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-   -   ethics: The stray that wasn't.. (http://www.catbanter.com/showthread.php?t=22263)

Brian Link July 9th 04 10:10 AM

ethics: The stray that wasn't..
 
About three weeks ago this nice little tom started visiting us. We
have two indoor cats and they were pretty agitated.

He kept coming around, and I took a good look at him. He was
un-neutered, looked to be a year or two old, was bedraggled and
riddled with ear mites. Other than that he was friendly and seemed in
good health. He didn't seem bothered by the cats trying to tunnel
through the picture window to get to him.. his response was to spray
our house. And our car. And our garden.. etc.

After a couple weeks, I decided I'd put some food out for him, which
he graciously wolfed down and asked for more. I put a cardboard box in
the shade for him to lay in, and he took up residence.

Well, to make a long story short, I checked the Humane Society, asked
around the neighborhood and put up posters, but no one recognized him.
So we made the decision to adopt him. Took him to the vet, got his
vaccinations, cleaned his ears, and got him fixed. About $450
altogether, which we could barely spare..

Today a kid bikes up to me and says "hey mister, remember that cat you
were asking about? Someone has a lost cat poster up at the rec center
and it looks like him".

Now.. if someone 'owned' him and let him rove freely, un-neutered, and
let the mites get to the point where his ears were running, should I
call them and tell them I found their cat?

Maybe there's a little kid who loves that (absentee) cat as much I
love my cats. Maybe they didn't know better.

If it turns out to be him, should I call?

Brian Link, Minnesota Countertenor
----------------------------------
"I think animal testing is a terrible idea;
they get all nervous and give the wrong answers."
- regmech

Wendy July 9th 04 12:24 PM


"Brian Link" wrote in message
...
About three weeks ago this nice little tom started visiting us. We
have two indoor cats and they were pretty agitated.

He kept coming around, and I took a good look at him. He was
un-neutered, looked to be a year or two old, was bedraggled and
riddled with ear mites. Other than that he was friendly and seemed in
good health. He didn't seem bothered by the cats trying to tunnel
through the picture window to get to him.. his response was to spray
our house. And our car. And our garden.. etc.

After a couple weeks, I decided I'd put some food out for him, which
he graciously wolfed down and asked for more. I put a cardboard box in
the shade for him to lay in, and he took up residence.

Well, to make a long story short, I checked the Humane Society, asked
around the neighborhood and put up posters, but no one recognized him.
So we made the decision to adopt him. Took him to the vet, got his
vaccinations, cleaned his ears, and got him fixed. About $450
altogether, which we could barely spare..

Today a kid bikes up to me and says "hey mister, remember that cat you
were asking about? Someone has a lost cat poster up at the rec center
and it looks like him".

Now.. if someone 'owned' him and let him rove freely, un-neutered, and
let the mites get to the point where his ears were running, should I
call them and tell them I found their cat?

Maybe there's a little kid who loves that (absentee) cat as much I
love my cats. Maybe they didn't know better.

If it turns out to be him, should I call?

Brian Link, Minnesota Countertenor



I guess I'd go check out the lost cat poster to see if this really could be
the cat you have.

Many times they have a date when the cat went missing on the posters which
might assist you in making the decision whether to call or not. If they said
the cat just recently went missing then I'd keep him. If they let the cat
get in this condition they shouldn't have a cat. If the poster has been
there a while then there is a possibility he just got out on them and has
been wandering long enough to get in this shape.

Legally I don't know if you can keep the cat or not if it is the cat on the
poster. But you might be able to recoup at least some of the money you spent
if you have to surrender the cat to the owners.

W



Wendy July 9th 04 12:24 PM


"Brian Link" wrote in message
...
About three weeks ago this nice little tom started visiting us. We
have two indoor cats and they were pretty agitated.

He kept coming around, and I took a good look at him. He was
un-neutered, looked to be a year or two old, was bedraggled and
riddled with ear mites. Other than that he was friendly and seemed in
good health. He didn't seem bothered by the cats trying to tunnel
through the picture window to get to him.. his response was to spray
our house. And our car. And our garden.. etc.

After a couple weeks, I decided I'd put some food out for him, which
he graciously wolfed down and asked for more. I put a cardboard box in
the shade for him to lay in, and he took up residence.

Well, to make a long story short, I checked the Humane Society, asked
around the neighborhood and put up posters, but no one recognized him.
So we made the decision to adopt him. Took him to the vet, got his
vaccinations, cleaned his ears, and got him fixed. About $450
altogether, which we could barely spare..

Today a kid bikes up to me and says "hey mister, remember that cat you
were asking about? Someone has a lost cat poster up at the rec center
and it looks like him".

Now.. if someone 'owned' him and let him rove freely, un-neutered, and
let the mites get to the point where his ears were running, should I
call them and tell them I found their cat?

Maybe there's a little kid who loves that (absentee) cat as much I
love my cats. Maybe they didn't know better.

If it turns out to be him, should I call?

Brian Link, Minnesota Countertenor



I guess I'd go check out the lost cat poster to see if this really could be
the cat you have.

Many times they have a date when the cat went missing on the posters which
might assist you in making the decision whether to call or not. If they said
the cat just recently went missing then I'd keep him. If they let the cat
get in this condition they shouldn't have a cat. If the poster has been
there a while then there is a possibility he just got out on them and has
been wandering long enough to get in this shape.

Legally I don't know if you can keep the cat or not if it is the cat on the
poster. But you might be able to recoup at least some of the money you spent
if you have to surrender the cat to the owners.

W



Luvskats00 July 9th 04 02:11 PM

writes
if someone 'owned' him and let him rove freely, un-neutered, and
let the mites get to the point where his ears were running, should I
call them and tell them I found their cat?


If someone let their cat out without spaying/neutering her/him first...I'd say,
they lost any rights or courtesy in "notifying" them about the whereabouts of
said cat. If the cat acccidently ran outside, then, that's another
tale......Perhaps they were treating the cat (for the earmites) before he
"accidently got out"?

Luvskats00 July 9th 04 02:11 PM

writes
if someone 'owned' him and let him rove freely, un-neutered, and
let the mites get to the point where his ears were running, should I
call them and tell them I found their cat?


If someone let their cat out without spaying/neutering her/him first...I'd say,
they lost any rights or courtesy in "notifying" them about the whereabouts of
said cat. If the cat acccidently ran outside, then, that's another
tale......Perhaps they were treating the cat (for the earmites) before he
"accidently got out"?

[email protected] July 9th 04 03:15 PM

Now.. if someone 'owned' him and let
him rove freely, un-neutered, and let the
mites get to the point where his ears were
running, should I call them and tell them I
found their cat?


No. It's probably not the same cat anyway considering that the lost cat
sign is up long after you took him in and brought him back to health.
You've given this cat good care and a good home, and took all the
required steps to find the previous owner. He's yours now.

Megan



"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do
nothing."

-Edmund Burke

Learn The TRUTH About Declawing
http://www.stopdeclaw.com

Zuzu's Cats Photo Album:
http://www.PictureTrail.com/zuzu22

"Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation), there is one
elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and
splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then
providence moves too. A whole stream of events issues from the decision,
raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen incidents, meetings and
material assistance, which no man could have dreamt would have come his
way."

- W.H. Murray



[email protected] July 9th 04 03:15 PM

Now.. if someone 'owned' him and let
him rove freely, un-neutered, and let the
mites get to the point where his ears were
running, should I call them and tell them I
found their cat?


No. It's probably not the same cat anyway considering that the lost cat
sign is up long after you took him in and brought him back to health.
You've given this cat good care and a good home, and took all the
required steps to find the previous owner. He's yours now.

Megan



"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do
nothing."

-Edmund Burke

Learn The TRUTH About Declawing
http://www.stopdeclaw.com

Zuzu's Cats Photo Album:
http://www.PictureTrail.com/zuzu22

"Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation), there is one
elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and
splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then
providence moves too. A whole stream of events issues from the decision,
raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen incidents, meetings and
material assistance, which no man could have dreamt would have come his
way."

- W.H. Murray



Tracy July 9th 04 06:03 PM

Brian Link wrote in message . ..
About three weeks ago this nice little tom started visiting us. We
have two indoor cats and they were pretty agitated.

He kept coming around, and I took a good look at him. He was
un-neutered, looked to be a year or two old, was bedraggled and
riddled with ear mites. Other than that he was friendly and seemed in
good health. He didn't seem bothered by the cats trying to tunnel
through the picture window to get to him.. his response was to spray
our house. And our car. And our garden.. etc.

After a couple weeks, I decided I'd put some food out for him, which
he graciously wolfed down and asked for more. I put a cardboard box in
the shade for him to lay in, and he took up residence.

Well, to make a long story short, I checked the Humane Society, asked
around the neighborhood and put up posters, but no one recognized him.
So we made the decision to adopt him. Took him to the vet, got his
vaccinations, cleaned his ears, and got him fixed. About $450
altogether, which we could barely spare..

Today a kid bikes up to me and says "hey mister, remember that cat you
were asking about? Someone has a lost cat poster up at the rec center
and it looks like him".

Now.. if someone 'owned' him and let him rove freely, un-neutered, and
let the mites get to the point where his ears were running, should I
call them and tell them I found their cat?

Maybe there's a little kid who loves that (absentee) cat as much I
love my cats. Maybe they didn't know better.

If it turns out to be him, should I call?


Yes.

Tracy July 9th 04 06:03 PM

Brian Link wrote in message . ..
About three weeks ago this nice little tom started visiting us. We
have two indoor cats and they were pretty agitated.

He kept coming around, and I took a good look at him. He was
un-neutered, looked to be a year or two old, was bedraggled and
riddled with ear mites. Other than that he was friendly and seemed in
good health. He didn't seem bothered by the cats trying to tunnel
through the picture window to get to him.. his response was to spray
our house. And our car. And our garden.. etc.

After a couple weeks, I decided I'd put some food out for him, which
he graciously wolfed down and asked for more. I put a cardboard box in
the shade for him to lay in, and he took up residence.

Well, to make a long story short, I checked the Humane Society, asked
around the neighborhood and put up posters, but no one recognized him.
So we made the decision to adopt him. Took him to the vet, got his
vaccinations, cleaned his ears, and got him fixed. About $450
altogether, which we could barely spare..

Today a kid bikes up to me and says "hey mister, remember that cat you
were asking about? Someone has a lost cat poster up at the rec center
and it looks like him".

Now.. if someone 'owned' him and let him rove freely, un-neutered, and
let the mites get to the point where his ears were running, should I
call them and tell them I found their cat?

Maybe there's a little kid who loves that (absentee) cat as much I
love my cats. Maybe they didn't know better.

If it turns out to be him, should I call?


Yes.

Ginger-lyn Summer July 9th 04 06:47 PM

On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 04:10:28 -0500, Brian Link wrote:

About three weeks ago this nice little tom started visiting us. We
have two indoor cats and they were pretty agitated.

He kept coming around, and I took a good look at him. He was
un-neutered, looked to be a year or two old, was bedraggled and
riddled with ear mites. Other than that he was friendly and seemed in
good health. He didn't seem bothered by the cats trying to tunnel
through the picture window to get to him.. his response was to spray
our house. And our car. And our garden.. etc.

After a couple weeks, I decided I'd put some food out for him, which
he graciously wolfed down and asked for more. I put a cardboard box in
the shade for him to lay in, and he took up residence.

Well, to make a long story short, I checked the Humane Society, asked
around the neighborhood and put up posters, but no one recognized him.
So we made the decision to adopt him. Took him to the vet, got his
vaccinations, cleaned his ears, and got him fixed. About $450
altogether, which we could barely spare..

Today a kid bikes up to me and says "hey mister, remember that cat you
were asking about? Someone has a lost cat poster up at the rec center
and it looks like him".

Now.. if someone 'owned' him and let him rove freely, un-neutered, and
let the mites get to the point where his ears were running, should I
call them and tell them I found their cat?

Maybe there's a little kid who loves that (absentee) cat as much I
love my cats. Maybe they didn't know better.

If it turns out to be him, should I call?

Brian Link, Minnesota Countertenor
----------------------------------
"I think animal testing is a terrible idea;
they get all nervous and give the wrong answers."
- regmech


That is a tough call. On the one hand, it could be that they cat went
missing awhile back (in which case, why wouldn't they have posters up
earlier?) and that's how he got in this shape. And as you said, you
wouldn't want to break a little kids' heart.

On the other hand, I have less and less patience for anyone who
deliberately allows their cat out, doesn't spay/neuter, etc.

I used to try *very* hard to track down owners -- knocking on doors,
looking for signs, calling the Humane Society, etc. I seem to try
less hard, especially when I find an unneutered cat full of fleas and
mites who clearly hasn't been cared for.

Over the years, I have found and returned cats to their homes -- in
those cases, the cat snuck out and had only been gone a day or so, and
they were in good shape. Others I have found were in bad shape, and I
never did see any signs, get any knocks on my door (I'm kinda the
"neighborhood cat lady", or find anywhere they seemed to belong.

Bottom line, what do you feel is the right thing to do for the cat?
And that's your answer.

Best of luck,

Ginger-lyn



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