Categories: Outdoor

How to Keep Outdoor Cats Warm in Winter

Published by
James marcus

The heat of summer is almost over and it’s starting to cool down now. It’s time to start thinking about how to keep outdoor cats warm in winter. Whether it’s barn cats, a feral cat colony, neighborhood community cats, or the stray cat you’ve found, you may want to consider helping our outdoor felines stay warm in winter.

Depending upon where you live, you may need to only provide a small shelter from the coldest days. If you live in areas that stay frozen the entire winter and into spring, you might have to get much more creative.

The ideas on how to keep outdoor cats warm in winter come from resources experience, fellow cat caretakers, and feral cat organizations. If you want to share your ideas on keeping cats warm whenever you are located, comment below! I’m always open to learning new ways of helping feral cats and their caretakers.

Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. I may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases, at no cost to you. Read the Affiliate Disclosure for full details.

Cats Need Shelter!

Perhaps the most important way to help outdoor cats stay warm in winter is to ensure that they have a shelter of some kind. If they have access to your shed, that’s a form of shelter. If they are working cats in a barn, then they have shelter. If they’re living under your mobile home, they’ll have shelter.

If they refuse your shed, are driving the neighbors up the wall climbing into their insulations from the basement, or they are located in an area without decent shelter, then you will want to build or buy the cats shelters.

This can be done as cheaply as needed or as pretty as you like, depending upon the what you want and what the cats need.

The DIY Option

You can build cat shelters out of anything!

DIY Shelter Ideas:

  • Plastic storage containers
  • Old refrigerators
  • Dog houses
  • Coolers
  • Plywood
  • Large faux rocks
  • Camper toppers
  • Sheds
  • Beneath your porch
  • Donated lumber scraps
  • Cardboard boxes

The possibilities are endless!

You can line these makeshift shelters with things like Reflectix or foam sheets from a home improvement store or layer a container within a container and fill the ‘walls’ with straw or foam insulation sheets. You might want to consider caulking any cracks and crevices cold air can get into the shelter as well or even wrap the whole thing in plastic bags, except for the entrance.

You can then fill the container with straw so that the cat has a nice cozy and water-resistant bed to curl up in.

You can find instructions online from Alley Cat Allies or Alley Cat Advocates or even on Pinterest!

Here’s a video of one of the easiest DIY cat shelters you can build.

Cat Man Chris Explains How to Build a Feral Cat Shelter
Buy Option

What if you want a pretty shelter for your yard or barn? What if you just don’t want or can’t build one on your own? What if money isn’t a problem? Then you can buy an outdoor cat shelter like the Kitty Tube. Or whatever aesthetically pleasing cat house you want.

There are many options to choose from and what you should purchase will depend upon where you live, what you like, where you want to put the cat shelter, and the cats themselves.

If you want a heated shelter for inside the barn? If you want a heavy-duty one for super cold weather that will last a while? What about pretty houses for your yard? The choices are endless.

You can find my favorite designs at my article about the 9 Best Outdoor Cat Shelters for Winter.

Give Them Access to Buildings

You can also add cat doors to your garage, basement windows, sheds, or tack rooms to give the cats access to buildings. These cat doors can range from a simple cat flap to a microchip-activated cat door if you microchip your colony or working cats. Just don’t forget a litter box!

Heck, you can build them their own small shed if you want to house multiple cats in an enclosure and build your own little feral cat sanctuary.

Shelter Placement is Important Too!

Where you put your cat shelters is just as important in how cozy it is.

  1. Make sure the shelter is in an out-of-the-way place and not near busy roads or placed in areas with lots of foot traffic.
  2. Try to get the floor of the shelter off the ground. This can be accomplished by putting it on something like a pallet, cinderblocks, bricks, or even layering shelters by putting a smaller one inside a bigger one, or you can purchase some that are elevated.
  3. Keep the shelter protected from wind and snow as much as possible, either by placing under trees, against the house, under your porch, etc.
Should You Use Door Flaps?

Door flaps are useful to help keep heat from escaping a shelter and discouraging wildlife, but it also sometimes discourages the cats themselves.

You can try to use door flaps on DIY cat shelters by building one into it or you can buy a shelter with the flap, but I would recommend removing it if it seems your cats don’t use it.

Don’t Forget the Insulation and Bedding

Wherever your barn cats or feral cat colony takes shelter, don’t forget to make sure it stays warms enough in that shelter. Don’t use space heaters (which are dangerous unattended) but you should make sure the shelter will actually be warm enough for them.

Whether you made your own shelter or bought one, you will want to add foam insulation sheets, Reflectix, or even straw and newspaper to insulate the shelter if possible. This is why they suggest putting one plastic storage tote inside a larger container. You can fill the space between the containers with an insulating material, like straw.

If your cat shelter is purchased and doesn’t have space you can fill with insulation, you can line the inside of the cat shelter with cardboard and foam insulation sheets or whatever insulation medium you can afford. Just be sure it’s safe for cats!

Lastly, you want the cats to have a comfortable and warm place to sleep inside that shelter, not a cold wooden floor.

If the cat shelter is outside, add straw. NOT hay. Straw. Hay absorbs moisture, gets soggy, and is prone to mold. Straw is much easier to keep dry. Don’t add newspaper, blankets, towels, cat beds, or really, anything else. You want straw. Moisture from the cat will drip to the bottom of the shelter and not be soaked into the bedding if you use straw.

Wet bedding doesn’t help cats stay warm. Wet bedding will also freeze, which is definitely NOT warm. Wet bedding will also turn moldy. Straw bedding will keep a cat much warmer.

If you can afford it, Mylar blankets cut to size and taped to the inside of the shelter are also an excellent way to help cats stay warm in their shelters and can be used instead of straw for insulation. I don’t believe they’ll make great bedding though, so you could line the shelter with mylar blankets and put straw on top of it.

For working cats with access to buildings and ferals with access to your porch or garage, I highly suggest investing in heated cat houses and self-warming cat beds. They’ll LOVE it and it’ll keep them much warmer. I wouldn’t recommend this for a feral cat colony living in the woods, but for working cats it’s perfect! Or even regular cat beds with barn heat lamps.

If they stay in the warehouse or barn most of the time, you can put what you want in the little houses or boxes they prefer sleeping in. Just be sure to check the bedding regularly to see if it is getting wet. If it is, change to straw.

Related Post: How to Care for a Barn Cat

Feed the Cats More and Feed Them Better

In winter, cats use up a lot more calories staying warm than they do during the summer. It’s not just ensuring they have fat layers to help keep themselves warm, although that definitely helps. It straight-up just takes more energy for cats to stay warm when it’s cold.

You can do this by simply feeding the cats more food, or more often, or better quality cat food in the winter. You can also add a lot of things in addition to their regular meals.

Ideas to ensure the cats get more calories in their diets (in ADDITION to their regular food), can include:

  • Wet food in addition or instead of the dry food as wet food has more nutrients and is easier to digest. Just be sure it doesn’t freeze!
  • Mix the regular dry food with kitten food (wet or dry)
  • Cooked meat such as shredded chicken
  • Bacon and hamburger grease or fat to their food.
  • High-calorie supplements such as Nutrical or if a cat is really in trouble, Purina Pro Plan’s Veterinary Diets Critical Nutrition (will require approval from your vet).
  • Beef or chicken liver or other high nutrient organs to their diets.
  • Feed them more often than normal.
  • Purchase better quality food for winter months that contain high percentages of protein and fat.

What you can do for your feral cats will depend upon your finances and how many you are caring for, of course.

Related Post: What is the Best Food for Outdoor Cats?

Heat Up Wet Food

By heating up wet food or using heated bowls, it’ll help a cold cat warm up pretty quickly. It’s like a human drinking hot tea, coffee or cocoa during winter months after coming inside from the cold. It feels just as good for cats to eat something warm and it takes less energy to digest than frozen wet food or dry food.

However, hot food will freeze faster than cold food, so don’t leave it out!

Access to Fresh Water

In winter, water bowls freeze easily. It’s really, really important that you figure out a way that the cats can have access to drinking water and not a block of ice in an aluminum bowl.

There are a number of ways to do this:

  • Refresh the water multiple times a day.
  • Water fountain (not recommended for extremely cold climates!)
  • Black livestock feed bins or other dark-colored bowls and keep them in an area with direct sunlight. Dark colors absorb heat best.
  • Deep bowls will not freeze as fast as wide bowls.
  • Heated bowls.
  • Silicone camping bowls can easily pop out the frozen water so that it can be replaced with fresh water.
  • Plastic bowls instead of metal as metal bowls will freeze faster.
  • Put a microwavable heating source under the bowls, such as a sock filled with rice or a Snuggle Safe to keep the water from freezing so fast.
  • Spray the underside of plastic bowls with spray insulation will help it take longer to freeze. (Not IN the bowl, on the outside)
  • If you use a spigot or faucet as a water source, keep the water running slightly into the bowl. Running water doesn’t freeze as fast as still water.

Don’t put hot or warm water outside for the cats. Hot water freezes faster than cold water does. (Yes, the old myth is TRUE, folks.) Heated water bowls are perfect as it provides a constant source of heat, but hot water alone will freeze faster.

Use a Cat Feeding Station

The purpose of building or buying a cat feeding station is to protect the cats and their food from the rain, snow, and other weather. There are many feeding stations you can build using a simple plastic storage container or if you’re good with woodworking, you can build a sturdy and pretty-looking feeding station. Check out Alley Cat Allies for instructions on how to build your own cat feeding station.

Or you can simply purchase one!

Related Post: Outside Cat Feeding Station Ideas

Alley Cat Allies’ DIY Feeding Station

Trap-Neuter-Return, Y’all!

There are a ton of benefits to spaying and neutering feral cats and only one of them is because it helps control the population.

Cats who are fixed are healthier overall. This may be because they’re no longer roaming miles looking for mates and fighting, they’re not in contact with multiple sick cats all of the time, spreading upper respiratory infections and worse. Fixed cats eat better and put on healthy weight.

Another big reason to TNR your colony is kittens are the most vulnerable of felines. If any of the colony is going to freeze to death, it’s going to be the kittens. Don’t let those tiny little babies die. Fix your colony.

Related Post: Does TNR Work?

How to Keep Outdoor Cats Warm in Winter: Extra Safety Tips!

There are a few other important ways to keep your cat colony safe during the winter and not just by ensuring they are warm.

Stick to a Feeding Schedule

There are multiple reasons why you may wish to stick to a feeding schedule, but one of the most important applies to helping cats in winter. Cats can tell when it’s feeding time. They will show up on time to get their nummies. This is very useful if you want to feed wet food (warmed up or not) so it isn’t left out to freeze.

Another reason for feeding schedules that is useful in winter is that because the cats will come to eat on a schedule. You can do a headcount to make sure no one is missing, see if any new cats show up, or if anyone in your colony isn’t doing well.

Even if you’re feeding 3 times a day instead of 2 like normal, do it at the same time each day. Unless you have a protected area like a garage or barn, I wouldn’t leave dry food out all day. It will attract raccoons, opossums, foxes, rats and mice, coyotes and maybe hungry bears in winter.

If you really want to give the cats access to dry food all day, microchip feeders or automatic feeders might be a solution.

Don’t Put Food Near the Cat Shelters

You do not want to put the cat food in or near the cat shelters. Cat food will attract wildlife like raccoons and cats will rarely sleep near where they eat, especially if there is leftover food to attract critters. Feed away from the shelters.

Check Your Shelters Regularly!

This is especially important if you live in an area that gets snow. Cat shelters can snow-in cats where they may get seriously dehydrated and hungry, and possibly die in there.

Another reason to check your shelters is to be sure an injured or sick cat isn’t hiding in them, as well as to check for wildlife. You don’t want to be housing a family of raccoons while your cats are cold!

Check Your Car Engines!

Cats, especially mama cats with their kittens, will gravitate towards warm spaces. This WILL include car engines, wheel wells, and even under your car. Pop your hood before starting your car and check your engine and other hiding spots. Lay on the horn a few times as well, just to be sure.

Don’t use Chemical Deicers on Sidewalks or Driveways

Don’t use chemical deicers or rock salt to melt ice as both can cause harm to your cat’s paws (and worse if they lick it off their feet). There are pet-friendly alternatives available.

Watch That Antifreeze

You want to be sure your car isn’t leaking antifreeze nor do you want to fill your car with antifreeze in an area that cats have access to, such as the garage or driveway. If it does spill, clean it up. Antifreeze is deadly to cats and dogs. Consider switching to an antifreeze with propylene glycol as it is less toxic, but it is STILL dangerous.

If You TNR in Winter, Watch Those Traps

A good rule of thumb when caring for animals is that if it is too cold for you, it is too cold for them. A fur coat helps, but not if they’re stuck in a trap in the wind and rain for four hours and gets hypothermic. Cat fur is not made to get wet. It makes cats cold very easily. They can and do die of hypothermia, just like humans do.

Keep Your Pet Cats Inside

Pet cats should be indoors, not wandering the streets like strays and ferals. But if you adopted an indoor-outdoor cat or adopted a feral that refuses to stay indoors all the time, then please bring them inside. Especially during the night when temperatures drop the most.

What Are Your Tricks to Keeping Your Ferals Warm?

Remember that if you find it too cold outside, so do the cats. If you’ve got a colony of ferals, adopted barn cats, or a single stray, a little bit of effort goes a long way in keeping them alive this winter. So follow some or all of

How do you keep your colony warm during winter where you live? Let me know in the comments below!

Lovies!

James marcus

Garden Courte is a blog written by [James Marcus], a passionate gardener and writer. She has been gardening for over 20 years and has a deep understanding of plants and how to care for them. In her blog, she shares her knowledge and experience with others, providing tips and advice on gardening, plant care, and more.

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Published by
James marcus

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