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ChristineL
09-12-2007, 05:40 PM
I've written a couple of posts about the fifteen abandoned cats I had to take to the Sonoma County Shelter. I've been checking their site regularly to see if these cats have been put up for adoption. I knew some of the cats because I adopted a blind kitten (Dolly) from the family and provided them with information on low cost and free cat neutering.

Maggie is my blind kitten's mother. She is presently listed on the site in their stray cats section. Her number is A201774. They say age unknown, I know she's around a year as the blind kitten is from her first and only litter. She was a good enough mother to raise Dolly outside and protect her from harm. Taking her to the shelter brought me to tears. I couldn't afford one more cat. She's loving, playful and likes children. She loves to be petted and will present her belly. She's not crazy about being picked up, but will climb in your lap. The photo in the listing doesn't do her justice, she is actually a very pretty cat with huge beautiful green eyes. While she was hanging around my house, she tolerated my large dog quite well. She knows her name and responds to it. Go from the Sonoma County Site, adoptable animals then to Pet Harbor, put in your area code. In the list of shelters, check Sonoma County Shelter, then search. Click "I lost my pet", follow the rest of directions and you'll get a listing, with photos, of stray cats at the shelter. She was given to the shelter on August 29th.

Her owners have told neighbors they were not taking any of the cats, they won't come looking for her.

On 8/23, I left four kittens from the same group of 15. A201620, A201621 and A201622 are three of them. I worked with these kittens, grabbing them and loving them up. Those three learned to love being cuddled. The dark orange boy is particularly loveable.

If there is room in your heart and home.........please save Maggie.

PS: Don't make the mistake I made, report hoarders and those who let their un-neutered animals run all over the place before it becomes the neighborhood's and shelter's job to try and help. I should have reported these people when I took in Dolly who would not be blind if they had taken her to the vet when they first noticed she had a problem with her eyes. If someone abandons cats and you can't take them in, as hard as it is, take them to the shelter where they have a fighting chance at a good life and won't die of starvation and disease; and, most of all won't have litter after litter. Trying to convince them to neuter their cats and telling where they could get it done at very low cost or free did not help.

PPS: I was asked, in a private email, what her adoption fee might be. I figured I'd add it: Her normal adoption fee would be $75.00. The shelter is presently having a half price sale, which would make 32.50. This sale started on 9/9 and should still be running.

Clancy
09-12-2007, 06:17 PM
If at all possible, in the future, take any tame stray cats to the Rohnert Park Shelter, the Healdsburg Shelter or the Humane Society. If the cats are reasonably tame they'll stay in those shelters until they're adopted in most cases.

Each shelter has their own limits on who can bring strays in, for instance you have to be a Rohnert Park resident to bring cats to the Rohnert Park shelter, but if you have a friend who is a Rohnert Park resident and they take the cats to the shelter and say the cats showed up at your friend's door, they'll be taken in.


I've written a couple of posts about the fifteen abandoned cats I had to take to the Sonoma County Shelter.

ChristineL
09-12-2007, 06:48 PM
If at all possible, in the future, take any tame stray cats to the Rohnert Park Shelter, the Healdsburg Shelter or the Humane Society. If the cats are reasonably tame they'll stay in those shelters until they're adopted in most cases.

Each shelter has their own limits on who can bring strays in, for instance you have to be a Rohnert Park resident to bring cats to the Rohnert Park shelter, but if you have a friend who is a Rohnert Park resident and they take the cats to the shelter and say the cats showed up at your friend's door, they'll be taken in.

Thank you, this I knew. I used to live in Rohnert Park over ten years ago. I have no friends there any more. If this should happen again, I'll ask the Healsburg Shelter. I live in Guerneville. I tried the Humane Society.....they told me by appointment only.....they were full.

ChristineL
09-20-2007, 01:43 PM
On September 19th, the dark orange boy was adopted (#201620). If it was any of you. Thank you. He is a love of a kitten.

Maggie has been spayed and is now in the adoptable pet listings along with one they call Autumn (a buff beauty). Numbers A201774 (Maggie) and A201771.

I'm still searching for my beautiful Scooter and have just come back from plastering flyers on what feels like entire hillsides. The poor dog couldn't understand why this really long walk had so many stops. I don't know who's more tired, the dog, or me.

Moon
09-21-2007, 12:39 AM
Before your small animal friend gets lost, get her/him microchipped, increasing
the odds of safe return by a factor of ten. If a small animal friend of yours has gone missing,
the first thing to do is to start phoning people who hire out the services of themselves
and tracking dogs. If the missing individual is a cat, they’ll swear up and down
that allowing the dog to track a cat would “ruin” him. Horsepuckey! Refer them
to Kat Albrecht’s work, to lostapet.org &/or to me—just insist.
If you absolutely can’t talk anyone into it, get a friend with a dog to sniff the missing cat’s bed,
and then try to get across to him the idea of following that scent outdoors. That’s the hard way,
but you must get a dog on the scent now—before it’s crossed with so many other scents
even a dog can’t follow it.
See lostapet.org for further advice and for small-animal retrieval contact info.


I'm still searching for my beautiful Scooter and have just come back from plastering flyers on what feels like entire hillsides. The poor dog couldn't understand why this really long walk had so many stops. I don't know who's more tired, the dog, or me.[/quote]

Kunnskaping
09-21-2007, 10:31 PM
Before your small animal friend gets lost, get her/him microchipped, increasing the odds of safe return by a factor of ten.

An RFID chip might improve the odds of finding a lost pet, but it might also increase the odds that the pet, lost or not, will develop a tumor at the site of the chip (https://www.medicaldaily.net/story.asp?ID=229189&Title=French%20Bulldog%20at%20Heart%20of%20RFID%20Tumor%20Story). The health risk presented by these chips has been covered up by the industry (see previous link for some details), but now that the story has been busted open in the mainstream press, financial backers are taking it seriously. (https://www.technewsworld.com/story/59295.html) I think pet owners, parents, and employees involved in decisions regarding whether to implant one or more of these chips in a living being would do well to do the same. And, of course, there's that whole 666 thing (https://www.rfid-666.com/) being foreshadowed by this trend. . . . :wink:

spam1
09-22-2007, 11:34 PM
An RFID chip might improve the odds of finding a lost pet, but it might also increase the odds that the pet, lost or not, will develop a tumor at the site of the chip (https://www.medicaldaily.net/story.asp?ID=229189&Title=French%20Bulldog%20at%20Heart%20of%20RFID%20Tumor%20Story). The health risk presented by these chips has been covered up by the industry (see previous link for some details), but now that the story has been busted open in the mainstream press, financial backers are taking it seriously. (https://www.technewsworld.com/story/59295.html) I think pet owners, parents, and employees involved in decisions regarding whether to implant one or more of these chips in a living being would do well to do the same. And, of course, there's that whole 666 thing (https://www.rfid-666.com/) being foreshadowed by this trend. . . . :wink:
I assume the smiley face was to ensure that everyone knew you were spouting non-sense, right :thumbsup:

RFID tags are no more dangerous than a implanting a piece of sand (which I will admit might be dangerous, in a very remote way). RFID technology doesn't have any EM associated with it unless it is scanned (the scanning energy is converted into power to run the RFID chip), so the risk of getting EM induced cancer is zero, unless your pet is lost and scanned...seems like a good trade off to me.

ChristineL
10-01-2007, 11:53 PM
Here is an update: Maggie is still waiting for a home.....I saw her a few days ago and she was alone in a dog kennel.....she's not happy alone. She's always had other cats and humans around. Her ID number is, again, A201771. She is a loving playful girl. #A201774, the buff beauty was adopted. A201621 and A201622, a beautiful black 5 month old female and a sweet buff male from the same litter are also waiting for homes. They're both sweet and friendly.....I taught them to enjoy being handled and petted. They're all healthy and come from a line of healthy cats. Maggie's mother is still in foster care with her litter of four. Once again, if there is room in your home and heart, please save my friends. Taking all these abandoned cats, many of which I knew, to the shelter was difficult and painful. It was also the only choice I had........I'm keeping track of them and hope I ended up taking the first step to finding them new homes. The last kitten I had left, I wasn't able to catch her the last time I was taking cats in, has a good home with a friend of mine. She turned out to be a super-affectionate little cat who thrives on having a human of her very own.