really a stray?
1. Put the 'found cat' ad in the paper, flyers in the neighborhood.
2. If you don't take it in, put a cat collar on the cat, with a note explaining the situation, asking for info from any "owner." Check the cat regularly for reply notes. 3. The cat's completely declawed? IMHO, it's not safe for the cat to be outside so much. Take it in! Good suggestions, all. You can also check with the Humane Society or pound -- we keep a "lost & found" database at ours. IMO, if somebody doesn't care enough about the cat to check there, they don't deserve the cat back. Sherry |
1. Put the 'found cat' ad in the paper, flyers in the neighborhood.
2. If you don't take it in, put a cat collar on the cat, with a note explaining the situation, asking for info from any "owner." Check the cat regularly for reply notes. 3. The cat's completely declawed? IMHO, it's not safe for the cat to be outside so much. Take it in! Good suggestions, all. You can also check with the Humane Society or pound -- we keep a "lost & found" database at ours. IMO, if somebody doesn't care enough about the cat to check there, they don't deserve the cat back. Sherry |
Good suggestions, all. You can also check with the Humane Society or pound --
we keep a "lost & found" database at ours. IMO, if somebody doesn't care enough about the cat to check there, they don't deserve the cat back. Another thing I did was call the vets in the area to see if a cat matching her description (we found an adult white cat) had been reported lost, and left a contact number if someone was looking for her. I also checked all the lost pet ads in neighborhood and city papers, but we didn't run any found ads. I did register her as found with the Humane Society, and I took her in to a vet to be scanned for a microchip. We also asked the neighborhood kids if they'd ever seen this cat before. But IMO, you can only do so much. If the person who lost the cat isn't making flyers and running ads and calling the shelters, I'd assume they don't care that much about finding her/him. In our case, the cat was so emaciated either someone had lost her quite a while ago, she was dumped, or whoever had her was neglecting her anyway. |
Good suggestions, all. You can also check with the Humane Society or pound --
we keep a "lost & found" database at ours. IMO, if somebody doesn't care enough about the cat to check there, they don't deserve the cat back. Another thing I did was call the vets in the area to see if a cat matching her description (we found an adult white cat) had been reported lost, and left a contact number if someone was looking for her. I also checked all the lost pet ads in neighborhood and city papers, but we didn't run any found ads. I did register her as found with the Humane Society, and I took her in to a vet to be scanned for a microchip. We also asked the neighborhood kids if they'd ever seen this cat before. But IMO, you can only do so much. If the person who lost the cat isn't making flyers and running ads and calling the shelters, I'd assume they don't care that much about finding her/him. In our case, the cat was so emaciated either someone had lost her quite a while ago, she was dumped, or whoever had her was neglecting her anyway. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:37 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
CatBanter.com