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The Kindness of Strangers

A woman named Donna lives in a nearby town. She loves her cats and always provides them with the best care possible. Like so many people have reported this year, Donna suddenly discovered she had a friendly pregnant cat visiting her yard and was concerned about what to do.

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©2012 Donna M. Winnie.

This is Winnie. She usually lives at a home nearby Donna. Winnie got pregnant and had a litter of kittens, then another. Winnie is pregnant for the third time, but this time it will be different. Donna spoke with her neighbor about spaying and neutering and instead of arguing that the neighbor was doing a bad thing by leaving her cat intact, she simply offered to get Winnie spayed after her next kittens were weaned. Winnie's guardian agreed that it needed to be done.

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©2012 Donna M. Babies on board.

What Donna wasn't sure of was what to do with the kittens once they arrived and how to keep them all safe and not put any of her own dear cats at risk of picking up any diseases or vice versa. I found out about Donna's situation and thought about what I could do to help. Clearly, this wasn't the sort of person I usually run into-the kind that wants to dump a problem on a rescue, offers no other support and wants them gone. No. Donna wanted to help, to contribute and to make the entire rescue much easier on whoever helped.

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©2012 Donna M. Winnie and kitten number one.

What she really wanted was a reliable way to get the kittens adopted into good homes instead of putting them on Craigslist, which is not allowed in the first place and which is dangerous to do. Those listings can be answered by anyone and adopters aren't screened so the cats could be given away to labs for testing or for other nefarious purposes.

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©2012 Donna M. Welcome to the world little ones!

Donna worked out that Winnie would have a home no matter what, but that if she could have guidance and eventually have the kittens go into foster care, that's what would be best and I agreed. If Donna could provide a home for now, I'd work on finding a foster home or hope, pray, beg that enough of my own foster cats would get adopted by the time Winnie's were ready to find their homes.

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©2012 Donna M. Teenie tinies!

Five kittens were born on August 10th-little gray and white cow patterned kittens and one who's black and tabby cow patterned. So far they're all doing well and Winnie, no surprise, is a great mama. On Wednesday I've offered to have Winnie seen by one of our Vets to get tested for Feline Leukemia and FIV, to be checked for fleas, get de-wormed and have all the kittens examined to make sure they're all doing well, too. With any luck, everyone will be just fine and we can focus on giving Winnie great nutrition so she can support her offspring. Snap testing mama cats always distresses me, but it must be done.

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©2012 Donna M. Kitten pile!

This lucky family found safe harbor under the roof of a loving couple and although they are a bit nervous about having such small wards, I'll be offering advice and doing some hand-holding as was done for me so many years ago when I first started fostering mamas and their kittens.

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©2012 Donna M. It doesn't get any cuter than this.

In two months (or possibly sooner) we'll need a foster home for these kittens.

If you live in or near Newtown, CT, please contact me at info@kittenassociates.org for more information on how to be a foster home. It's really fun. It's not a big time commitment and you're saving lives!

I want to thank Donna for doing the right thing for this family and for not turning her back on them or trying to dump them on a floundering rescue with no resources. Your willingness to take on this responsibility makes my job so much easier and lets me stretch my limited resources a bit further.

If only everyone who found a pregnant cat was so devoted to their care!

Comments

Oh.... so sweeties!!!!!

I´m praying for babies and Mom find a forever and lovely home!!!!

Thanks to Donna for the rescue of this pregnant Mommy, Winnie.

WHOA! As an experienced cat foster I have SERIOUS problems with what you said about Craig's List! I'm surprised at your sweeping statements and generalizations!

Not allowed in the first place
Not true! CL prohibits animal sales and breeding, adoptions are fine. Sure, some people try to mask their sales as 'adoptions' and ask big bucks. They are in violation of CL's T&Cs and are usually flagged (often by me).

Dangerous to do
How is it dangerous? I have met some really fantastic adopters through CL. It's simply a place to match up supply and demand.

Those listings can be answered by anyone
Yes, and they can be ignored by me.

Adopters aren't screened
This generalization FLOORS me. Of course I screen adopters. Each and every one. I make them fill in a form before they even get to meet the cats. I call their vets and their landlords! When required I do home visits.

the cats could be given away to labs for testing or for other nefarious purposes
Yes, sadly that is true of our society. But as mentioned above, we take steps to ensure this doesn't happen. When I see naive people posting ads 'free cat/kitten/dog to good home' I (and many others) email them to let them know the reality of the situation, and give advice to how to offer their animal safely.

No, I'm not the only diligent one. There are scores of us in my community alone. We're everywhere. Please don't diss this valid and valued method of animal adoptions. We're having a hard enough time placing our cats during this kitten season as it is.

I wish you and this family luck finding homes, however you connect with adopters.

This may be your experience because you're diligent and are careful. You sound like you run a rescue yourself. Most folks do not take the time to bother with screening anyone. They get "stuck" with a cat or find kittens in their yard. They don't want to deal with them or even get them vetted. They just want them out. They also add to the problem of overpopulation of pets by not spaying or neutering the animals before they let them go because they may not know better, not have the funds, not care-assuming the adopter will take care of all these things-which you can't guarantee will happen. I wasn't making a sweeping statement that isn't based on facts. All the locals rescues here let each other know when they find ads on craigslist for folks giving away found animals or who want to get rid of their own cat or dog because they know of the inherent risks. I've taken some cats from Criagslist and the folks never even asked me my address or any personal info. They just handed over the cat-who was NOT VETTED at all-and this goes for cats who are a few months old to 13 years old. If everyone was like you and did the right thing, then those ads wouldn't be removed and animals wouldn't be at risk. I stand by what I wrote. Craigslist is NOT a place to advertise an animal.

I'm not a CL fan, but am thrilled someone responsible is! Thanks for fostering & responsibly adopting out!

Donna & Robin you are angels! Thanks for helping this adorable family!

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