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Old April 4th 04, 04:50 PM
RedRiver35
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Well, there is no telling what they did at
the vet's office after he bit them. They are probably okay foks, but I can't
watch them as they only take the animals back and not let the people into the
rooms like other vets do.

His cry is higher pitched and squeaky. H rubs agains the doorjam and the stick
I use to keep the door open. He may actually be living under the porch now.
I trapped him once. I don't know if he would be hungry enough or too trap wary
for it to work again. I will try putting some of the Bach's on his dry food
maybe. He seems to have a hard time eating wet food, hard for him to pick up.
We have a current infestation of hookworms, the cat next door had them also,
and he may have a tummy full of worms. We found out about the neighbor cat
last night. I will see if I can get a bottle of wormer tablets (I know thay
make them for dogs) for cats at PetsMart or something, and see if I can crumble
them up into the dry food. I do talk to him, and he will look at me and
sometimes acts like he is really trying to understand what I am saying. I
probably should not have let him go, but I was not sure what else to do with
him, and at the time I had a dominant cat whom I thought might try to bite him
or attack him. She is another story. I always seem to end up with two or
three kitties at a time. I have one under treatment for hookworm. And I have
a second who i am going to start on this afternoon.

Chelle

Feral cats do not meow at you. What you are discribing is a once
friendly cat who has been through the hell of being a stray and no
longer trusts people.



"The day may come when the rest of the animal creation may acquire those rights
which never could have been withholden from them but by the hand of tyranny.
The question is not can they REASON, nor can they TALK, but can they SUFFER?"
-- Jeremy Bentham