T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3012.1 | | FSHQA2::RKAGNO | A Cat Makes a Purrfect Friend | Mon Nov 06 1989 12:18 | 16 |
| Pat, you are not compulsive, you are humane!
Do you think the MSPCA would respond to a call from you? I know
they are quick to respond in situations involving a dog (a friend
of mine had one-day turnaround time and the woman she snitched on
got quite a lecture as well as ultimatums from the rep. who visited
her house). A lot of people are so ignorant in regards to having
a cat. Just as you stated, they feel cats were born to live in
barns, control the rodent population, and never require veterinary
care, immunizations, etc. There is not much you can do short of
having a talk with uncle or contact the MSPCA.
I wish I could offer more suggestions. I've been in your shoes
and know how helpless and frustrated you must feel.
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3012.2 | | CRUISE::NDC | DTN: 297-2313 | Tue Nov 07 1989 14:35 | 18 |
| If I felt stongly enough about the cat, Pat, I would do exactly
what I did with Jesse. Take him in, take him to the vet and find
him a good home.
I thought about Jesse for a while before I took him in and decided
that if he did have "owners" they had given up their claim on him
by not taking care of him. Jesse had an injured and infected foot
for a while and I mixed antibiotics into his food for three weeks.
When we finally did bring him into the vet's I found out he had
severe ear infections. I don't feel the least bit guilty about
having him. After seeing his reactions to catbox, furniture and
other cats I am convinced that at one time, Jesse lived indoors
and has since been abandoned.
You have to answer to your own conscience but the courts tend to
side with the one who's paid the vet's bills.
Nancy DC
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3012.3 | | STOREM::DALEY | | Tue Nov 07 1989 15:44 | 26 |
| What I did yesterday was bring him into the bathroom and try to
doctor his eye - but the best I could do was put bacitracin on his
nose. What's good for the eyes (until I get him to the vet)
beyond warm water? He was well behaved and when I was finished I
set him on the floor and he laid-down on the bathmat- as if he was
also an indoor cat once upon a time.
But I had cats on the other side of the bathroom door who weren't
as well behaved (just curious- not rowdy). At that time I didn't
have extra litter or any flea powder so I put him back outside.
He took off. He was back this morning of course looking for his
breakfast. I brought him in - it looked like he had been in a
fight (but maybe was the winner??). Anyway, I put more bacitracin
on his cuts, but his eye needs some attention. I will try to get him
to the vets after Thurs (payday)- hopefully Friday night.
At least one of my cats has leukemia so I prefer that he not get
too near them, for both his and their protection.
A friend at work is trying to convince her husband that they need
Cat #4. She was really helpful by taking a kitten off my hands about
1-1/2 years ago. Funny thing is the kitten came from the same area,
looks alot like this cat colorwise, and has the same look on its
face when it cries. Maybe a relative?
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3012.4 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Tue Nov 07 1989 16:53 | 5 |
| If you have any boric acid powder, you can mix up a solution to
flush his eye out with. Do not use Visine, but you can use products
like Natural Tears, if you don't have any boric acid powder.
Jo
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3012.5 | RESCUE THE CAT!! | COOKIE::SIMON | | Wed Nov 08 1989 10:11 | 29 |
| TAKE HIM!!! My girlfriend and I have rescued and adopted numerous
abandoned and/or neglected cats & dogs, including one who was "living"
(and I use that term *very* loosely!) next door to her. After only a couple
of days we had to take her (the cat) in for major surgery due to a
blocked intestine. When the #$%@'s from next door found out that she
was at my girlfriend's, and their kid started yelling that he wanted
his cat back (for some more torture) we told them fine...pay the $250
surgery bill and she's all yours. Being such major derelicts, they
naturally declined (as we figured they would) so Bunny (the cat) now
resides with my girlfriend's gang of cats.
It's far better to rescue the cat and farm him/her out to a friend not
on the same street, at least temporarily, but if that isn't feasible,
by all means rescue the cat. By enlisting the Humane Society or ASCPA
on your side, you shouldn't have any legal problems. Make sure,
though, that the cat remains an inside cat for a while so he doesn't
get kidnapped back or worse, as the soon-to-be-former owners sound like
real wastes of air.
Good luck, and if you have any hesitations, just remember that this
cat's welfare could be in your hands. On the way back from lunch
yesterday, we found a poor deserted cat near the middle of the street
that was so far gone from feline leukemia there was no chance of saving
it when we took it to the vets; following that episode, I've been
angrier than ever at owners who neglect and abuse their cats (or dogs,
for that matter, but that's another story); they don't get a second
chance to inflict harm on poor animals.
Alan
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3012.6 | RESCUE part 2 | COOKIE::SIMON | | Wed Nov 08 1989 10:16 | 7 |
| addendum...just noticed the part in .3 about worrying about
leukemia...We get all of the strays tested for FLV and FIV immediately
to ensure that they are not infected (that's how we knew that the poor
cat yesterday was so far gone with FLV); this should ease your mind.
Possibly you could find a humane vet who would give you a break on the
test prices.
|
3012.7 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Wed Nov 08 1989 14:19 | 15 |
| I would just add one note of caution, which I am sure does not
apply to this case. There was a heartbreaking letter in our local n
newspaper a week or two ago. A lady's very elderly (and hence thin and
somewhat moth-eaten looking)
cat was "rescued" by someone who just took it off to a local shelter
and didn't ask at any of the nearby houses, post notices, advertise
in the newspaper, etc. The owners did that but they didn't know
enough to contact the shelter. By the time someone told them to do
that, the cat had been euthanized. And it wasn't sick, just elderly.
My next door neighbors also let their outdoor cat, who had leukemia,
live a bit longer than they should have. Not out of neglect but out
of love. I hate to think that someone would have carted it off
and had it euthanized.
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3012.8 | Just had to say this... | IAMOK::GERRY | Home is where the Cat is | Wed Nov 08 1989 16:36 | 7 |
| I think that anyone who has a cat that tests positive for leukemia and
still lets it out to roam the neighborhood should be shot!!! It is
just too unfair to all the other cats that may come in contact with the
leukemia positive one and then end up suffering the same fate.
cin
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3012.9 | If you know the cat's history, SAVE HIM! | NWACES::KORGEN | | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:45 | 50 |
| Although some weeks have gone by, I would like to
add something to this discussion. For several years my husband
and I have lived next door to a family with a barn and cows, and,
yes, LOTS of feral cats. We saw them at our place occasionally
but had been asked not to feed them because it encouraged them
to wander. Most of them answered to the description from the
base note: good hunters, but thin and probably wormy; unkempt
to say the least. The summer of '88 one of the females was
hit by a car, and soon afterward we discovered six kittens in
the crawlspace under our house. We took only one to the vet
because he became very ill, and later died, but within a few
days we captured them all and brought them over to the neighbors'.
They were, after all, THEIR cats. We felt after they lost the
mother they would want her kittens. And as it turned out, one
of their other females had lost all but one of a litter (gee,
I wonder if it could have been neglect) and was happy to adopt
the kittens. We felt as if we had done a service to everyone.
Well, all the other kittens survived and grew up, but we
began to regret our decision as we watched them grow up thin and wary,
just like all the other cats there. Why hadn't we kept some of
them? Well, there's also the VERY BUSY road that we live on!
When we realized that one of the more docile females from the
litter was pregnant at 9 months old, we began to cultivate her
and try to feed her. We took too long to bring her inside!
She, too, was killed on our road. And then we found her four
kittens in our woodpile. NO WAY were we going to give those
kittens back to the neighbors! We did tell them the mother was killed.
And we allowed them to think that she had lost the litter.
They told us that in the course of a year, every single one of
her littermates had also died, one way or another. The prettier
ones' skins had been discovered in the neighborhood. (I cannot even
describe my emotions at this.) And we live in a "nice" neighborhood.
So these four "lost" kittens are now all enjoying safe, cushy homes,
one still with us and soon to be relocated with other family members
where he can have humans at home during the day and also remain safe.
I asked our neighbor about neutering and spaying, especially in view
of what had happened, and she said, "Well, we mean to do it, but
before you know it, it's too late. We just never get around to it."
These are people who spent $8,000 to keep a dying collie alive for
a year longer. Go figure. That dog spent its whole life tied to a
chain.
You don't get far with the MSPCA in a farm community, I don't believe.
I confess we never tried; we just took the law into our own hands.
Susan (foster mother of Ditto, Spike, Chocolate, and Peeper)
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3012.10 | | CRUISE::NDC | DTN: 297-2313 | Tue Dec 05 1989 08:01 | 3 |
| Susan - If spay certificates would make any difference contact
me and I"ll send you the applications.
Nancy DC
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3012.11 | what are spay certificates? | NWACES::KORGEN | | Wed Dec 06 1989 12:54 | 13 |
| You mean offering the spay certificates to the neighbors?
I could try it. I don't know if expense is the problem
for them, but it's true that our vet charges $35 for a male,
$66 for a female. Kind of tough for a barnful of cats.
Please tell me about what spay certificates are,
or direct me to the correct Note.
As for our "own" kittens, we advised everyone who adopted
them to fix them. They're quite healthy, but come from VERY
inbred stock. And there are just SO MANY kittens out there!
Poor things.
S
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3012.12 | | CRUISE::NDC | DTN: 297-2313 | Fri Dec 08 1989 07:21 | 9 |
| Send me your mailstop or home address and I'll end you some applic-
ations for spay certificates. They enable you to get your cat
spayed or neutered at participating vets for a reduced rate.
Its $33 for a female cat and about $20 for a male. The trick is
finding a convenient participating vet. I have a list (dated
April 1989) of participating vets.
Nancy DC
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