Jim Kyle
03-30-2015, 08:52 AM
About two weeks ago, as I came home from a meeting on a Sunday afternoon, I saw something moving in front of the car as I opened the garage door and drove into my garage. I didn't get a clear look at first, but it was furry and I thought that my 8-year-old indoor cat might have sneaked in when my wife had the door from the house open.
However after I got out, the critter came up to me, cautiously, and began to purr. It appeared to be a half-grown kitten, maybe 8 or 9 months old, but was obviously used to humans and not one of the feral colony that comes to our back porch for breakfast almost every morning. My wife came out and picked it up, discovering that it was almost starved. We took it indoors, put it up in a room that we could close off to quarantine it, and gave it a plate of cat food and a bowl of milk.
Next morning we took it to our vet for a checkup, and discovered that it was an older kitty, possibly 10 to 12 years of age, and that it had a moderately serious respiratory virus infection but except for that seemed to be in good health. It weighed only 5 pounds and was less than half the size of our current kitty. Since the virus was probably highly contagious, we left her with the vet for a week to either recover or succumb. She made full recovery, and a week ago we brought her home.
While we had no burning desire for a second kitty -- the current resident offers enough challenges although she pays her way in purrs -- we didn't have the heart to turn her out, since she seemed to be so friendly and has a clear desire to be with people.
Unfortunately, it turns out that she and the long-time resident don't get along at all. The newcomer appeared to be quite confident and not at all agressive, but Current Kitty (who had, as a kitten, been dominated by two previous feline family members) seemed frightened by her presence. We kept the newcomer quarantined all last week, and Current Kitty seemed to accept her presence in a closed room -- but refused to go into that end of the house. By the weekend, though, we felt it might be safe to let the newcomer explore, and to allow Current Kitty to make her acquaintance.
For a day or so, they avoided each other although Current Kitty began to act fearful again. Then yesterday, the conflict erupted into a full-fledged cat fight for no visible reason. The newcomer attacked Current Kitty after a 10-minute standoff during which Current Kitty growled continually and the newcomer simply stared at her. The fight lasted only a few seconds before Current Kitty broke away and darted for the top of a display case some 7 feet high, with the newcomer in hot pursuit.
I led the newcomer back to the quarantine room; she followed willingly and i shut the door. She's still there, getting food and water but not allowed out. Current Kitty stayed on the display case for hours but finally deigned to come down to eat. Then she returned to the heights, not coming down until bedtime.
My wife and I cannot tolerate such aggressiveness, so we need to find the newcomer a home where she can be the only resident cat, and she can be with the humans whose company she so obviously craves. While we're adamantly opposed to euthanasia of healthy animals, that's the only option we see unless we can find her such a home, since the no-kill shelters all seem to be filled to capacity.
As I said, she's tiny -- no bigger than most "teen-age" kittens. She's beginning to fill out, with food, though her bone structure is still obvious. Our vet assures us that she's past the age of reproduction. She does appear to have some dental problems, but they don't keep her from eating canned cat food and occasional bites of dry food between meals. Her color is a ruddy tabby pattern, and it's obvious that she's worn a flea collar in recent months. The vet applied Advantage during her convalescence so she's free of fleas at this time.
If you've read this far and can offer her a comfy home in which to live out her remaining years, send me a private message or reply to this thread and we'll work out the details. If you know of anyone who might help, put me in touch with them. We hate to keep her confined, so her time with us is limited, but I'll hold off on any irrevocable action for a while in hopes of your responses...
However after I got out, the critter came up to me, cautiously, and began to purr. It appeared to be a half-grown kitten, maybe 8 or 9 months old, but was obviously used to humans and not one of the feral colony that comes to our back porch for breakfast almost every morning. My wife came out and picked it up, discovering that it was almost starved. We took it indoors, put it up in a room that we could close off to quarantine it, and gave it a plate of cat food and a bowl of milk.
Next morning we took it to our vet for a checkup, and discovered that it was an older kitty, possibly 10 to 12 years of age, and that it had a moderately serious respiratory virus infection but except for that seemed to be in good health. It weighed only 5 pounds and was less than half the size of our current kitty. Since the virus was probably highly contagious, we left her with the vet for a week to either recover or succumb. She made full recovery, and a week ago we brought her home.
While we had no burning desire for a second kitty -- the current resident offers enough challenges although she pays her way in purrs -- we didn't have the heart to turn her out, since she seemed to be so friendly and has a clear desire to be with people.
Unfortunately, it turns out that she and the long-time resident don't get along at all. The newcomer appeared to be quite confident and not at all agressive, but Current Kitty (who had, as a kitten, been dominated by two previous feline family members) seemed frightened by her presence. We kept the newcomer quarantined all last week, and Current Kitty seemed to accept her presence in a closed room -- but refused to go into that end of the house. By the weekend, though, we felt it might be safe to let the newcomer explore, and to allow Current Kitty to make her acquaintance.
For a day or so, they avoided each other although Current Kitty began to act fearful again. Then yesterday, the conflict erupted into a full-fledged cat fight for no visible reason. The newcomer attacked Current Kitty after a 10-minute standoff during which Current Kitty growled continually and the newcomer simply stared at her. The fight lasted only a few seconds before Current Kitty broke away and darted for the top of a display case some 7 feet high, with the newcomer in hot pursuit.
I led the newcomer back to the quarantine room; she followed willingly and i shut the door. She's still there, getting food and water but not allowed out. Current Kitty stayed on the display case for hours but finally deigned to come down to eat. Then she returned to the heights, not coming down until bedtime.
My wife and I cannot tolerate such aggressiveness, so we need to find the newcomer a home where she can be the only resident cat, and she can be with the humans whose company she so obviously craves. While we're adamantly opposed to euthanasia of healthy animals, that's the only option we see unless we can find her such a home, since the no-kill shelters all seem to be filled to capacity.
As I said, she's tiny -- no bigger than most "teen-age" kittens. She's beginning to fill out, with food, though her bone structure is still obvious. Our vet assures us that she's past the age of reproduction. She does appear to have some dental problems, but they don't keep her from eating canned cat food and occasional bites of dry food between meals. Her color is a ruddy tabby pattern, and it's obvious that she's worn a flea collar in recent months. The vet applied Advantage during her convalescence so she's free of fleas at this time.
If you've read this far and can offer her a comfy home in which to live out her remaining years, send me a private message or reply to this thread and we'll work out the details. If you know of anyone who might help, put me in touch with them. We hate to keep her confined, so her time with us is limited, but I'll hold off on any irrevocable action for a while in hopes of your responses...