I got a weird problem involving both of my cats (Siegfrieda, to the left; Kika, to the right).

Kika is rather particular about having her own litterbox(es), and refuses to use a litterbox shared by another cat. Frieda on the other hand is adept to the “if I fits, I sits, I shits” philosophy, and is totally OK sharing litterboxes.

That creates a problem: no matter if properly and regularly cleaned, the only one using litterboxes here is Frieda. We had, like, five of them at once; and Kika would still rather do her business on the patio.

How do I either teach Kika “it’s fine to share a litterbox”, or teach Siegfrieda “that’s Kika’s litterbox, leave it alone”?

  • @Heavybell
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    267 months ago

    Probably a dumb suggestion but… I know you can get cat feeders that will detect your cat’s microchip and only let them in. I wonder if you could get a litterbox that uses similar tech to only open for Kika?

    • ubergeek77
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      157 months ago

      This was the first thing that came up in a search. Looks like there’s a few sizes too:

      https://meowspace.biz/product/meowspace-microchip-system/

      It looks pretty pricey, but considering microchip pet doors on their own cost about that much, this seems like a cheaper option than DIYing some contraption involving a microchip pet door.

      Look around for this kind of stuff OP! It exists!

      • FuglyDuck
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        7 months ago

        I mean I could probably do it with around 100 bucks in hardware….

        Convincing the CIA or NSA or FBI or half a dozen alphabet soup agencies that you really need their facial recognition code in a FOIA request…. That’s both priceless and probably expensive at the same time.

        Probably easier to just do some machine learning stuff. Cat recognition, no chips needed.

      • @SkyezOpen
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        17 months ago

        Op might need some electrical engineering but I’m fairly certain there’s a homemade solution using an rfid tag on a collar.