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The Cat Chose Me ... So Now What Do I Do?

(8 posts)
  • Started 4 years ago by MerD
  • Latest reply from AngelaMotorman

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  1. Article from PetPlace.com

    Few people will argue the point that stray cats have a sixth sense that allows them to hone in on those houses that contain, in cat language, "the person who gives food." Cats have perfected the "pitiful, hungry stare" guaranteed to send certain householders hurrying into the kitchen to bring out plates of tasty morsels.

    Various studies estimate that as many as 40 million cats in the U.S. are unowned/feral/free-roaming. A national survey done in 1992 by the Humane Society revealed that nearly 25 percent of all households feed these cats; another study, from the California-based National Pet Alliance, shows that 10 percent do. Eventually, many of the cats make the transition from panhandler to pet: A 1996 study sponsored by American Pet Product Manufacturers Association (APPMA) put the number of pet cats originally adopted as strays at an impressive 49 percent – a figure that far exceeds any other source of adoption, including shelters, breeders and pet shops.

    Ideally, all of the cats currently unowned but amenable to a change in status would be able to find owners. But some cats – by the very nature of their homelessness – will never be able to make that transition.

    Feral Vs. Owned

    The difference between the feral cat and the owned companion is a continuum, at the center of which is what Joan Miller of the Cat Fancier Association defined as "the touch barrier" in the Journal of the American Veterinary Association several years ago. This barrier defines whether a cat can or cannot be successfully transitioned from unowned feline to pet cat.

    According to Miller, at one end of the scale are feral cats, which totally shun human touch and must be trapped to be handled. These animals are deemed by shelters or rescue organizations as unadoptable and efforts to "tame" all but the youngest of kittens (six weeks or younger) could well be futile. Trap-Neuter-Return (T-N-R) programs are the more humane and successful alternatives to control these feral populations, as opposed to the generally utilized Trap-And-Kill methods. In the T-N-R program, sterilized, vaccinated cats are returned to a managed colony, commonly in parks or industrial areas, where the stabilized population continues its centuries-old public service of rodent control.

    Cats near the middle of this "touch barrier" can, with some patience, be accustomed to acceptance of human handling, and thus become pets. Some of the less wary feral cats, as well as cats that were once owned, but have strayed or been abandoned, will move closer to human habitations, lured by prospects of food and shelter. Miller describes an "interdependent" relationship in which some may still shy from human touch, while others express a more ready willingness for closer human companionship.

    "Backdoor-Fed Cats"

    These are the "backdoor-fed" or "loosely owned" cats that live in legal and social limbo. Unless they are claimed as "owned," vital veterinary care, including sterilization, and the more complete relationship involved in "ownership" is lacking. Additionally, their cost to the community is great, as they are a primary source of shelter intakes and euthanasia. T-N-R programs are usually done in public or commercial areas of concentration, or colonies, leaving these "backdoor fed" cats to reproduce unchecked in urban and suburban neighborhoods.

    Communities and humane organizations are beginning to recognize this "hole in the dike" of controlling surplus births. The city government of San Jose, Calif., for example, provides free neutering or spaying of cats – with no questions asked about ownership. In other cities, humane organizations have advertised programs such as "Neuter Scooter for a Nickle," and "Spay Day USA," and most have ongoing programs of low-cost sterilization, either at their own facilities or through cooperative programs with local veterinarians. Likewise, most larger humane organizations and shelters have low-cost vaccination clinics on site or can direct callers to these services.

    Voluntary, incentive-based programs work. The San Francisco SPCA, which in partnership with the city government has built the most successful animal welfare and control program in the country, has condemned the passage of local ordinances that would mandate obligations to these cats. It stresses that threat of fines or punishment will have the opposite effect of discouraging the process of strays and people adopting one another and will lead to the abandonment of yet more cats.

    Posted 4 years ago by MerD #

  2. Yes, I am one of those "people who gives food". LOL! I used to say that all the stray cats eventually end up at my door. I also accuse the ones I've taken in of spreading the word. I haven't had any strays show up for quite a while now - I must be losing my touch. :)

    Posted 4 years ago by NNGM #

  3. Yep they can spot me for a mile and they bring friends and family.

    Posted 4 years ago by Buttercup #

  4. Lol, me three, have a backyard-fed patio cat now, he is feral as can be and sometimes, only sometimes 'lets' me watch him thru the patio door while he eats. But he also does not mess with the birds that I feed and leaves the lizards alone, well the ones that I see on the brick wall. Very good article!

    Posted 4 years ago by AZDEBRA 5/27 & crew #

  5. AZDEBRA, your appt is this week sometime, isn't it?

    Posted 4 years ago by paulajeanne #

  6. paulajeanneMT, yep Thurs/Fri so won't be back online until probably either Friday night or Saturday morning.

    Posted 4 years ago by AZDEBRA 5/27 & crew #

  7. You mean I'm not the only one with an invisible-to-humans sign on the roof that says "soft-hearted cat-feeder here"?

    This article does a great service by laying out the continuum analysis of neighborhood cats. I'm about to have to leave behind a colony that includes one adorable 6 month old calico who is exceptionally hand-friendly, and it's breaking my heart. There were a total of nine kittens born on the block this summer, and of all of them, just this one marches right up to me and says, "Hi! can I be your friend?" (Or maybe it was, "I can has cheezburger?" I'm not that fluent...)

    I hope someone takes in Susu soon. She's being spayed as I write, and will have a tipped ear to avert the Animal Control sweeps, but I worry that she'll get too friendly to the wrong people. And this is the first time I have NOT taken in a cat that clearly chose me -- but I already have seven!

    I keep telling myself this is a very close-knit colony, and the neighbors are good caretakers. Pray that I'm right.

    Posted 4 years ago by AngelaMotorman #

  8. "...I hope someone takes in Susu soon."

    Er, make that Zuzu. She's supposed to be named after the daughter in "It's A Wonderful Life", but it wasn't until the name drew a couple of blank stares that I thought to Google it.

    Must. Have. Caffeine.

    Posted 4 years ago by AngelaMotorman #


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