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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to stop next doors sick cat coming into my garden?

219 replies

GardenCatHorror · 08/09/2025 21:42

Neighbours (retired couple in their 80s) have a cat and a dog. Our gardens have quite tall fences and there has been a hole in a low fence panel for quite a few years that their cat has used to come between our two gardens. We are both mid terrace houses and our gardens are functional but not big.

Their cat poos in our garden all the time. It was always in this same dirt spot under a tree, so I just cleaned it up and didn't make a fuss about it because I understand that's kind of what cats do. I would rather the cat wasn't in our garden as I have young kids who I have to keep away from the part of the garden it was using as a toilet, but I have never once said anything to the neighbours complaining. Our garden is functional but not fancy. We usually get along well enough- they look after our houseplants while we go away, take in parcels. I have given them a sign in to our netflix etc.

We have been away for two weeks, and then there was bad weather, so yesterday was the first day we were outside hoping to enjoy our garden in close to a month. Their cat has clearly gotten very sick. There was about twenty piles of cat poo on our lawn, many appear to be bad diarrhea, we couldn't let our kids onto the lawn at all to play and spent nearly an hour cleaning everything from this cat/ trying to scoop up the chunks and cut away all the dirty grass, along with some more over by the tree and a bit on the gravel. The grass has grown a little long lately (top of an ankle boot height) so it was really hard to clean/ see. It was absolutely disgusting and really stunk. I blocked off the hole in the fence because I couldn't cope with having to clean a mess like that again.

I received a text from the neighbours today that their cat is very old and needs to be able to come into our garden and they didn't want to fall out over this, so they were letting us know they had opened up the hole into our garden again. I rang them to explain about the liquid poo on our grass and said I wasn't comfortable with the cat coming over anymore. Neighbour then told me the cat is only an outside cat now and fairly feral, and needs to be able to leave her garden when her dog goes outside or the dog will hurt her. Apparently the cat being able to come into our garden and just go into theirs to get food when the dog is shut away has been the cats living situation for a while. Noone ever asked us! Cat is too old to climb fences apparently.

I explained my concern with the poo I couldn't clean up around my young kids and another relative who is undergoing chemo. I never said anything nasty, I never called her a name, I never made a threat. I was just trying to be firm. I said I needed to talk to my husband about it after hearing what she'd been saying about her cat being unsafe in her garden and about this sickness likely being permanent for the rest of the cats life due to old age/ kidney problems. But then she's been sending some really hurtful text messages accusations saying I am clearly having 'Karen' moments, that I should 'stop upsetting two pensioners with health problems', that I should 'let it go' 'that I have mental issues going on if I'm upset about their cat (she knows my parent has terminal cancer so I'm going through an emotionally draining time), that I better not hurt their cat (I have never hurt their cat!).

Honestly it's been so bad this afternoon I've just blocked them on my phone. Fence hole is currently unblocked, no sign of their cat before it got dark. I am both so upset I just want to block the fence up permanently and be done with them, but don't want to leave the cat in a dangerous position. Do I get my husband to text? Do I just ignore them and carry on cleaning up after the damn cat? Do I sprinkle pepper on our lawn?

They have been kind neighbours in the past so i would probably have just put up with it once she told me about the dog being unsafe around the cat, but then these nasty texts started. AIBU if I block up the fence and blow up neighbourly relations for good?

OP posts:
Thread gallery
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Flakey99 · 10/09/2025 08:35

The poor cat. I’m a cat person and if I knew they were ill treating it this way (they definitely are!), I’d wait for it to come into my garden and put it in a box and take it to a vet for treatment or more likely to be PTS.

They are selfish and using their ages as an excuse for animal cruelty!

GAJLY · 10/09/2025 08:43

Omg just read your update! I suppose you could either leave the cat where it is, or open the hole and seal it (but the dog may hurt it) or take it to the vets and explain its been abandoned onto your property (but it may be put to sleep or live out it's last days in the rescue centre, as can't imagine people adopting such an elderly cat. Do you think the cat has long left?

AlaskaThunderfuckHiiiiiiiii · 10/09/2025 09:54

OP none of this is your problem. Their pets their problem and I couldn’t muster up a fudge to give about any of it to be honest, I’d have had my DH out there the first time I found cat 💩 and the way in and wouldn’t have let it go on this long

to be fair though I have had so many issues with cat crap in my gardens of previous houses and no they do not bury it as I’ve caught them in the act. Thankfully house I’m in now is on a main road and no one has cats apart from the farm cats I rarely see.

cat owners should have to either keep them indoors or build a catio or enclosure in their own gardens before being allowed a cat. No space for a catio? Don’t get a cat it really is that simple instead of forcing your choice of pet on everyone else

GardenCatHorror · 10/09/2025 09:55

Richtea67 · 09/09/2025 19:10

OP apologies if this has already been mentioned as not rtft, but a motion activated sprinkler was the only thing that stopped our neighbours car shitting on our lawn. The cat only got sprayed once and never returned again...but we kept the sprinkler in the ground (off) and it's continued to be a deterrent. It's initially a pain having to remember to turn it off whenever you or the kids go in the garden...but the cat gets the message very quickly. Hopefully blocking the hole solves the issue, but in case the cat finds another way through, I would highly recommend.

Thank you- this is definitely something I am considering if we do returf our lawn as it got ruined by the foxes last time before it could properly grow in. The reason it wouldn't have been ideal here is the grass area the cat was toileting on was where we hang our washing- and we use our washing line daily if its a dry day and sometimes leave overnight. I assume the clothes would just set off water jets on themselves!

OP posts:
Lovelyladiesarenotinsecure · 10/09/2025 11:03

I’d suggest it was foxes as cats don’t just go in the middle of grass. They hide and bury it - it’s instinctive and habitual behaviour. I get they maybe don’t do this with diarrhoea but you’ve said this was only one time and the rest of the time it’s solid. My cat goes in my garden but I never see it - completely buried out of sight.

Jimmyneutronsforehead · 10/09/2025 11:34

I don't understand this assumption that all healthy cats bury their poo.

I've had cats, and at one point every bloody cat on the street chose our garden to meet up at for a raunchy time, and I don't think I ever saw any of them do more than a few kicks backwards scuffling up the lawn. Not a single one was good at hiding the fact that they'd done a shit.

It was so bloody infuriating, especially as by that point we didn't have any cats of our own.

They might bury it better in a litter tray but they certainly didn't go out of their way to hide their presence.

HerewardtheSleepy · 10/09/2025 11:40

Sorry, voted YABU by mistake.

I have now put my glasses on.

GardenCatHorror · 10/09/2025 11:48

UPDATE-

So the cat was blocked out of its garden all night and the block was still in place this morning. The cat was hanging out at the hole this morning trying to get back through (likely looking for food poor thing) and I tried helping it by putting a broom through the hole to push the wire fence she'd used out of the way, but it didn't budge at all- she'd really fortified it from her side. It was raining too and there is no proper shelter for it in our garden.

There was another poo pile on our grass this morning. I don't think the cat is sick anymore though, the poo looks very normal again. Visually it looks cared for and healthy too.

I asked my husband to send a text- it said 'I can see the cat is in our garden and you have blocked it from returning home. If your cat is still unable to return home by 3pm we will be reporting it to the RSPCA as abandoned. FYI the poor thing is probably starving as the food you left out was found by the foxes' and then block their number in his phone as I didn't want him getting any abuse back.

He took the kids on the school run and they laid in wait for him to return to shout abuse at him in the street. 'Fucking Cunts' featured again, heavily. Husband didn't say a word in return. I've asked him to record the verbal abuse it if it happens again.

The threat of the RSPCA report seemed to work as they let the cat go home and we have drilled in a board to mend the fence.

I made a note of the verbal abuse with the police on 101 saying I know it seems like nothing at the moment, I just want it recorded formally in case they retaliate later on because they are so unreasonably angry about this mended fence that i wouldn't put it past them to make a malicious report.

AIBU to stop next doors sick cat coming into my garden?
AIBU to stop next doors sick cat coming into my garden?
OP posts:
GardenCatHorror · 10/09/2025 12:01

Lovelyladiesarenotinsecure · 10/09/2025 11:03

I’d suggest it was foxes as cats don’t just go in the middle of grass. They hide and bury it - it’s instinctive and habitual behaviour. I get they maybe don’t do this with diarrhoea but you’ve said this was only one time and the rest of the time it’s solid. My cat goes in my garden but I never see it - completely buried out of sight.

This cat has never buried its poo. I have seen it pooing on several occasions in our garden and it just walks away 😂We do get occasional fox poo (primarily on the concrete patio oddly enough) and it looks quite different - very dark/ almost black and long and skinny whereas these poos are mid to light brown. I grew up with cats and these read like cat poo to me instinctively... but I am always open to being told I'm wrong! Pic attached

AIBU to stop next doors sick cat coming into my garden?
OP posts:
GardenCatHorror · 10/09/2025 12:19

seratoninmoonbeams · 10/09/2025 08:03

Am I being thick? Disclaimer….I quite often am 😆 the photo looks like the orange cat bowl is on the other side of the metal mesh. So as if the photo is taken from Peggy’s side?

Sorry it was a photo I'd taken for my husband to see the fence she'd installed before it got dark yesterday, it wasn't the clearest to see the bowl. I attached a still of the video I took today to document that the fence wouldn't budge or let the cat through, you can see the bowl clearer in that. It's definitely on 'my side' of her divide.

OP posts:
Scully01 · 10/09/2025 12:21

What absolute cunts. So bizarre.

Whyherewego · 10/09/2025 12:24

Omg awful

seratoninmoonbeams · 10/09/2025 12:25

@GardenCatHorror 😮 re your update. Unreal how people can turn in an instant. Horrible. It’s horrible having any fall out with neighbours too isn’t it because it’s constant. My query with the photo was not me questioning you or the story at all. Just me being a bit dim as usual. I really hope things quieten down now that the cat is on the correct side of the fence and hopefully feeling better.

GardenCatHorror · 10/09/2025 12:26

Delphiniumandlupins · 10/09/2025 00:18

Seems she thinks the cat is, or at least could be, in your garden. Maybe the wire isn't securely fixed so she can put more food down? It's very weird behaviour. I don't think you've mentioned the husband, has it just been her being abusive?

They could erect some kind of cat enclosure in their own garden, to keep the cat safe from their dog. Foxes in your garden (and the other neighbours') could also be a danger to the cat, if it can no longer climb.

Husband is the main one shouting the abuse outside and over the fence, and the one who was waiting for my husband to do the school run this morning to continue it. She is the one who was texting it. They are both over 80 but he is still a tall, broad man (and physically about a foot taller than my husband). Although we are not worried about him doing anything like a physical attack he is more intimidating/ has more physical presence than you might expect from a pensioner.

OP posts:
LivingWithANob · 10/09/2025 13:41

Film them next time. Do they have family visit?

Coldnightsapproachingwhereismyduvet · 10/09/2025 13:44

Report every incident to the police.
Never too old for a ASBO...
That poor bloody dcat.

GardenCatHorror · 10/09/2025 15:26

The cat came back... climbed over the fence, chilled in our garden for an hour or so and then climbed the fence back to next door 😂😂

I guess he's gotten the last laugh?

OP posts:
Swiftie1878 · 10/09/2025 15:29

GardenCatHorror · 10/09/2025 15:26

The cat came back... climbed over the fence, chilled in our garden for an hour or so and then climbed the fence back to next door 😂😂

I guess he's gotten the last laugh?

😂 so funny. He was faking helplessness to get the ‘prince of cats’ treatment.

Coldnightsapproachingwhereismyduvet · 10/09/2025 17:36

Hopefully next opportunity he shits on their pillows..

Glittertwins · 10/09/2025 17:51

Would need to do it in the middle of the night from OP’s side even though it’s her fence and she can do what she likes with it. Just make sure the cat is on the right side of it first!!

BettysRoasties · 10/09/2025 17:55

So it was just a lazy old cat all along.

I wonder if the crazy neighbours might suddenly start being nice again randomly when they realise they fucked up and their cat doesn’t need a hole in the fence and their bat shit behaviour was all for nothing.

OhNoNotSusan · 10/09/2025 18:26

i was going to ask if he could climb the fence,
what ridiculous neighbours you have, Cunts they are!

SaratogaFilly · 10/09/2025 19:03

BettysRoasties · 10/09/2025 17:55

So it was just a lazy old cat all along.

I wonder if the crazy neighbours might suddenly start being nice again randomly when they realise they fucked up and their cat doesn’t need a hole in the fence and their bat shit behaviour was all for nothing.

I wondered the same?! I’d go down the sprinkler route now as there’s no way I’d be letting it into my garden after their shenanigans!

[Also wonder if they’ve erected something on their side to help the cat climb the fence?!]

Matsukaze · 10/09/2025 19:09

SaratogaFilly · 10/09/2025 19:03

I wondered the same?! I’d go down the sprinkler route now as there’s no way I’d be letting it into my garden after their shenanigans!

[Also wonder if they’ve erected something on their side to help the cat climb the fence?!]

Cat managed to get back over the fence to get back to it's own garden though!

Must admit, this revelation has amused me. Typical cat behaviour!

I'm sorry that it doesn't stop OP's problem of cat shitting in the garden, however.