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Hey Julian,..I've had pretty good luck putting strips of duct tape, sticky side up all over the hood, trunk, and top. Only takes a couple of times before they understand it's gonna be unpleasant to get up there.
Doesn't do any lasting damage to the pussycat, which keeps "lovely, darling" wife from going ballistic.
Good luck Bob
That sounds about right. My family owned cats all the time when I was a kid. Our experience was that we could never really train a cat not to do something, the best we could do was train the cat not do it while your around.
A PRACTICAL answer is to take SMALL <- emphasis on SMALL -mouse traps and put index cards or playing cards on the arms and on the bases. When kitty hops up on the top....snap, snap, snap and scared kitty runs. Plus you have an alarm system to notify you. This also works for counter tops and other surfaces where kitty is not to go. It won't hurt the cat, mainly scare it. I have used this with my cats and my small dog who thinks it's cute to lie on the kitchen table! Darn dog thinks he's an honorary cat!! LoL
My (our) big ol' fat cat goes for the bonnet. He's left his marks. My understanding wife made a bonnet cover out of a wool blanket that has a pocket across the top that I can slip onto the open bonnet and then lower, but not lock it.
I don't mind if he lays his fat butt on the tonneau and the boot has a luggage rack that he finds uncomfortable apparently. Wife says "he's just a baby". Huumph.
Funny, ours loves the stuff, especially if its rolled up into a ball. He'll play with it for hours. Lay a sheet on the floor and he goes nuts playing with it.
Ours will stick his face into a burning candle. Burns his eyebrow whiskers right off. Never even flinches. Swung his tail into a candle flame one time and singed the tip of his tail. I smelled the burning hair and looked over at him just sitting there, with his tail smoking, looking back at me. No reaction that time either. Most things don't bother him, if you try and scare him he usually attacks instead of running away. If you succeed at scaring him, he gets even later. Since we have lots of Raccoon's and Foxes in our neighborhood, and the occasional Coyote. We have decided that the cat will stay inside all the time and we will have the cat de-clawed to save furniture and our shins. I keep him out of the garage as well to keep him away from my cars.
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