Thursday, April 25, 2024

Cat rescue groups - a review


This may not be a fair analysis as I have not heavily researched the subject but is based on personal experience. Few years back I had two stray female cats temporarily living in the house and one was obviously quite pregnant so I contacted a cat rescue group. The end result was good she took the cats and they went to a foster home. Yes they have them for cats too. The methodology however. She came by late afternoon with two big cages in the back of her SUV and clearly wanted to follow the protocols of official cat rescue techniques which involves putting a bowl of food in the cages and as they say on detective stakeout shows we wait. Order Chinese? I was like how long is this gonna take I wanna watch Wheel of Fortune give me the cages. Somewhat hesitant she gave in and within ten minutes or less I handed her the cages with the cats inside and thank you and have a good night. FF to now and I have another situation with a tomcat that I've been feeding and has battle wounds on his face from territorial cat fights and so I texted the cat lady again who responded to my first text but hasn't replied to my followup texts. I realize these people are incredibly busy and serve large geographic areas but how hard is it to hit an emoji? Then I'm sitting on the porch with my fine cigar and observed a neighbor trying to get what looked like a female cat off the road and then feeding it and trying to get the cat out of harm's way so clearly our neighborhood has a cat problem as do many other neighborhoods so where are the cat people? Calling Jackson Galaxy!

46 comments:

  1. In north small town Idaho there is a high population of ferals. The common hideout is a barn on the property. Behind us, the people have a horse and the barn has hosted generations of ferals. The horse lady got good at trapping (TNR-Trap, Neuter, release) and right now the big gray and white one is the sole inhabitant. A lot of the vets are associated with HelpingHands and offer cheaper TNR.
    A few years back, the barn group eliminated the rabbit population, but I'm thinking a barn would be good hunting for mice. I guess a lot of feral cats get handouts from people (kind of like feeding the squirrels. One Summer I put out a bit of tuna (Tuna-the natural prey of the cat?) and had a mom and her litter hanging around. At night
    they sleot on a lounge cushion on the back deck - big pile of cats, took a picture. Probably not in Yonkers, but here their natural enemy the coyote will take one now and then. Note to self: check with Jackson Galaxy on the relationship.

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  2. The feral cat mystique. A more romanticized way of saying stray.

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  3. We definitely have coyotes in Westchester County. The Eastern Coyote bigger than its Western counterpart and said to be 1/4 wolf.

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  4. In flicking TV channels I came across "Pitbulls and Parolees''. Some lady matches them and they bond I guess- not sure, I can only watch for a minute or so and get bored. Now, I'm no entrepreneur, but do have a half open mind (or open half mind, take your pick) and it occurred to me that Z-Man might save feraldom and make himself some cash. It is your new TV series called "Felons and Ferals" Grab it before Jackson Metalface does.....

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  5. TNR = sterile strays without a home like a homeless person who has gotten temporary medical attention. "We're gonna let you off on the corner. Good luck."

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  6. They wander into your home. How do you think I got half my cats?

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  7. Ever had an Eastern Coyote wander in?

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  8. Not yet. No Sasquatch either.

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  9. Wanted to post an image yesterday. Should take no more than three minutes. Couldn't do it with the Blogger app. Reviews of Blogger say the same thing. Spent an hour last night trying to fix the problem.

    You already gave the Golden Finger award to Gates and Jobs. Hereby presenting the Golden Finger award to Google.

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  10. Sounds like a challenge. I tried it. No luck. It may be in Sec 49 (B) in the 48 page "How to easily post an image". Something about requiring a quantum computer array. Is there a Polonium Fist Award?

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  11. This is not my first rodeo. I used to post images. Must be one of them software system upgrade updates.

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  12. It's the Cloud. Every thing goes to the Cloud. I think there is a big section of the cloud called "BBs" Mistakes"

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  13. I have everything in the Cloud. Must be Chinese interference.

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  14. The way this blog was originally set up for me many years ago I was using a Yahoo email account under Google. Had to go to Blogger permissions and actually invite MYSELF as an author then granted the invited me administrator privileges and then removed my old account and can now access my photos library. Keep it simple. Like having too many credit cards.

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  15. More spam ads - 15 weeks training and I can become a lineman for the power company. WTF - been retired for over 20 years. Advice?

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  16. Tell the power company boss you can't go over 20 hours a week. SS rules.

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  17. I'm having trouble finding catnip in the stores of late. Did Jackson Galaxy say it's bad or something?

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  18. I get it at the pet store. The Christian Brothers of felines. Apparently, even lions, tigers, leopards lynx and bobcats react the same way. Not sure - maybe you could walk through the big cat section of the zoo tossing the stuff around?

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  19. Valerian root too has the same effect. Keep your sleep aids under lock and key.

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  20. Blogger, Chrome, G-Mail - Google is a huge part of the commercial internet, enigmatic, useful and a bit of a puzzle to use. Considering
    the number of complaints I have and hear, I find it an anomaly of
    Capitalism that last year Google earned $92 Billion. Wife lost all
    her e-mails: should she sue?

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  21. Article in Sunday paper- Bite-Size Steak. A local favorite, which seems confined to about a 50 sq mi radius. Travelers and tourists are quite taken with the concept. Cut sirloin in 1-1/2 " sections, marinate in spices, cover with pancake dough and deep fry. Big seller here, often as 'Bite-size and Shrimp'. Since i have trouble even with Cup-O-Soup, I refer to the professional chef. NYC, the food Paris of the western hemisphere, always innovating. Imagine Z-Man's Old West Bite-Size Sirloin. Start with a small shop, advertise, hire away a few Hooter's waitresses, expand with franchises up to Boston and over to Philly and retire in a couple of years to rescue feral cats. Too
    daring? Start with a street cart and hula dancer. Dunno, I'm not a pro in that area.

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  22. There's a lot of food shows on TV here. Sandwiches you can't fit in your mouth etc. Should you make sure your estate is in order before eating the stuff?

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  23. Don't understand those French chef things - a tiny dab of horse rump
    with a sauce atop and a sprig. $95 plus tip.

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  24. Wouldn't fill up a truck driver.

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  25. Back to Cat Rescue -
    The Humane Society of the United States estimates the following:

    Number of brick-and-mortar animal shelters in the US: 3,500
    Number of rescue groups and animal sanctuaries in North America: 10,000
    Number of cats and dogs entering shelters each year: 6-8 million (down from 13 million in 1973)
    Our old cat, who was found in a box in the Walmart parking lot, knows three words: Dish, Kitty nibbles and treat. He still doesn't know NO. Why would people in Florida own a Siberian Husky?

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  26. I've often wondered how do vets deal with the ferals?

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  27. The trapping process must be frustratingly time-consuming at times. There are other issues. The wrong cat goes in or a neighbor's cat goes in. Are there any cat lawsuits?

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  28. I don't know what a feral cat trap looks like. Hopefully not like one of those many toothed bear traps.

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  29. To my limited understanding gleaned from dealing with that cat rescue lady a few years back one method is a large rectangular cage like you would even put a small dog in and they don't want anybody to feed the target cat. They want the feral/stray good and hungry so they go in after the bowl of food then they close the lid on top and the lady I dealt with uses twist ties now because she told me she's had cats that popped the lid open. Then right away they put a large towel or blanket over the cage and so this is supposed to calm the cat down during transport.

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  30. Certainly questions. Since they want the target cat hungry do they canvass the neighborhood and tell people to not put out food for any strays? Also seems to me they'd get only one shot at trapping the cat as if the cat escapes before they close the lid the cat is gonna get wise to this. I myself would probably not be a good team member of such a group as Z-man would opt more for the take the bull by the horns approach if too much failed time has elapsed. Thick winter gloves, long sleeves with a heavy fabric etc. and so put the critter in the cage I want to go home to dinner already!

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  31. I would think a cat would be very suspicious of a trap. That's where the term 'fraidy cat' came from. Barn feral and our old Maine Coon had it out in the driveway one night. Fur all over the asphalt.

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  32. As a rescuer I would make liberal use of catnip Jackson Galaxy be damned.

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  33. You are the consummate cat whisperer. Stand aside Jackson Nebula.

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  34. My sister lives in an apartment and is having trouble with a cat who won't use the box consistently. What says Mr. Quasar?

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  35. Got the same problem. Let me know the cure.

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  36. I'm thinking stress/anxiety. Israel/Gaza, property tax, price of Fancy Feast......

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  37. The main cat you see in the picture to this post is a 100% perfect litter boxer. He can give lessons.

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  38. Are those yours? the white faced one in the doorway looks like ours.
    He is fascinated by boxes and if one is just the right size he makes a
    den out of it. Most cats seemed attracted to simple cardboard boxes: wonder if a dish of Fancy Feast would attract a feral, then while it is fancy feasting, you shut the lids and duct tape it. Would that require the usual body armor, face mask, leather mittens and
    athletic supporter?

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  39. They're completely mine. Official pets all six of them. Spayed/neutered with yearly shots. Two vets. Never went to a shelter. The one in the foreground just showed up one day. Very friendly. The others the mother cat in the yard next door had kittens. Some time went by and being in a cold winter season we eventually took them in and made vet appointments. My sister got the mother cat spayed and she stayed here awhile and then took off. Probably living someplace else. She taught her litter how to hunt and kill squirrels and some of them carry on the tradition on occasion. We also took one from her second litter a male tuxedo. We also have a senior tuxedo not related. They keep me busy.

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  40. Yes if you buy a pair of new shoes or sneakers they love the empty shoebox.

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  41. Curious - do they share a litter box, or each have their own. It's like that lady from Yonkers that was visiting Laredo TX. Went to the restroom and stood there pondering the sign. STEERS- HEIFERS. Cowboy wanders by and she hollers, "Hey which am I?"

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  42. Two litter boxes. One upstairs one downstairs. Somebody is using them because I scoop 'em out everyday. They also go out a lot. Never a mess on the rug.

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  43. A pair of ear rings and some tattoos and Z-Man Galaxy on TV.

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  44. & maybe a Bob Ross perm.

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  45. Got a local squirrel, young guy. Named him Zits after the newspaper comic kid. He stands peering in off the kitchen deck. I pour a few peanuts out, he backs off until I go in and then feasts. He also enjoys harrasing our cat through the glass door. Oldest girl has some sort of heeler hound that is a bark-aholic and has more holes in the yard than a gold rush. But they claim humans are the most
    dangerous species.

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