I have 2 proven solutions, but I'm told the RSPCA frowns on them.
Edit: 3 if you include the trebuchet.
Edit: 3 if you include the trebuchet.
Here we put mothballs, small pouches of tobacco, and Neem tree leaves as insect protection for woolen clothes, which can be worn only about two months a year here in my city.
Formal clothes, for occasions are also like that, occasional use, mostly in storage.
A friend had issues with monkeys, I told her to tie red chilies to an exploding type fireworks rocket, and give them a dose in the tree, that would sort of upset them.
She sent a tears from eyes - laughing emoji...
You can mount the speakers behind a grill, on the ceiling, maybe high up against the walls.
Or put some sort of smell that cats don't like, and as with people, all cats may not be alike.
Here tobacco is locally grown, and we can buy dried tobacco for about $6 a kilo, the smell keeps bugs away.
The merchant told me to put the tobacco flakes in a muslin (open weave) fabric pouch, as the tobacco can cause permanent stains on the fabric being protected.
This gives the smell, but the fabric is not in contact with the tobacco.
If you can, try any method like this, dried chilies should work, change them monthly.
Formal clothes, for occasions are also like that, occasional use, mostly in storage.
A friend had issues with monkeys, I told her to tie red chilies to an exploding type fireworks rocket, and give them a dose in the tree, that would sort of upset them.
She sent a tears from eyes - laughing emoji...
You can mount the speakers behind a grill, on the ceiling, maybe high up against the walls.
Or put some sort of smell that cats don't like, and as with people, all cats may not be alike.
Here tobacco is locally grown, and we can buy dried tobacco for about $6 a kilo, the smell keeps bugs away.
The merchant told me to put the tobacco flakes in a muslin (open weave) fabric pouch, as the tobacco can cause permanent stains on the fabric being protected.
This gives the smell, but the fabric is not in contact with the tobacco.
If you can, try any method like this, dried chilies should work, change them monthly.
I have to add these pics here, as an example of the damage these little beasts (cats) are capable of inflicting. This is just in the previous several months. Speakers now repaired and moved to another (safe, cat free) room.
Attachments
The day after I glued the linkwitz back together the cat toppled them again causing an ev3n bigger dent in the seas aluminium driver! (the first damage to the linkwitz was when the cat knocked a sound absorption panel from the wall, rather than a direct attack).