Monday, August 3, 2009

How to get the cat urine smell out of tennis shoes?

our spitefull cat sprayed my daughters tennis shoes. anybody know how to get the smell out? I've washed them once in hot water, but no change.

How to get the cat urine smell out of tennis shoes?
Try adding detergent and 1 cup of vinegar to the wash. Have a nice day.
Reply:Throw the shoes in the burning barrel and take the cat down and get him neutered.
Reply:try soaking them in baking soda and water for maybe a day then wash them. Just dump the whole bucket in the washer. Also try Tide w/ febreeze and hot water. I wash urine bed mats with this. It works great. good luck.
Reply:go to petco or any pet shop and look for Natures Miracle. it will help the smell!!!
Reply:The cat probably did not "spray" for spite, but rather did it because he was marking the shoes as his. Male cats have a tendency to mark what they believe belongs to them. Actually, it should be a compliment... tho'... we don't take the smell as a compliment. Don't want this to happen repeatedly in the future? Get your cat neutered as soon as possible. There is no 100% guarantee that he will stop spraying, but chances are good that after the neuter, he probably won't.





Water alone is not going to get the urine smell out. To get the smell out, you have to use a product or products that break down the enzymes that causes the smell. There is a product on the market that I will swear by. You can get it at this website: www.justrite.com That will work. If you can't wait to get it, there are other alternative methods.





It's been mentioned to use vinegar. I use apple cider vinegar in the wash. It's always worked well for me, too.





Or you can use this recipe:


Soak in a solution of 50% white vinegar and 50% water, then allow to dry. The acidity of the vinegar will neutralize the ammonia in the cat urine.





When dry, apply a liberal amount of baking soda over the affected area then douce it with a quarter of a cup of hydrogen peroxide mixed with a teaspoon of dishwashing detergent. Work it in with a scrubbing brush or your fingers (be sure to wear rubber gloves) to dissolve the baking soda and work it in. Allow it to dry. Re-wash and dry normally. The smell will be gone.





The vinegar will neutralize the ammonia and the baking powder will remove the odor of the cat urine.





Important ::: Never use ammonia or ammonia-based products. The smell may attract the cat to that item or area and will encourage cats to urinate there again. Also, never ever use bleach on cat urine, it will only exacerbate the problem you already have.





One other suggestion? Set the shoes out in the sun for about two weeks or so. The sunlight and fresh air will also take the smell out, so I'm told. I've never tried this method myself.





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Reply:Try' Zero Odor', it really works great. I got mine off TV, but I think you can get it at pet stores too! It takes every bit of the smell out of anything!
Reply:Most pet shops carry a product called nature's miracle. I would douse them and let them air dry. If that does not work, I certainly don't know what will as I have never seen any product work as well as Nature's miracle.


Good luck,


dale
Reply:it's really hard to get urine out of shoes. It's easier to replace them than trying. You need an enzyme cleaner that you can buy at a pet store like Nature's Miracle for cats or Urine Gone.
Reply:you should try oxi clean, with really hot water. i have used it on my matress and my sons book bag, which our cat urinated on.
Reply:try some pinesol either in a wash or hand washing..


you could also use the carpet freshener baking soad poweder they sell and sprinkle it on the shoes (in and out) before you wash - it should absorb some of the smell and the carpet powder is cheap and safe to use around kids and pets.
Reply:I had the same thing happen to one of my tennis shoes too.


I threw it outside for all winter and when I got them off of the porch a few weeks ago....tada...they just smelled like the good old outdoors..
Reply:Washing machine! Or go to the mall and walk up to one of those people who try to sell you the shoe products and they wash your shoes. If they cant do it then you cant get it out.
Reply:I was going to say wash them again and this time add some Chlorox bleach.
Reply:Boil the piss out-of-um.
Reply:Let them soak for an hour or so in a mix of water and vinegar just strong enough that you can smell the vinegar not so that it's overpowering, then wash them again, that should work if your washing in a machine put a little vinegar in the wash cycle with the laundry detergent. The vinegar neutralizes the urine odour.
Reply:They sell stuff at the pet store that removes odors from cat pee. Or, get rid of the cat.
Reply:I would get new shoes....maybe color safe bleach.



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1 comment:

  1. One of my 2 cats (both neutered males) had taken to painting all of my walls, furniture, and anything else he could reach. I was horrified when I got a UV light. He never did that in all of the 9 years I've had him and didn't when I got him a buddy (they love each other and did so right away) but when a strange black cat started showing up outside both of my cats went nuts and the older one (9) started his wall painting, as well as the curtains out in the kitty room. I couldn't keep up with it.

    My cats are indoor cats so it's not like the stray is actually going to get in here but they both hate him (and he is weird...my neighbor's cats hate him too). I've tried cleaning with a pet urine enzyme and then spraying some "No More Spraying" but that hasn't worked.

    He's a sneaky little bugger too; he waits until he thinks I'm not looking and then does it. He's learned that the minute I see him backing his butt up to something he gets yelled at. It wasn't until I found "Cat Spraying No More" that I was able to finally get rid of this tiresome behavior. Now my house doesn't smell like a litter box anymore :)

    Here's a link the their site if you're interested in checking it out, I highly recommend this: http://nomorecatpee.com

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