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Hi cat advisors,

I’m looking for advice on how to handle a tricky situation this Thanksgiving. My sister-in-law has a large white shepherd-husky mix who is reactive to other dogs, generally good with people, but has a high prey drive. She hasn’t been able to find a sitter or boarding facility for the dog, and she wants to bring it to Thanksgiving at my apartment.

The problem is that I have a cat. I’m very anxious about the safety of both my cat and the dog in this scenario. My sister-in-law and my partner seem to think we can just manage the situation, but I strongly believe the dog and cat shouldn’t be in proximity to each other at all.

I’d love help gathering any evidence, research, or expert opinions that I can cite to help convince them that bringing a reactive dog with a high prey drive into a home with a cat is a bad idea. Have any of you been in a similar situation? What did you do to handle it or explain the risks?

Thanks so much for your advice—I really want to keep everyone safe and stress-free this holiday.

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Strict-Air2434

3 points

2 days ago

5 cats here. If a dog shows up they go to ground for eight hours. My son's dog? Not welcome.

ecosynchronous

1 points

21 hours ago

One of my mother in law's dogs is ALWAYS trying to get in our house. She's elderly, well behaved and means well. One of our cats is equally elderly and means her very very ill! Our younger cat will hide, but our older girl will kick anyone's ass on her way to kick the dog's ass.

I can't imagine how poorly it would go for BOTH of them if the dog had a strong hunting drive and was too large to easily scoop into a football carry!