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Adopting
a kitten or cat | Handrearing kittens
| Finding a lost cat | Caring
for feral cats and kittens
Poisonous house plants & dangers in your garden
| Moving house with a cat | Taming
feral kittens
How you can help
Why we have our cats neutered | How to make an igloo
When a new cat appears in the garden, some cat-lovers
immediately offer it some food; but is this always the right thing to do?
If the cat is lost or abandoned it may be a lifesaver, but otherwise it
may only cause problems for the cat and its real owner.
The cat might be on a specially medicated diet and ordinary cat food
(and even more the popular dish of milk, which is bad for most cats) can
compromise its health. The cat
might be greedy and receiving extra meals may cause obesity.
If the cat is new to the area and exploring its new
neighbourhood, whilst not totally familiar with the outside of its new home,
food offers may stop it from returning home altogether and we are then dealing
with a lost cat. This can also
happen to “holiday cats”, which are in the care of a friendly neighbour
with keys to the house. The cat
misses the usual attention of its owners, gets bored and seeking human company
it may venture further than usual with potentially disastrous circumstances.
The cat, having found a feeder elsewhere does not go home anymore and
the neighbour finds the food untouched and stops feeding – a pet has become
homeless. Every year,
particularly during the summer holidays we receive requests from people to
“collect a stray” which they have started feeding, unaware that they may
have caused the problem in the first place. I suggest they reduce the feeding to only one meal to
encourage the cat to go home. Meanwhile
the cat should be scanned for a microchip, the number of which is stored on a
central national register containing the cat’s home address. Failing that the neighbourhood should be informed about this
cat in notes on trees and through letter boxes, at least until the holidays
are over.
A very sad story twenty years ago warned me against
removing new cats. A man and his
two children came to me to choose a new kitten.
All three, and soon all four of us, were in floods of tears.
Their nine-month-old beautiful and affectionate neutered tomcat had
been left in the care of a neighbour for two weeks.
He had soon disappeared and when the family made enquiries on their
return they found out that Tom had ventured only ten houses away where he had
previously never been seen. Two
elderly people assumed he was lost and started feeding him.
A few days later they realised they had acquired a cat and unwilling to
adopt him, they had him collected by a charity which was not opposed to
killing for expediency. Because
he wore a collar he was kept for a few days, in case the owner turned up, then
he was put down.
Who was to blame for this tragedy? Practically everybody involved; the cat should have had an
address attached to his collar, the neighbour should have advertised when he
went missing (or looked for him), the ladies should not have fed him or at
least asked around for his owners and finally the charity should have left
notices realising that such a well groomed, well fed cat was not really a
stray.
How can you tell if a cat is lost or not?
Lost cats are usually desperate and hungry and will eat anything; to
test them I offer some food of moderate quality, which will be ignored by a
spoilt cat, which has had its meal at home.
If a cat hangs about I use a scanner, if it is a kitten I take it in
instantly for safety reasons and make extensive enquiries in the area.
Young kittens do not survive for long without regular feeding and
cannot be left to fend for themselves.
© Elke de Vries 2004