I was wondering how others felt about this issue because in my heart, i just believe a shelter (unless it is a no kill shelter) will just put the animal to sleep more likely than not due to the overwhelming number of cats who need homes.
As a result of my feelings, I would definitely not take a cat there and if I couldn´t take it in my home, would rather see it fend for itself as I feel a cat has a better chance that going to one of those places.
I think that most healthy cats are quite resilient and find the homes that put out food and are good hunters. I know I am thinking of adult cats.
Kittens are another problem and I would definitely feel I have signed their death warrant if I took them there which I guess is to say I would if I couldn´t find them a home......it is such a conflict in me.......
Everyday I just hope I never have to face such a problem and so far, have been able to adopt any strays that come into our yard.
Is anyone else feeling this conflict in their souls.....????
Let a cat be "free" versus taking it to a city run shelter?
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15.May 2008 05:02 | changed 28.May 2008 14:32(
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15.May 2008 05:16
Well I agree, shelter´s are overrun...what you could TRY and do if you wanted to be charitable....take the cat in temporarily...worm it, flea it and advertise it in the paper. it´s a LONG SHOT as you may end up with it in the long run...but I guess there is a chance someone will adopt it in the end. |
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15.May 2008 05:56
I don´t believe letting it be free and fending for themselves is the answer. I would think that would add to the bigger problem. Wouldn´t that cat then be breeding and adding to the huge population of homeless cats and fighting with others spreading diseases? I don´t know what an alternative answer would be either though. |
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15.May 2008 06:00
5555, you are right but I have heard, somewhere, someone talking about catching a cat, getting it fixed and then, letting it go.....don´t know if I imaging that but I think I heard of that on some news program.......??? It just sickens me to think of a cat being killed just because someone doesn´t want it and I know there are way too many cats for everyone to take in..........what a dilemma...... |
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15.May 2008 06:14
I must confess I have done that then. I have taken ferrel and stray cats and had them sterilized then let them go. They had the choice to live with me but they declined unfortunately. They could have been owned by someone I don´t know but they shouldn´t be allowed to be out wondering unsterilised. |
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15.May 2008 06:51
You already do your bit 5555! I would love to help and truth be known if a cat did just show up on the property...I would ignore mu hubby´s pleas and take it in...at least until I could pass it on to another house. The only problem is you have to segregate them from your other cat |
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15.May 2008 07:04
I agree Tegan and 5555 but it is terribly risky......Years ago, I took in a dog that was running loose. It had a nasty disease, although it didn´t look that ill. The vet said it could live or die....I kept it isolated from the dogs and cats I had at the time (I ´nursed it´ according to what the vet said to do). Once it survived, I thought all was well.....I found it a good home but was shocked to realize that it was a silent carrier of that disease, forever, and it infected one of the older dogs in its new home and that dog died.......I felt so guilty......but I couldn´t bring myself to take it to a shelter because I know they kill most of the animals.....and with that disease that wonderful dog wouldn´t have had a chance...... |
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15.May 2008 07:32
If you turn a cat loose here, you are feeding the coyotes. All of my boys have come from the shelter and people do adopt some of them. There are some no-kill shelters too. I know several people who take in any cat they find and they are very overworked and broke but at least the cats are okay. Here in town there is a feral cat society that has volnteers go to the colonies of feral cats with baited live traps. One by one they catch the feral kitties, neuter them, then take them back to their feral colonies. Kittens don´t fare well in the wild. Tom cats kill them to get their moms to go back into heat. I´m kind of lucky that I haven´t been sought out by a needy cat too many times. One time one came in through our cat door, when we had one, and slept on my ottoman at night. I always want to take a strange cat to my vet to get checked before thinking about integrating him with my cat household because of diseases. I thought this was maybe a pregant female but turns out it was an old neutered male who was at death´s door with a big stomach tumor. My vet´s wife said he had a good instinct for where to go to be comfy but they did put him to sleep. I trust them and I know they would not have done so if they´d thought that he could live happily for awhile longer. One cat had survived in the neighborhood on her own for awhile and she became my Popsicle when she spent part of one winter in my window sills, crying. She looked so well fed I thought she was already someone else´s pet but the neighbors, knowing the buttheads who had owned my house had abandoned her as a baby, were feeding her too. That was before the coyotes got to be such a problem. Not too long ago a little butterscotch and white cat was visiting with the boys at the enclosure. I thought she was a neighbor´s pet too till she kept hanging around so I went out and petted and talked to her, and invited her in, but she declined. Since I knew I´d have to take her to the vet to get checked, I didn´t try real hard but that night, she got up in the window sill and was complaining to the boys about her campsite, when all of a sudden we heard a growl, then silence. I got out of bed and grabbed a flashlight but the poor little thing was gone. So, abandoning an cat here doesn´t save them from death anymore. |
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15.May 2008 08:07
That is a tough decision, but I would have to vote for the animal shelter. |
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15.May 2008 08:38
If cats are left in the wild here in OZ to fend for themselves than you are killing all our precious wildlife. |
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15.May 2008 10:34
IN the UK the best charity is Cat Protection (and I support them financially) as they never put a healthy cat (or even a disabled but healthy cat) to sleep. They also take in Feral cats and neuter them before releasing them again. I don´t trust the other - including the RSPCA - as a friend of mine took a cat to them to get some medical attention of an infected eye and they put it to sleep because it had FIV. Now cats can live a happy long life with FIV. CP (cat protection) don´t kill cats just because they have FIV. |
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15.May 2008 13:33
In Australia there is a free service offered to de-sex stray cats. I think it´s funded by the RSPCA or a cat welfare organisation. The shelters here seem to be good because they foster out a lot of cats until they find a forever home. |
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17.May 2008 20:22
I think it should be free. Here in Az I pay about 69.00 and that includes the first shot. That is for the boys. I ahve not done Boots yet but lou and mr are done. Lou was a stray that I fed and I could not bear to leave him behind. |
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17.May 2008 20:56
Leaving a cat to fend on it´s own rather than taking it to a shelter is not a good idea. A no kill shelter or cat rescue can give it a better life than "living wild". Cats that have been pets have great risks to their lives being outside trying to find food, shelter and protection from other wild animals, toxins etc. Feral cats are another story and often are not adoptable, but capturing, speutering and vaccinating is a very good and responsible thing to do, both for the native birds of your area and to help diminish the chances of increased reproduction and waves of illness. |
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18.May 2008 03:42
I do have this conflict in my soul. I´d have to think twice before takin in any cats/kitten, cuz there´s diseases to think about it. If I´m able to keep it isolated from my other cats, I´d definitely take them in and de-worm and de-flea them. I did this once with a week-old kitten I found...found it a good home through a local cat forum, thank God. But I think for the most part I hesitate because I know I´d find it hard to let it go...I nearly kept the kitten for myself. |
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18.May 2008 05:05
Ok, I am afraid I don´t agree to let them run free. They are un-neutered, feral and wild. They eat the wild life and in a lot of places here they attack the endangered species. They carry disease to our moggies, fight with our moggies. If they get hit by cars they cause stress to people and cost to the vets that will fix them. |
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18.May 2008 05:14
Im with furrypaws! By people letting cats free they are fueling the problem of the shelters being over whelmed. The only way we can reduce the over crowded cat shelters is to educate people on pet ownership and getting their pets spayed and castrated. it will take time. |
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18.May 2008 09:04
hooplady i could not have said it better myself. i agree 100%. |
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18.May 2008 09:11
In the USA, the feral cat society (at least there is a chapter in Bloomington, IN, my former hometown) will catch a cat, desex it, microchip it, and let it free again. |
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18.May 2008 17:37
It´s done in other countries ,too (I mean lop off a piece of ear) - probably easier to identify a wild living but taken care of cat than looking in the ear for tattoo. |
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18.May 2008 18:17
This dilemma is what made me become a cat sanctuary. In 1999, there were 70 cats here, many still unfixed, ferals in my woods and recent ones from our county shelter that was not allowed to keep cats. I took everyone found at the shelter. After getting them fixed, they were released on my farm. Some may have found new homes on their own. Few ever get adopted as not many want adult cats. We feed them and care for their medical needs. |
















