Is there something we could do or is it just best to keep them inside?
Mudpie,
I too worry about coyote since cats seems to be a favored treat. My two felines spend a good deal of time outdoors, but they are fit and hopefully savvy to their predator. Nights are spent indoors, especially after 11:00 PM when coyotes are most active. For some strange reason coyotes are most bothersome on weekends. Something is changing their usual rounds. Overall, the problem is intermittent, worsening with winter's depth.
The pack stays in a nearby woods field, howling up a storm. A scout or two are sent away to make a big loop around way around the pack, venturing through woods along the edge of town. It seems to be part of their hunting strategy. While attending a NASA dunes workshop at a National Park last year, I learned that park coyotes sometimes use these scouts to befriend domesticated dogs in surrounding settlements. Taking advantage of the domestic’s packing instinct, the tricked pooch is lured back to the pack for evening’s meal. That is what I was told.
S-M
Best thing you could do is to get a dog. Letting cats, or dogs, roam free is being pretty irresponsible IMO. Not just for their own welfare, but for the damage they do. The feral cat problem is bad enough, hopefully you won't contribute to it.
And if you take the advice and get a dog, please don't let it roam either. I have both and neither roam.
I had two cats for a number of years in four different homes in the pines. In Tabernacle ~1996, one of the cats staggered home with his head gashed open and one eyeball hanging out. Miracle that he survived, we theorized that he was hit by a car but who knows? The vet bills were in the thousands and although he recovered, he was blind in one eye.
In Medford Lakes, the main issue was fights with other cats but a neighbor said somebody down the street was leaving poison outside for them. Around 2003 the town made it illegal for cats to run free and I think also instituted a license fee.
In Medford ~2005 I really didn't have any significant problems but the cats were getting older and didn't venture very far from the house.
In my current isolated home south of Mays Landing, I only had one 17 year old cat and he never went very far from the front porch. Good thing, because there are some tough looking wild cats that live in the woods here. These aren't stray kitty-cats, but wild animals that seem to survive well in the woods.
At my place in upstate NY, we had an incident where both cats tangled with a raccoon... and the 'coon won. Some more expensive vet bills from that adventure. I don't have cats anymore, and although I often miss them I like being free of the responsibility.
We once had one built to surround all sides and top with proper wire when we lived on a busy road.What kind of pen would you build for cats? Seems like it would have to be fully enclosed on the top, bottom and all sides with some kind of heavy metal mesh. My cats were all very resourceful when it came to escaping.
IMO = In my opinion.