newborn kittens
My brother found a cat that just had kittens under a sticker bush and
would like to move them to more safety spot. Can you move a litter with the mother this young or will she hurt her babies if you do? thanks for you advice. Rosemary |
I agree. It really depends on the personality of the mother. If you can
catch her, then attempt the move. If you cant, then I would recommend leaving them alone and keeping an eye on her. Once the kittens get to be four or five weeks, Id take them away from her. It is awful early, but that way you can socialize them to like humans, and give them a chance to have a home, instead of becoming feral and living out on the street and living with those risks. "Rosemary" wrote in message om... My brother found a cat that just had kittens under a sticker bush and would like to move them to more safety spot. Can you move a litter with the mother this young or will she hurt her babies if you do? thanks for you advice. Rosemary |
I agree. It really depends on the personality of the mother. If you can
catch her, then attempt the move. If you cant, then I would recommend leaving them alone and keeping an eye on her. Once the kittens get to be four or five weeks, Id take them away from her. It is awful early, but that way you can socialize them to like humans, and give them a chance to have a home, instead of becoming feral and living out on the street and living with those risks. "Rosemary" wrote in message om... My brother found a cat that just had kittens under a sticker bush and would like to move them to more safety spot. Can you move a litter with the mother this young or will she hurt her babies if you do? thanks for you advice. Rosemary |
Don't move the kittens. They're probably safer under a sticker bush than
they would be anywhere. The mama will move them if the spot is too dangerous. -- M9 "Rosemary" wrote in message om... My brother found a cat that just had kittens under a sticker bush and would like to move them to more safety spot. Can you move a litter with the mother this young or will she hurt her babies if you do? thanks for you advice. Rosemary |
Don't move the kittens. They're probably safer under a sticker bush than
they would be anywhere. The mama will move them if the spot is too dangerous. -- M9 "Rosemary" wrote in message om... My brother found a cat that just had kittens under a sticker bush and would like to move them to more safety spot. Can you move a litter with the mother this young or will she hurt her babies if you do? thanks for you advice. Rosemary |
"~*Connie*~" wrote in message ...
I agree. It really depends on the personality of the mother. If you can catch her, then attempt the move. If you cant, then I would recommend leaving them alone and keeping an eye on her. Once the kittens get to be four or five weeks, Id take them away from her. It is awful early, but that way you can socialize them to like humans, and give them a chance to have a home, instead of becoming feral and living out on the street and living with those risks. Ageed, also let your neighbors know (if you live in a close neighborhood) about them so no one accidently disturbs them, same with landscapers. My wife and I went though two similar situations, one the mother abandoned them (3 kittens, 2 got very good homes, one stayed with us), the other the mother was very sweet and we took her in (northeast winter was coming) we raised the kittens from bald, no eyed, peeping kittens, to fully, jumping, playing kittens. (Most of which also got good homes though us, the rest went to a shelter and were all adopted out). Also, if you know how to feed & take care of the kittens, it will help them grow and devolop into good cats, I'm sure there is a plethora of information out there on how to take care of them. Warning: If you do move them in your house, and you have cats on your own, keep them seperate and clean all the cats you bring in, a simple bath will doa world of good. |
"~*Connie*~" wrote in message ...
I agree. It really depends on the personality of the mother. If you can catch her, then attempt the move. If you cant, then I would recommend leaving them alone and keeping an eye on her. Once the kittens get to be four or five weeks, Id take them away from her. It is awful early, but that way you can socialize them to like humans, and give them a chance to have a home, instead of becoming feral and living out on the street and living with those risks. Ageed, also let your neighbors know (if you live in a close neighborhood) about them so no one accidently disturbs them, same with landscapers. My wife and I went though two similar situations, one the mother abandoned them (3 kittens, 2 got very good homes, one stayed with us), the other the mother was very sweet and we took her in (northeast winter was coming) we raised the kittens from bald, no eyed, peeping kittens, to fully, jumping, playing kittens. (Most of which also got good homes though us, the rest went to a shelter and were all adopted out). Also, if you know how to feed & take care of the kittens, it will help them grow and devolop into good cats, I'm sure there is a plethora of information out there on how to take care of them. Warning: If you do move them in your house, and you have cats on your own, keep them seperate and clean all the cats you bring in, a simple bath will doa world of good. |
Rosemary, the kindest and most responsible thing to do is to bring the whole family inside, where they are all safe. But you don't mention whether the cat is tame, which complicates matters somewhat. You also don't mention whether you are a kid, which complicates things even more, unless your parents will support you. Feel free to contact me at his address or my Campus Cats address for further advice. Sharon Talbert Friends of Campus Cats On Wed, 5 May 2004, Rosemary wrote: My brother found a cat that just had kittens under a sticker bush and would like to move them to more safety spot. Can you move a litter with the mother this young or will she hurt her babies if you do? thanks for you advice. Rosemary |
Rosemary, the kindest and most responsible thing to do is to bring the whole family inside, where they are all safe. But you don't mention whether the cat is tame, which complicates matters somewhat. You also don't mention whether you are a kid, which complicates things even more, unless your parents will support you. Feel free to contact me at his address or my Campus Cats address for further advice. Sharon Talbert Friends of Campus Cats On Wed, 5 May 2004, Rosemary wrote: My brother found a cat that just had kittens under a sticker bush and would like to move them to more safety spot. Can you move a litter with the mother this young or will she hurt her babies if you do? thanks for you advice. Rosemary |
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