T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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770.1 | OPTIONS?? | TPVAX3::ROBBINS | | Tue Sep 15 1987 09:17 | 6 |
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I'm going to call the Hudson Shelter and see what they would do
with mama and her babies and see if they have any advice on trying
to "catch" them if they would shelter them........ I'll see what
I can do and I'm sure there will be others that will want to try
to do something before winter hits........
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770.2 | | SKETCH::BASSETT | Retirement - Year 2034 | Tue Sep 15 1987 12:19 | 5 |
| Ohhhh...This note is so sad.
Please keep us posted on the out come of Mom and the babies.
lb
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770.3 | | TPVAX3::ROBBINS | | Tue Sep 15 1987 12:26 | 15 |
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Well called Hudson Shelter..... To put it bluntly she would not
put them to sleep....... But they're not in Hudson..... I can't
blame her cuz they do need some kind of guidelines.... And if I
didn't think that we would need some help capturing them I wouldn't
have told her where they were but I guess that option is out......
The only advice she could think of is that the best thing would
be for someone to take them and find homes on our own.... She said
if there left too long they will go wild and it will be almost
impossible to place them unless there is someone that has the room
on their property to have them as strictly outdoor cats....
C'mon now someone else must have some kind of solution to this sad
unfair problem..... (I hope)
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770.4 | noon report | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Tue Sep 15 1987 15:07 | 9 |
| A friend placed dry cat food on the ledge to improve momma cat's
nutrition.
However, I spent most of the noon hour out there, eating lunch
and occasionally peering into the den. I did not see any
movement within. Perhaps there has been too much activity
and momma has moved everyone to a new den.
Stay tuned...
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770.5 | Feral Cats | CSC32::JOHNS | My chocolate, all mine! | Wed Sep 16 1987 21:05 | 23 |
| FYI to anyone trying to catch a feral cat or kitten:
I did this. Timothy was about 6 weeks old and had 3 siblings.
Mama had never been owned, and grandma had an owner, but was a totally
outdoor, unspayed cat.
First of all, they are FAST. Secondly, they will hole up. Third,
and most important, they are MEAN. They think you will try to harm
them, so they bite and scratch. One of those kittens BIT THROUGH
heavy work gloves. Their teeth are like needles. You do not know
what diseases they may have, including rabies, and if one bites
you and you don't catch it, you may need to go through nasty shots.
Timothy was the only one we caught. It took only about 36 hours
to semi-tame him, but in the meantime he decided to escape by CHEWING
through the wall (darn near succeeded, too), and I had to be really
careful of my face, hands, legs, etc.
If you decide to ever try this, I figured you should know what I
experienced.
Good luck!
Carol
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770.6 | no forwarding address supplied | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Thu Sep 17 1987 09:46 | 10 |
| I looked for the cat and kittens all day yesterday, and again
thsi morning. There is no sign of them. The dry catfood that
was left behind is still there. I believe that momma has
moved them.
(I also have not seen a chipmunk in over a week and the place
used to be overrun with them. Maybe momma decided to locate
the kittens where there is a more plentiful food supply?)
bill
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770.7 | I wish I could offer hope, but... | CROW::TAMIR | | Mon Sep 21 1987 11:19 | 14 |
| Like most wooded areas of Nashua, we ZK folks have feral cats.
My house is near the airport in Nashua (yes, Nashua has an airport)
and I have countless feral cats. As for them making it thru the
winter, I have some cats in my area that have been around for years.
They do seem to survive. My feral cats have the advantage of a
well stocked buffet to dine from, and I think that gives them an
edge over the rest of the community. But, as you have noticed by
talking with the various shelters, there isn't much you can do about
it. There is no law covering cats, and as one of the animal control
officers put it, they fall into the same category as squirrels.
No doubt Mom has moved them elsewhere. I sure wish there was something
more encouraging I could tell you...
Mary
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770.8 | Wild kittens can make excellent pets! | NHL::WATKINS | | Thu Sep 24 1987 12:04 | 18 |
| Someone we knew found a litter of wild kittens in their barn, and
the mother took off on them. These people notice the kittens getting
a little scraggly, and started finding homes for them. When we
got ours, she was about 3 weeks old. We immediately (on the way
home) had her checked out by a vet, and she needed a couple of routing
shots, but nothing major. She turned out to be a gorgeous, friendly,
long haired cat. She was tamed fairly quickly, hunger will do that.
We gave her a bath and have had her (and now her two kittens!) for
about a year. We give her "space" seeing that she was once wild,
and let her go about her business when she's eating and other things
that she might "get offended" by. The kittens show no signs of
having a mother born in the wild. They revel in their luxurious
lives, and wouldn't dream of sleeping anywhere else but on the
waterbed. Hannah, the mother IS very friendly, but she's not quite
as much of a "little dope" as are the kittens. That's where it
shows.
Stacie
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770.9 | if it doesn't want to, don't take it home | 3D::CHABOT | Many are called, but few are at home | Sat Sep 26 1987 01:32 | 37 |
| My mother's household has been known to adopt kittens from both
feral and semi-feral backgrounds. One of our favorites was a part
Siamese (with lime-green eyes, and faint spiraly stripes, but still
having darker points) that my sister made friends with from a litter
being raised in her sandwich shop's dumpster (the rest of them ran
off though--luckily he was close enough to weaning age). We've also
had house- and yard-raised kittens turn feral on us, for unknown
reasons whether physical or emotional
...they still hang around the neighborhood for food but are completely
uncatchable. The dumpster cat was completely tame and affectionate,
and knew what the litter box was without being shown; for awhile
he showed a marked fondness for black olives (he was likely raised
on scraps from a near-by pizza parlor), but otherwise was at least as
civilized as everyone else.
My usual policy with cats is that if I can call to them and they
come, then they can become used to humans, although sometimes they
have become startled when they figure out they really don't know
who I am. I've seen a ~5 week old feral snarl at me when I called
(the mother had already high-tailed it for the woods); I didn't
investigate further, remembering infected scratches from far-less
feral kitties. If they're too young to run away or try to defend
themselves, I'd guess your chances for successful adoption are mixed,
although handling at an early age (> 1week, anyway) always seems
to help them get used to humans. You probably can't keep a truly
feral mom around if you're going to be handling her kittens, although
some semi-wild ones may even fearfully tolerate being ensconsed
in warm dark safe hideaway in your house. If you take them from wild moms
too early, be prepared to bottle feed, which also means if they're
less than 3 weeks old, their chances of survival are best if you don't
have a full-time daytime job away from home.
It's a little painful to see feral kitties you can't help, what
with winter approaching and all. In the city or around farms, they
can survive living in unheated sheds and hanging around vented waste heat.
And in the temperate regions of California they make do also. But
in the New England woods?
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770.10 | Unable to help | SQM::MURPHY | Is it Friday yet? | Wed Oct 07 1987 09:52 | 28 |
| Last night while I was walking my dog in the parking lot here at
ZKO, I could hear the crying of a kitten in the woods. Don't know
if it could have been one of the little ones .0 saw that may have
gotten lost from the others or if it had just been thrown out of
a car that had just driven slowly by that particular area. It was
too far for me to tell at the time but when I got to the area, I
could hear the frightened crying of a kitten.
I gave my dog the command to stay and took her collar off so it
would not make any jingling sound. I moved down the grass slope
toward the woods calling to the kitten and it answered me each time.
I was praying it would not be afraid of me and come or at least
that I might catch a glimpse of where it was. It was dark though
and very hard to see anything unless it had the background of the
sky.
I was heartbroken as it's crying stopped and I knew I couldn't help
it unless I found it. I kept calling and walking as quietly as
I could in the brush but I guess this frightened it into staying
quiet or it moved further away. I hope someone finds it before
the storm comes today but I rather doubt it.
If it was one of the 3 in the feral litter, maybe by now it's mother
has found it. If, on the other hand, it was thrown from the car
I saw last night - damned people like that! That kind of person
has no respect for another life, human or animal.
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770.11 | an update | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Fri Oct 16 1987 16:35 | 14 |
| Well, some good news:
I just talked to the people who work in the mail room,
who know what happened to some of the kittens. It seems
that they had all (4!) taken up residence in the large power
transformers outside the loading dock in ZK01. Today,
an electrician removed them! There was much wild
scrambling of people with gloves on and two of them were
cornered, captured and taken off by adopting humans.
The fate of the others is not known. And I did not hear
anything about the mother.
bill
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770.12 | What a relief to know babies found homes | SQM::MURPHY | Is it Friday yet? | Fri Oct 16 1987 17:05 | 12 |
|
I'm so glad to hear this, Bill. Too bad about the mother cat not
getting a home but she may be just too wild to get hold of right
now. Maybe in time with patience, she too might find a sanctuary!
Thanks for the update. I've been constantly haunted when walking
my dog here evenings and weekends. I can still hear the pitiful
crying of a kitten I heard one night but I couldn't find it in the
dark.
Pat (Mom to Holly, Buffy, D.P. Gremlin, and the dog, Cookie)
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