Carabooda – cats on rural blocks between market gardens and bushland

How layout shapes cat movement

Carabooda is a rural-residential area north of Wanneroo with large lots, market gardens, plant nurseries and patches of remnant bushland.[S13][S14]

Long driveways running off Wanneroo Road and local roads such as Bernard Road form straight movement corridors between houses, sheds and bush remnants. Shelter belts, tree lines and drains link paddocks, dams and vegetated gullies across multiple properties.[S13]

When a yard is open, cats can roam across several blocks using these lines without crossing many roads, moving between sheds, compost piles, poultry runs and bush patches.

Wildlife most exposed

Common cat lifestyles

High-risk zones (specific)

Cat rules that apply

Rural properties in Carabooda are still subject to the Cat Act 2011 (WA), including requirements for microchipping, registration and sterilisation.[S3][S12]

The City of Wanneroo Cats Local Law 2023 applies across the rural north-east area and sets rules for cat numbers, nuisance and access to sensitive conservation areas.[S4][S15][S23]

Why containment fits Carabooda

In Carabooda, an open shed door or boundary gap can move a cat quickly from a house yard to drains, dams and remnant bush where small native mammals and birds use the same cover lines as farm pests.

Better options for cats

Helpful links

Sources

The Cat Safety Network is a not for profit community project resourced by Kittysafe

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