There are so many reasons to love cats. Their bleps, beans, and bizarre antics all add up to make them companions quite unlike any other. Of course, domestic cats don’t do that much hunting, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t resourceful when they feel like it.
A handyman who’d just finished installing a cat flap sent his customer a video of what he thought was the customer’s cat going through it. Then a surprising thing happened – the customer replied that that was definitely not their cat.
Cats can be as cunning as they are cuddly, as this handyman found out in the most hilariously surprising way
Image credits: itsjoethehandyman / TikTok
He’d just finished installing a new cat flap, so he sent his customer a video of what he thought was their cat going through it
A handyman who set up a cat flap on a customer’s door later found out via text that the installation had delivered a surprising result. Having finished the job, the handyman, Joe, retreated to his car to observe his work. His hope was that his customer’s cat would be able to use the new flap without any problems.
Many owners of feline friends decide to have a cat flap installed to give their cats a bit of independence. According to the Battersea Dogs And Cats Home, a pet rescue organization in the UK, giving cats easy access to the outdoors can keep them physically fit and naturally stimulated.
Image credits: itsjoethehandyman / TikTok
Nothing could have prepared him for the customer’s response that that most certainly was not their cat
Joe started filming from his car after seeing his work in action, sharing what he captured in an August 3 TikTok video to his account @itsjoethehandyman. In the video, you can see a cat creep towards the door before sticking its head through to seemingly get a better look at what’s going inside the house.
Satisfied that the cat knew how to use the flap, Joe instantly sent his customer the video. Much to Joe’s surprise, the customer texted him back with alarming news – the cat in the video wasn’t theirs at all. The random feline had seemingly just seen the chance to take a break from the heat of the day and maybe find a snack.
Image credits: nmarnaya / Freepik (not the actual photo)
What Joe reckoned would be a useful clip turned into irrefutable evidence of one risk of adding a cat flap to your home: opportunistic animals sneaking their way inside. Within just three short days, the video had amassed over 368,000 views, 32,000 likes, and 653 comments.
Image credits: freepik / Freepik (not the actual photo)
Amused, the handyman posted the video on TikTok, where it quickly went viral, garnering over 368,000 views and more than 32,000 likes
Netizens celebrated the bold kitty, saying that Joe’s customer now has a new pet, whether they know it or not. “That is their cat, as evidenced by the cat going in. They’re just in denial, because they never saw that cat before and have no idea where he came from …” posted one viewer, while a second person wrote: “I love it. That’s how I am gonna get a cat!” and a third commented: “At least you know it works.”
Image credits: Getty Images / Freepik (not the actual photo)
If you’re thinking of having a cat flap installed for your feline but are nervous about unwanted animals slipping inside unexpectedly, you’ll be glad to know there’s a high-tech solution for that. Some cat flaps can be linked to your cat’s microchip or a radio frequency identification (RFID) tag on its collar.
The system works by identifying your cat, or cats, and only unlocking the cat flap when they’re nearby. Think of it as giving your feline its own set of keys to your house and avoiding the bother of cleaning up after a raccoon or opossum raiding your kitchen. Who says cats can’t be sci-fi?
@itsjoethehandyman True story #handyman♬ original sound – Joe The Handyman
In the hundreds of comments the video racked up in the first 3 days, viewers had some hilarious reactions
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Even better... just draw a circle and they will sit in it. lol
Load More Replies...My old uni professor recounted a story once. He was home alone, and fancied a little nap in the afternoon. He didn't go upstairs to the bedroom, just laid down on a sofa in his home office downstairs. Later he woke up to his cat sitting on his chest, licking his nose. As he looked up, he realised that was NOT his cat, but a random one. Then he looked around the room, and there were at least a dozen strange cats all around, with his own cat cowering in a corner, trying to be invisible. That was the moment when he suspected the cat flap might've been a mistake.
Cats had no problems with the cat flap. Got dogs years later and put in a dog flap. Training was ineffective. Flap used once when Mad Max stole something. I chased him. Sailed through the dog flap like a true professional. Never used it again. He's now rising 11 years.
🤣Good thing you put that flap in so Max could escape!
Load More Replies...I woke up one night to a raccoon eating the cat kibble in the kitchen. And before I could solve the flap situation the raccoon brought a date the next night!
Might install a cat flap - we don't have cats, I would like one, or several.
The problem with my cat door is that it does not require the cat to drop the mouse before entering.
Hi-tech cat flaps only! I still remember when an opossum got into the house while everyone was away for a few days.... She found and devoured my chocolate stash, made my printer her new bed and got mad when my mother tried to shoo her away with a broom ... Never, EVER try to scare an opossum.... not inside the house! 😣 the smell lasted for days and it's like rotting meat... Then we sealed the old cat flap.
Keep your cats indoors you idiots! They'll be safer, healthier, and won't destroy wildlife and your neighbor's gardens!
Yup. I love my cats too much to let them outside. It's not safe. And their mental health is just fine. They have several window perches and more toys than I ever had as a kid. They have a great life.
Load More Replies...When we first moved into our house there is a giant tomcat next door who was sneaking under our house to 💩 everywhere… He continued doing that even after we moved in so we had to close all the rafts under the house and he was still getting into it somehow. The little 💩 was actually pushing through the mesh so we put in steel mesh and he couldn’t get in any more. But then he noticed we had girl cats and then he kept hanging around and fighting with the other boy cat in the street outside the house cause he thought he’d be able to get into the cats. No he couldn’t. But when we take the girls outside, he will try and run up to them. Bad idea because I chased him away with a room. our girls are desexed, because we are responsible cat owners and they are indoor cats but we do take them out in the daytime for like 10 minutes or so and we supervise them the whole time. We currently have our kitten, she’s currently in teenage phase and she has not been outside while living with us…
We rescued her as a baby because she was being treated as a feral kitten and nobody was even feeding her… Anyway, she’s trying to get desperately but I won’t let her until I train her with a body harness for at least a few weeks so she knows that she has to stay near me. And I know that time that boy cat is gonna come over and I’m gonna be chasing it away with a broom because it is MASSIVE and it is also a little baştard!! it does not care that you are human. It will run straight up to the other cat! So I’m just waiting for her new harnesses to arrive and then we’ll see how we go.
Load More Replies...My now, very sadly passed little one, was very unimpressed when we purchased a flap that would open via the chip in her neck. Oh the fun I had trying to fold her into the house while she collapsed like runny jelly! She got the hang of it eventually. I think she just wanted to stress us out.
Love it! Cats are a lot more intelligent than most people think, and they have devious little minds. Cute but devious.
Where we lived for a longish while the older of our two cats, a female, had a male friend, same color, black. One day he was inside simply studying the apartment, that young lady was annoyed. I like that idea.
Not only can, but should - and if your cat isn't chipped, then get it chipped, so only it (or they, if you serve more than one) can use the flap.
Load More Replies...How about, not applicable, my cats don't go out. (I live on a busy city street, and I'm not a fan of road pizza!)
I didn't even need a cat flap. It was pouring down rain one night and when I came home and opend my door, whoosh... it flew in. It never left. The cat distribution system replaced my recently passed black Bombay cat of 18 years with an orange eyed black persian kitten of 6 months. My 2 calicos were slightly hissed off for a bit and my yeallow lab now has a new buddy.
A friend of mine installed one only to find three baby racoons eating his cat food. He chased them out and he ran out the door only to find a 35 lb momma racoon that was not amused while protecting her babies. He retreated wisely
I put a cat flap into an internal wall which was so helpful. My cat has to wear her harness when we go outside so no need for an outdoor flap.
My mom had this problem with her cat Elmo and one of the neighborhood cats. This cat would get in through the flap and steal Elmo's food. They didn't get into fights but the other cat would stare him down and push him around. Poor guy, it only went on for a few months because it was around the time my mom sold the house. He's happy at his new home and has made friends with the new neighborhood cats.
😂😂SORRY TO SAY BUT THAT IS YOUR CAT !! 😂😂 I don’t have cats I’m a dog person , but I used to have the, n yup add cat flap and you AQUIRE more cats 😂I took on three that way 🙈😂if they decide that is now there home lol tough ,cos it now is , that’s cats for you ,cheeky n they lives where they decides they will live,😂
Even better... just draw a circle and they will sit in it. lol
Load More Replies...My old uni professor recounted a story once. He was home alone, and fancied a little nap in the afternoon. He didn't go upstairs to the bedroom, just laid down on a sofa in his home office downstairs. Later he woke up to his cat sitting on his chest, licking his nose. As he looked up, he realised that was NOT his cat, but a random one. Then he looked around the room, and there were at least a dozen strange cats all around, with his own cat cowering in a corner, trying to be invisible. That was the moment when he suspected the cat flap might've been a mistake.
Cats had no problems with the cat flap. Got dogs years later and put in a dog flap. Training was ineffective. Flap used once when Mad Max stole something. I chased him. Sailed through the dog flap like a true professional. Never used it again. He's now rising 11 years.
🤣Good thing you put that flap in so Max could escape!
Load More Replies...I woke up one night to a raccoon eating the cat kibble in the kitchen. And before I could solve the flap situation the raccoon brought a date the next night!
Might install a cat flap - we don't have cats, I would like one, or several.
The problem with my cat door is that it does not require the cat to drop the mouse before entering.
Hi-tech cat flaps only! I still remember when an opossum got into the house while everyone was away for a few days.... She found and devoured my chocolate stash, made my printer her new bed and got mad when my mother tried to shoo her away with a broom ... Never, EVER try to scare an opossum.... not inside the house! 😣 the smell lasted for days and it's like rotting meat... Then we sealed the old cat flap.
Keep your cats indoors you idiots! They'll be safer, healthier, and won't destroy wildlife and your neighbor's gardens!
Yup. I love my cats too much to let them outside. It's not safe. And their mental health is just fine. They have several window perches and more toys than I ever had as a kid. They have a great life.
Load More Replies...When we first moved into our house there is a giant tomcat next door who was sneaking under our house to 💩 everywhere… He continued doing that even after we moved in so we had to close all the rafts under the house and he was still getting into it somehow. The little 💩 was actually pushing through the mesh so we put in steel mesh and he couldn’t get in any more. But then he noticed we had girl cats and then he kept hanging around and fighting with the other boy cat in the street outside the house cause he thought he’d be able to get into the cats. No he couldn’t. But when we take the girls outside, he will try and run up to them. Bad idea because I chased him away with a room. our girls are desexed, because we are responsible cat owners and they are indoor cats but we do take them out in the daytime for like 10 minutes or so and we supervise them the whole time. We currently have our kitten, she’s currently in teenage phase and she has not been outside while living with us…
We rescued her as a baby because she was being treated as a feral kitten and nobody was even feeding her… Anyway, she’s trying to get desperately but I won’t let her until I train her with a body harness for at least a few weeks so she knows that she has to stay near me. And I know that time that boy cat is gonna come over and I’m gonna be chasing it away with a broom because it is MASSIVE and it is also a little baştard!! it does not care that you are human. It will run straight up to the other cat! So I’m just waiting for her new harnesses to arrive and then we’ll see how we go.
Load More Replies...My now, very sadly passed little one, was very unimpressed when we purchased a flap that would open via the chip in her neck. Oh the fun I had trying to fold her into the house while she collapsed like runny jelly! She got the hang of it eventually. I think she just wanted to stress us out.
Love it! Cats are a lot more intelligent than most people think, and they have devious little minds. Cute but devious.
Where we lived for a longish while the older of our two cats, a female, had a male friend, same color, black. One day he was inside simply studying the apartment, that young lady was annoyed. I like that idea.
Not only can, but should - and if your cat isn't chipped, then get it chipped, so only it (or they, if you serve more than one) can use the flap.
Load More Replies...How about, not applicable, my cats don't go out. (I live on a busy city street, and I'm not a fan of road pizza!)
I didn't even need a cat flap. It was pouring down rain one night and when I came home and opend my door, whoosh... it flew in. It never left. The cat distribution system replaced my recently passed black Bombay cat of 18 years with an orange eyed black persian kitten of 6 months. My 2 calicos were slightly hissed off for a bit and my yeallow lab now has a new buddy.
A friend of mine installed one only to find three baby racoons eating his cat food. He chased them out and he ran out the door only to find a 35 lb momma racoon that was not amused while protecting her babies. He retreated wisely
I put a cat flap into an internal wall which was so helpful. My cat has to wear her harness when we go outside so no need for an outdoor flap.
My mom had this problem with her cat Elmo and one of the neighborhood cats. This cat would get in through the flap and steal Elmo's food. They didn't get into fights but the other cat would stare him down and push him around. Poor guy, it only went on for a few months because it was around the time my mom sold the house. He's happy at his new home and has made friends with the new neighborhood cats.
😂😂SORRY TO SAY BUT THAT IS YOUR CAT !! 😂😂 I don’t have cats I’m a dog person , but I used to have the, n yup add cat flap and you AQUIRE more cats 😂I took on three that way 🙈😂if they decide that is now there home lol tough ,cos it now is , that’s cats for you ,cheeky n they lives where they decides they will live,😂





















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