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Last week we were contacted by a person in westmere asking for assistance in rehoming some kittens. We went to check them out assuming that their might be another cat colony on our hands but found 6 very fluffy kittens 2 of which already had homes. We got them all desexed the next day and found 2 homes already, one home is by someone who desexed them and fell in love with one the other home hasnt decided which one out of the remaining 3 yet.
Neeko/Smudges (already has a home)
Winston still needs a home. Winston is a 4 month old male, he is desexed, deflead and wormed. He has been socialized very well and is super friendly. He has green eyes and a black splotch on his nose.
Bubbles is a 4 month old male who is desexed, deflead and wormed. He is the smallest of the litter. His name definitely reflects his personality. He has been socialized really well and is very friendly and affectionate. He is mainly white with light grey patches and green eyes.
Two face is a very fluffy black and white female with brown eyes, very friendly and affectionate. She has been desexed deflead and wormed. The photos don’t really show her fluffyness and brown eyes that well.
Last night I had to give Willie subcut fluids for the first time to keep her hydrated. These fluids are administered under the skin by a needle. It was not actually too hard giving them to her by myself.
To read more about subcut fluids click here.
She is going back to the vet tonight to see if there is any reason why she is not eating and if there is anything we can do. I suspect that the toxins may be building up again. I really really hope not cos I do not know if there would be anything further we could do to help her.
Hi All,
Last night Mr Monochrome went to his new home. It was strange because he is usually really out going and bouncy but when I dropped him off at his new home he was really shy and did not really do anything. The young boy who he is now living with, Cruze, loves him and was very good with him. I have a very cute picture of them together which I will post soon.
Now for the vet updates; and this time it is all good news (expect for for our bank balance but who cares about that).
Moose successfully had all her teeth out yesterday :) and we are collecting her today. I can't wiat to see what she is like.
And little Splotches too is doing well. The vet said that the toxins in her body have come down significantly and she is eating on her own now. She will stay at the vets until Saturday when she can come home. The vet said that she will need to be administered fuilds every few days under the skin so that will be a learning curve for us but if will help her it will be find.
I will see Splotches today when I collect Moose so I will update you on how she is going tonight.
Love Jasmine
She will stay in the vet hospital for a few days on fluids to see if that can de-toxify her body and stabilize her. If this does not work she will not have long with us.
She really is such a lovely girl with a very friendly nature despite being a pain because of her teeth. Over the last day or so she has been sleeping more than normal and has not really been eating so now is definitely time for her dental work. After that she should be back to normal.
We quickly read our little Hedgehog Rescue book and fixed him a bed with a hot water bottle and towel as was recommended. We also gave him lots of water and cat food.
He ate lots of food and then had a long nap. The next day he seemed better and was running around the room when we let him out to play however after this he seemed to go into a deep sleep that he never came out of. Unfortunately we found him dead the following morning in his bed.
It was very sad that he did not make it but we are happy we could give him a feed, warm bed and love in his final days.
The week before last we had Bumblebee (below) at home after being desexed. She is very very cute and friendly; we at least I think so. Kelsie would disagree; she did not find Bumblebee that nice after she tried to scratch her, but with me she was fine.
Over the last week I have been re-trapping three of the cats (Tangelo, Pumpkin and Mr Monochrome Senior) because I put collars on them after they were desexed and these were proving problematic. Many colony cats have their left ear tipped (meaning the vet takes a small clip out of the ear) so that they can be identified as having been de-sexed but I thought that this would be better achieved with collars however I now know why this is not actually a good idea. Collars are all well and good on cats who you know and that you can easily pick up should the collar need to be loosened or the cats get stuck on it.
Collars on cats who are not that used to being handled is a different matter entirely. Mr Monochrome Senior somehow got his caught around his stomach and both Tangelo and Pumpkin needed to have theirs loosened. I caught Tangelo by hand but she scratched the shit out of my arm and I had to let her go.
A few days later I went back with the trap and caught Mr Monochrome Senior and Pumpkin and sorted them out. Tangelo however was too smart for me and I will have to try her again this week. Needless to say the collars have been permanently removed.
It is interesting how I have found all the cats handleable when they were at home however as soon as they are returned to outside they revert back to being a bit more ‘wild’.
Good news on the rehoming front though; Mr Monochrome has found a home with a lovely family in West Auckland and he will be going there this week and Mr Monochrome Senior has won over the hearts of Rosilina and her family and he will stay with them when the others have been rehomed.
The article read:
A woman battling with 15 feral cats on her property is at her wits’ end after being refused help.
Grey Lynn resident Rosalina Solomona-Kali says her property has become home to a growing number of cats during the last several months.
She says her two sons are constantly sick with colds, allergies and flea bites and her sister’s two young children contracted scabies while on a visit from Australia last year.
"They just came out of nowhere and before you knew it they were breeding," she says.
"I can’t understand it because we’re not feeding them."
Ms Solomona-Kali started phoning the SPCA in October last year, in the hope it could help with the problem.
She says she was told her only choice would be to hire trapping equipment for each of the cats from a pest control company, at a cost of $50 each.
"I’m from a low-income family, I can’t afford $50 each for 15 cats that aren’t mine," she says.
Ms Solomona-Kali has also contacted the Auckland City Council and the Auckland Regional Council who both said they are unable to help.
She also sent a letter to Auckland mayor John Banks pleading for help.
A response Mr Banks on March 6 confirmed there is no legal action the council can take as the cats have no owner.
In the letter Mr Banks suggests methods such as using Zoo Poo fertiliser and placing mirrors or bottles of water around the garden to scare the cats away.
Mr Banks calls the trapping of cats "emotive, expensive and not without problems", and says it is also often an ineffective and only temporary solution.
But Ms Solomona-Kali says there is such a large number of the cats, she doesn’t think minor measures such as mirrors will work.
She says the skittish, un-tamed cats, some of which are very young kittens, would be difficult to catch without professional help.
The situation has left her feeling exasperated and helpless, she says.
"I’ve gone through all the right pipelines and no-one wants to help me."
When contacted by the Auckland City Harbour News, regional council biosecurity officer Andrew Stein confirmed it is unable to help as it only deals with feral cat populations in rural areas.
SPCA chief executive Bob Kerridge also suggested that Ms Solomona-Kali contact a pest control company who would trap the cats
But after calling several pest control companies in the wider Auckland area, the Auckland City Harbour News was unable to find any who could help.
We responded to this article in the paper by offering to desex, vet check and feed the cats until we find them permanent homes.
Why take a hen from a Free Range Farm you ask.
Even though hens on a free range farm are not in cages and can move around they are still only there to make profit for the farmers. When hens on both battery and free range farms stop laying ‘enough’ eggs to be profitable they are all sent to slaughter. So even a so called ‘free range’ hen who could live for 15 years has her life cut short to only a couple of years.
Naturally hens live in very small flocks however on many free range farms hens are forced to live in flocks much larger than that, some even over one thousand birds. This causes stress to the hens and makes it hard for them to form hierarchies, which are an integral part of a hens social structure.
Living in larger groups can also lead to hens becoming aggressive and peaking each other. Like on battery hen farms many ‘free range’ farmers remedy this situation by cutting the tip of the hens beak off; this is known as de-beaking. This procedure is carried out when the hens are chicks and is very painful as there are many nerves in a hen’s beak. Glenrocks Free Range farm where Chicken came from used this practice.
Many free range egg farms source their hens from the same hatcheries used by battery hen farmers. The parents of these chicks are factory farmed and live in over-crowed sheds in conditions much like those of broiler (meat) chickens. When fertilised eggs are laid they are taken from the mothers and placed inside incubators until they are ready to hatch. At this point the eggs are placed in draws until they hatch. Half of the chicks will be males, who obviously cannot produce eggs. At one day old the chicks are sorted by gender; because the males are not economically useful they are killed; either by gassing, neck dislocation or instantaneous fragmentation (which basically means being minced alive). This is the same for both the battery hen and free range industry. For every female hen in a battery hen cage or on a free range farm there is a chick who was killed because he made the misfortune of being born a male.