat can eventually be taught to use a toilet instead of a litter box," said Tiganila, who once worked for the CIA and trained dogs. She said, "I use the same method to train the cats as I did with dogs. It is better to start younger, but you want to avoid accidental falls into the toilet bowl." Like with dogs, "You demonstrate and repeat. When they learn the behavior properly you reward them with a treat or a snack, just like you would a dog."

    Tiganila concedes that the cats she specializes in - Bengals - have an advantage in the learning curve when it comes to toilet training. "In the wild, Bengals naturally gravitate towards water when they need to pass fluids or waste, because they want to hide their scent."

    That would explain everything for another Charlotte resident, Shannon Eury, who adopted a stray Bengal kitten she found in her neighborhood. "I live in a house full of women, so we were constantly mystified as to why no one was flushing and there was urine in the toilet, but no tissue," she laughs. "Then one day we were in the living room and there was the sound of peeing coming from the downstairs half-bath underneath the stairwell."

    After exploring the sound, she and her housemates discovered their adopted Bengal pal, Safari, squatting on the toilet urinating. "It was just about the funniest sight I've ever seen," she recalls. "We didn't train him at all. He just picked it up on his own."

    Tiganila said, "It's instinct. But with any cat, you have to take the time. Take them with you when you go to the restroom. They're smart and they'll figure it out. Let them sit in your lap. With Bengals, it's hardly a challenge at all."

    For less toilet-inclined kitties, there is a set procedure to follow. Start off by gradually moving their standard litter pan closer and closer to the toilet. Then it's time to take the big step - move their focus from the floor pan to the toilet bowl. There are various types of kits available. Most involve placing a shallow pan filled with litter, which sits between the toilet seat and the ceramic bowl rim. The amount of litter is gradually reduced over time until the pan is removed entirely and the cat becomes comfortable with the human john as its primary site for potty time.

    "And for all cats, even teaching them to flush is pretty easy," says Tiganila. "They want to scratch and cover after they use the toilet, so you take that instinct and transfer it over to flushing. Just place their paw on the handle and push. It's all repetition and continuity.

    "After they learn it, though, you might want to keep an eye on them for awhile. I read a story about a couple who taught their cat how to use the toilet and then later couldn't understand why their water bill had suddenly become so expensive. It turns out the cat was so entertained by flushing the toilet and watching the water swirl away, it spent most of the day doing just that while they were away at work."

    If you choose to tackle the effort, the keys (in print, anyway) are simple: love, patience and consistency. All my best to you and your feline friend!

    David Aaron Moore is a Networx writer. Get home & garden ideas like this on Networx.

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    • profpbudee  •  3 months ago
      so now i gotta go but the cats on the toilet so i gotta use the litter box
      • Brittany M 3 months ago
        just wipe your feet when u r done
      • Dennis 2 months ago
        can you just imagine getting up at 3 am to go, and there's the cat sitting on the throne with a copy of Cat Fancy staring at the centerfold tabby?
    • quilbilly80  •  Olympia, Washington  •  2 months ago
      don't think my cat Tuna is trainable.......the toilet is her favorite source of cold drinking water, lol
      • JAFO001 2 months ago
        I'm reminded of an old Garry Shandling routine, about the look your dog gives you when you use the bathroom.

        "Hey, stop that! I drink out of that thing!"

        Well, it was funny at the time... ;-)
      • quilbilly80 2 months ago
        exactly, lol
    • A. Chaya  •  3 months ago
      While I think the comments about it being "gross" are a bit ridiculous (It's a friggin cat. It's butt is all over your house the rest of the day and nothing is stopping it from burying its poop and then putting its paws all over your pillows), it's actually illegal to flush cat litter and cat feces in California because a disease in it kills the sea otters.
      You should probably mention this in the article, really.
      • Obama Ate my Homework 3 months ago
        Finally someone else with some common sense. The parasite Toxoplasma Gondii can also have serious impact on human beings (see my earlier post).
        I think when Arnie was Der Governator he increased the fine to $25,000 - that is one expensive kitty poop.
      • trudy 3 months ago
        I have NEVER heard of it being illegal to flush cat po, any idiot know you don't flus the litter
      • Bea 2 months ago
        What's the best way to dispose of cat poo?
    • Mariah  •  3 months ago
      "You demonstrate and repeat. When they learn the behavior properly you reward them with a treat or a snack, just like you would a dog." Demonstrate and repeat? How would you demonstrate that for your ca... oh. That's kind of weird. Do you think they understand what you're doing? ;)
      • Sarah 3 months ago
        They do! Once we were moving and packed the litter box...and our kitty had to pee. She was flipping out so we put her in the sink and turned the water on in the adjacent sink, and she got it and peed. Later, at our new place we learned she was peeing in the sink instead of her litter box, but would still poo in the litter box lol.
      • Mariah 2 months ago
        OMG, that's a riot! Smart kitty, too!
      • RedMan 2 months ago
        My cat will sit and watch me, then when I'm done will go to his litter box and do his thing. My wife won't enter for about a half hour. lol
    • GBT723  •  Houston, Texas  •  2 months ago
      Noooo! Toilet is mine, litterbox is my cats, backyard is my dogs.
    • johanna  •  Meriden, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
      True story - a former neighbor trained her Siamese cat to use the toilet and flush it too! Now the cat (Siamese are pretty smart cats) decided she liked flushing the toilet just for the hell of it...need I say more? That cat flushed the toilet constantly.
      • Mariah 3 months ago
        That's hysterical!
      • Dwight 3 months ago
        I saw one like that on you tube. Now my cats, ( 3 of them ) get scared when the toilet is flushed. They run like heck. They even run when they see me getting ready to flush the toilet. No way they will do that. Winter time they like the litter box. Summer time they like my flowers. Boooooo.....
      • TheEndOfObamagedden 3 months ago
        I'd have the same problem. One of our cats will follow you into the can every day. When you're done he has his face up there to watch the water swirl when the can flushes. It's funny when he doesn't get there in time to beat the door, as soon as you open the bathroom door he charges up to the toilet meowing loudly. He won't stop until you put a piece of paper in the toilet and flush.
    • *Smile*  •  2 months ago
      I had a Siamese cat that taught itself how to use the toilet. Didn't learn how to flush it though but hey I'm not complaining 'cause anything beats having that stinking litter box in the house and poop in their claws. Only problem was when some human family member had to go real quick. Had to hold it til the queen got off her throne!.
    • janmarie  •  3 months ago
      it would never work for my cats one is almost 20 one is so fat she fall in the other 2 do not take orders LOL. nice concept thugh.
    • Lo  •  3 months ago
      I'd heard of potty training cats, but dogs? I wish!
    • Procrastinating  •  3 months ago
      We had a cat that did this without training. I heard running water in the bathroom and thought I had left the sink on - turns out the cat was taking a wee in the toilet!
    • An A.C. Resident  •  3 months ago
      I would think you would have to have sanitizing wipes handy for the seat each time you wanted to use it. We once had a cat that would pee over the bathtub drain, weird cat.
    • Dani  •  Gloucester, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
      We trained our cat to use the guest bathroom toilet....it was one of the best things ever. We didn't use the bathroom often anyway so we didn't have any issues with it "getting in our way." We put his litter box close to the toilet for starters. Then we used a turkey roasting pan with a little bit of that newspaper pellet litter and cut holes in the pan larger and larger every few days. He eventually got used to the sound of his waste going into the water and lack of smell. Still happy and I flush it every night!
    • Yumietreat  •  2 months ago
      Cats using the toilet is awesome.
    • Dale Bird  •  2 months ago
      This was a most enlightening article! Now I know why my wife wants me to use the litter box!
    • Joel  •  2 months ago
      Can you train a pet lion to do that?
    • Zeno  •  2 months ago
      I trained my adult Maine #$%$ Cat to use the toilet. The cat seemed to prefer the toilet over the litter box. I just couldn't get her to stop trying to "bury" the wastes. She scratched up the toilet seat. If I ever got another cat, I would train it from the start to use the toilet.
    • Loki  •  3 months ago
      It seems PlainJane hasn't heard of Advantage or FrontLine...ya know, medicine that stops cats from getting fleas?

      How about you keep your tooth brush away from your toilet...after all when you flush your stir up nasty stuff into the air.
    • GulfWarVet  •  2 months ago
      My cat takes a crap in the toilet and reads the sports page at the same time! She refuses to flush the crapper when finished, but she does return the newspaper to the living room coffee table!
    • ShopperBen  •  2 months ago
      there are cats that will decide to do the unconventional and no one can force a cat to learn them.
    • Celewen  •  Findlay, Ohio  •  2 months ago
      You should never, ever flush cat feces down the toilet. The protozoa Toxoplasma gondii (the reason pregnant women should take precautions when cleaning out the litter box) in encapsulated and cannot be filtered by conventional waste water treatment plants. This means it goes right back into the water supply. Toxo causes mental alterations, malaise, promiscuous actions, and abortions in humans, and many of the same problems in cats. Really cool disease, if you're into that kind of thing, but still a very legitimate concern. Moral of the story: just clean out the litter box.

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