[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference misery::feline

Title:Meower Power - Where Differing Opinions are Respected
Notice:purrrrr...
Moderator:JULIET::CORDES_JA
Created:Wed Nov 13 1991
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1079
Total number of notes:28858

404.0. "KITTEN ON RT2 62/NEAR 495" by AKOCOA::LEINONEN () Fri Sep 25 1992 07:34

	I'm still tearful as I write this, but I'm hoping to save
	an owner from worrying about their kitten. 

	If anyone in Hudson, MASS. owns, or knows the owner of, a 
	black kitten with white chin, bib, and four white stockings
	I'm sorry to say but your kitten will not be returning home.
	The kitten was found on Rte 62 near the 495 intersection.

	He/she was pretty young (about 4-6 months old) and had no collar,
	tags, or identification. I never thought to check if the kitten 
	was male/female - I wasn't thinking too clearly. 

	The following story is pretty sad so you may want to hit NEXT
	UNSENN unless you know who's baby this was.

		Heidi

    
	At about 6:45 last night I was headed up Rte 62 in Hudson heading
	towards 495 when I saw a black/white kitten lying in the road.
	It had apparently been hit and was trying to get up. I stopped 
	and went over to the poor baby only to find that it had suffered
	massive internal injuries and was barely alive. I didn't have a
	blanket so I picked the poor thing up and was carrying it to my
	car when a police cruiser luckily(?) stopped. I asked him where
	the nearest vet was and he told me he had just driven by the
	Hudson vet and they were closed. As the poor baby was barely
	alive and obviously suffering the officer offered to put it to
	sleep. Not being able to think straight, and not knowing what
	else to do I told him I had to leave but would be back in about
	10 minutes to pick up the body - I hope I made the right decision.
	I had a box in my trunk and returned about 5 minutes later to
	take the kitten home with me. My local vet is taking care of
	the body and is not charging anything due to the circumstances.
	I then went home in tears to hug and cuddle my Tiggr.


T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
404.1Thank youERLANG::FALLONKaren Fallon "Moonsta Cattery"Fri Sep 25 1992 10:298
    Heidi,
    I am very sorry you were in this position. It must be very upsetting! 
    I can't blame you for what you did and it could very well have been the
    right thing.  If you had taken the poor kitten in the cat to a vet the
    ride and time would have probably been unbearable.  You cared enough to
    take care of it's little body.  Much more than many people would have
    done.  I would personally thank you.
    Karen
404.2NETWKS::GASKELLFri Sep 25 1992 11:416
    This is my nightmare.  You were very brave and I think you did
    the right thing.  I think the officer deserves some praise as well.
    
    Thanks for the warning but I just had to read on.  
    
    
404.3And to the person who hit it.....MODEL::CROSSMon Sep 28 1992 13:185
    
    Would love to get my paws on the person who hit that poor animal and
    left it floundering by the side of the road........  gggrrrrrrr
    
    N
404.4I'm all right, the world's wrongPROXY::HUTCHESONthe revolution will not be televisedTue Sep 29 1992 09:1440
Many moons ago, when I lived in my hometown of Chicopee, MA,
I was driving to work one morning along a main road and there
was a cat lying right in the middle. He had been hit but was
still conscious. As cars passed in each direction he cried to
them. I pulled over and crossed to the middle and picked him up.
A man was out tending his lawn and I asked if he knew where the
cat belonged.  By this time I was blubbering uncontrollably. He
pointed to a house across the way, so I went over there and rang
the bell. It was their cat and they called the animal hospital
which had an ambulance.

This was in broad daylight during morning rush hour and to this day
I cannot get over the callousness of the other drivers (I don't
think the neighbor knew the cat was there).

I had a similar experience last fall, when I saw a hurt muskrat trying
to cross the road. This was in broad daylight on a busy
road. I pulled over, got a blanket out of the car, but as I turn
to go get the critter a big gravel truck was coming and I just stood
there in terror for the muskrat. Fortunately I think the driver per-
ceived the situation, and manuever to go directly over the animal (he
was too big and going too fast to stop quickly). When I recall that
moment I imagine the terror the muskrat felt as he rolled into a ball.

As I chased the muskrat, I could see the he was dragging one leg. I
caught him in the blanket and took him to the vet. Unfortunately, the
leg was too badly mangled and the vet euthanized the muskrat. But, again
it boggles the mind that no one else stopped as this critter struggled
across the road.


There is a recently published book in which the psychologist-author finds
fault with psychotherapy and the recovery movement. His thesis is that
our psychological problems are rooted in our lack of connection to our
environment, which would include our fellow creatures. Frankly, I think
he's onto something.



                                          Susan
404.5DTIF::JUDYPicard/Riker '92Tue Sep 29 1992 13:1616
    
    
    	I remember one day, I had gone to a chiropractor after taking
    	a spill in my driveway.   When I pulled up outside his office
    	(it was on a side street, attached to a house) there was a 
    	very large squirrel in the middle of the road, injured but
    	very much alive.  Unfortunately, I didn't have any kind of
    	blanket or anything in my truck with which to pick him up
    	and I didn't dare do it with my bare hands.  However, it 
    	seemed that every couple of steps I took, he moved a little
    	more towards the grass.  So I just kept stepping till he
    	was safely off the pavement.  I don't know if he lived or
    	not but he wasn't in the grass after my appt.
    
    	JJ
    
404.6Whom to CallIAMOK::LOCKHARTThu Oct 01 1992 09:3412
    What a good deed you did!  The other day I saw a dead cat in the street
    near where I live.  I was still dealing with the loss of my cat who I'd
    had put to rest on 9/21.  After I drove by I thought of stopping, but
    didn't have a shovel (we all need to be really careful of rabies now)
    but I also didn't think I had the emotional strength to do it. Then I
    decided I'd call someone (I live in Leominster). I thought of the
    police (non-emergency #), the "dog-catcher" if there is one, and ended
    up "forgetting" to call.  The next day the poor baby was still there,
    but luckily untouched.  That night it was gone.  I feel badly that I
    didn't do anything, but reading your note made me realize that next
    time I'll take some kind of action. I'd appreciate hearing about the
    right people to call in this circumstance. Thanks, Lynne
404.7GUCCI::SMILLERMrs. Shannon DiPietroThu Oct 01 1992 11:456
    Yesterday I saw a very tiny mouse in the parking lot.  He looked like
    he must have fallen and hit his head, because he was stumbling all
    around. I got him back in the grass, which I figured was safer than
    heading further into the parking lot. Well, when I left at 5:00 he was
    in the same place-dead.  Poor little guy. Probably got lost from his
    mama.  At least he died in the grass and not under some wheel. :-(
404.8Thanks for picking him up...ERLANG::FALLONKaren Fallon "Moonsta Cattery"Fri Oct 02 1992 08:537
    Poor little mouse!  He had probably already been hit and was just
    suffering the trauma before he went.  I saw this happen to a squirrel
    just outside of my house one morning on the way to work.  He spasmed a
    few times and then went limp. Really made my day I'll tell ya!!  I just
    hope it wasn't "Rusty", Jimmy picked him up and buried him in our "pet
    semetary".
    Karen
404.9CIMNET::MIKELISConstruction means DestructionFri Oct 16 1992 08:219
I really hate seeing all the dead animals on the road everyday.  I wish
they would just stay off the asphalt. It amazes me why some animals even
want to cross the road in the first place. I would think that the feel
of pavement on their paws would be enough for them to say, "hey, this
stuff doesn't feel right, i better get back to that tree".  Opossums
seem to be great ones for wandering aimlessly around in the middle of a road.
It's a rough life for them.

/james