Trinity County's animal code does not set a numerical limit on how many dogs or cats a household may keep. Instead, the general animal rules in Code 6.04.050 control problem animals through trespass and noise-nuisance provisions, backed by licensing and rabies-vaccination requirements.
Unincorporated Trinity County does not appear to cap the number of household pets in its Title 6 animal code, and no kennel-trigger pet count surfaced in the County's animal control chapter. Practically, the limits on keeping multiple animals come from three places: the parcel's zoning under Title 17, the requirement that animals be licensed and currently vaccinated against rabies, and the general nuisance and trespass rules in Trinity County Code Section 6.04.050. That section makes it unlawful to allow any animal to enter the land of another without permission and unlawful to allow an animal to disturb the peace with loud and unreasonable howling, barking, or other noise; a written affirmation by two unrelated persons with separate residences that their peace is unreasonably disturbed is prima facie evidence of a noise violation. The same section makes it unlawful to fail to exhibit, on demand, any license, license tag, permit, or certificate of rabies vaccination to a person authorized to enforce the animal control provisions. Because there is no fixed pet ceiling, the practical constraint is whether the animals are properly licensed and vaccinated, kept on the owner's property, and not creating a noise nuisance. Owners with many animals should confirm zoning and licensing obligations with Trinity County Animal Control.
There is no fixed pet limit to violate, but keeping unlicensed or unvaccinated animals, letting them trespass on a neighbor's land, or allowing chronic loud noise can be cited under Section 6.04.050. Failing to show a license, tag, or rabies certificate on demand is also a violation.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Trinity County has no ordinance banning backyard composting; home composting of yard and food scraps is allowed. California's SB 1383 organic-waste recycling...
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Trinity County has no ordinance prohibiting or specially regulating artificial turf. Synthetic lawns are allowed on residential property, subject only to gen...
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Trinity County does not mandate native-plant landscaping for ordinary homes. However, the county cannabis-cultivation rules (Code Ch. 17.43G) require biologi...
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Trinity County has no ordinance restricting rooftop rainwater harvesting. Capturing rainwater in barrels and cisterns for outdoor, non-potable use is allowed...
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Trinity County has no countywide lawn-watering day/time schedule. Outdoor water use is shaped by the county Water Quality Control Ordinance (Code Ch. 8.60), ...
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Trinity County's Vegetation Management Ordinance (Code Ch. 8.68, Ord. No. 1300) declares excessive dry grass, brush, dead trees and other flammable vegetatio...
See how Trinity County's pet limits rules stack up against other locations.
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