Can cats be raised as pets? Why not take a look

 8:47am, 7 July 2025

Many people think that cats are like humans, and they can be freely raising and letting go because they need freedom. In fact, doing so will bring some safety hazards to cats and pose a great threat to cats' growth and development. So can cats be freely raising as pets? What problems will free-range raise bring to cats?

Cats cannot control their outdoor activities when they are free-range. They shuttle between the woods and grasses. When they are hungry, they will pick up unhealthy food on the roadside or in the garbage dump, causing their bodies to be covered with parasites such as fleas, lice, mites, etc.; or they are infected with infectious diseases such as cat plague (detailed introduction), cat AIDS, peritonitis, or diet rot and poisonous food, which leads to parasite diseases such as gastroenteritis, tapeworms, roundworms, etc.; they seriously endanger the health of the cat and its owner.

Free-raised breeding methods are absolutely unhealthy for cats and will increase the number of stray cats in society. Free-range cats will not control mating by themselves when they are in heat. Cats will choose to mating with stray cats and then breed outdoors, and the newly born cat cubs will find it difficult to escape the fate of strays. Gradually, stray cats in society will increase several times, bringing pressure to social ecological balance.

In addition, cats are easily lost when they are free-range, especially in the city's high-rise buildings. Cats are easily lost in the city's prosperity and can no longer find their way home. At the same time, free-range cats will be arrested, slaughtered and eaten by illegal cat dealers. Moreover, cats can easily lead to car accidents and lose their lives by passing through busy streets.