Savannah's Paw Tracks

Autobiography of a Former Shelter Cat

Archive for the tag “abandoned kittens”

Friday’s Child

HIYA!!   SAVANNAH HERE!!!

“Friday’s child is loving and giving.” Children born on a Friday are thought to be affable, loving, and generous. I think this can also mean that any abandoned kitten that is trapped on Friday is also loving and giving, don’t ya think that outta be right too?

You see, my our nonprofit that Mom L and Dad P manage, Delta View Cats, has incredible volunteers. We do lots of things to try and help humanely manage our city of Pittsburg’s overpopulation of abandoned community cats. We feed about fifty kitties all around our marina and waterfront park. Now this park had a colon of cats numbering about thirty-five in 2017. We have worked to get friendly kitties adopted and now the colony stabilized in 2019 to twelve adult cats. Since 2017 to Spring 2021, no cats nor kittens were abandoned at this park. It was a common dumping ground for over ten years, since about 2005.

Unfortunately, from Spring of 2021 to now, October, 2022, Delta View Cats volunteer colony caretakers/feeders have found forty dumped kittens at this park!!

We feed once a day at this park and our Friday colony caretakers went early before feeding time, intent on trapping this little kitten that was sighted about eight days before. They found she was sleeping in one of our shelters and plotted to catch her on her exit in the early morning using a fishing net!! SUCCESS!!!! Miss Elaine and Mr. Bobby feed on Friday’s so they named this little three pound two ounce girl “Friday”!!

She was skinny and her long furrs were matted and dirty. And boy was she hissy at first. She tried to climb outta her cage and she huddled in a corner.

She met a buddy at station three feeder, Hercules, and he must’a showed her how to survive in this park with raccoons, owls and unkind loose dogs. Miss Elaine and Mr Bobby volunteered to foster little Friday, whom they named after the day of the week that they always feed and it is also the day they were finally successful in snagging her!! YAY FOR FRIDAY!!

She got over being hissy really quickly and Mom L just had to go visit and hold her.

You can see her furrs are not groomed and she has had a weepy eye so she is getting treated with eye drops our retired DVM pal Doc Josie ordered. And she loves to be brushed and groomed and takes her eye med just fine. She is getting dewormed and will soon be weighing in at four pounds!!! WOO HOO!!!

Isn’t she just gorgeous!! Did you notice her incredible white LONG whiskers!

Friday will soon be ready for adoption so please will all my pals share her story on your own social media, ESPECIALLY if you have family and friends living in the San Francisco bay area. If anyone is interested, you can contact Mom L at this email address: infopdvc at gmail dot com.

PAW PATS, SAVANNAH

Kittens treated like trash

HIYA!!   SAVANNAH HERE!!!

Mom L wrote this blog post six years ago. If you do not click on this link to read this moving post about how insane America is relative to being a “throw away society”, then you will miss the entire point of my blog post today. As for me, another “thrown away” adult cat, I believe that post is one of Mom L’s best posts. Now, all of mine are brilliant, but—Mom L and Dad P saved me from remaining as a “thrown away” cat.

Now let’s talk kitten trash. Yes, I said “kitten trash”. I live in the San Francisco bay area, in Contra Costa County. Our “kitten season” is now ten months, not six months, long. That my pals is called “climate change”. We virtually are losing any “winter” respite we once had in the breeding time for abandoned adult community cats.

Given that our county animal services has chosen to fall back on something called “community sheltering” for all abandoned adult, friendly or not, community cats and all kittens born in “the wild” to those same parents, none of our county’s small nonprofits, like mine—Delta View Cats—has any resource to help us save the lives of this year’s “thrown away like trash kittens” during our over extended “kitten season”.

I have examples of kittens and juvenile kitties (six months to twelve months) that we have found dumped at  city parks, along our delta waterfront and even in a boat at our marina.

August, 2021: Mom cat (seven months old) and four kittens dumped at a city park. Two kittens euthanized. Mom cat and remaining two kittens fostered by Delta View Cats and waited six to seven months to find their permanent homes.

While in foster care—

Six week old kitten, clearly from someone who loved her, but could not find resources to help her keep this kitten safe. Sadly, her guardian chose to dump her in a carrier, in the rain, with food and a note at a city park. If only this human knew there are still resources in our small city to help her keep her kitten. Shiloh was surrendered to county animal services as an “abandoned kitten” with no ability to TNR her.

Nine kittens, left with a note, in a plastic container at the entrance to the city park where Delta View Cats (DVC) feeds a colony of twelve adult cats.

Two kittens, about four months old, found again at this same delta waterfront city park by our DVC colony caretakers. Very sick, thin and terrified. They were passed as a Good Samaritan drop off at a sanctioned local emergency animal clinic and then transferred to our Contra Cost County animal services. Thankfully, both have recovered and been adopted.

Within about seven days, DVC received another call about five more kittens dumped at this same park.

These kittens were only about ten weeks old, again very ill with upper respiratory infections. Again, Contra Costa County Animal Services had to accept them because 1)  they are ill/injured and 2) there is no possibility of TNR ( trap, neuter, return) because DVC has no idea “where” to release them as they were dumped, like trash at this park.

DVC received a plea to help a very pregnant mom cat—only about eight months old herself. We quickly got a local vet to take her in immediately to end her pregnancy and spay her. We named her Tiffany and she has been adopted. Tiffany was dumped by the trash dumpster at a nearby apartment complex. Guess they could not fit her into their car when they left. She was just a little bit more trash they left in the parking lot.

Yes, I know you are tired of reading this very long post. But I do still have two more examples of kittens being tossed aside as non-recyclable trash.

Mom L and her pal Miss Carol Ann found yet again THREE MORE dumped kittens at the same city park where DVC manages an adult cat colony. These sweeties were about six months old. Starving and scared but incredibly filled with trust and need to be with humans. Why were they dumped? *tapping paw on the table for a moment*—Oh right!! Because our Contra Costa County Animal Services does not provide more than sixteen spay/neuter appointments for a county with about 300,000 abandoned community cats/kittens!! Pl ease meet Cruiser, Spats and Bandit!! Now waiting for adoption and our county animal services. ONLY because they were abandoned at a city park. Had they been in someone’s backyard, animal services would have said “shelter them in place” then TNR them. Leave them to a life outside.

Lastly, found just days ago. Two abandoned kittens found in a boat at our city marina. DVC was able to collect two of these kittens. We have not been able to find the mom and third.

Left like trash by our city employees. They found this little family in the morning but did not bother to contact DVC until the end of their work shift. Too late to be able to trap mom cat and the last little tuxedo kitten Mom L saw. These two were again taken to county animal services where they are “mandated” to intake only sick, injured and abandoned kittens. Had these kittens been located in someone’s backyard, they would have been doomed to living a life outside where they would likely starve over time.

So I say “Welcome to America”!! Do you know that our state of California and our county of Contra Costa have zero ordinances that “mandate” our taxpayer paid for animal services must intake abandoned adult friendly community cats/kittens? Yup!! When will we all wake up to the fact that our abandoned community kittens deserve humane care? Why do we, and I ask this of my California Contra Costa County, believe that it is just fine to treat these abandoned, lost soul kittens like trash that has NO redeemable value?? What??? Ya can’t recycle tiny little kittens??

So how’s it going with public funds dedicated to providing humane care and management to abandoned community kittens in your part of the good ole USA?

PAW PATS, SAVANNAH

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