WHAT
TO DO IF YOU FIND A STRAY CAT
Cats have a sixth sense about the kind of owners they need and, if they choose
us, we should feel privileged -- even if they do cause us a great deal of trouble
and expense!
1. Check if the cat has an owner. Ask neighbours in your street and adjoining
streets. Ring the local vet to see if somebody has reported losing their cat.
Ring local RSPCA and Cats Protection League to see if they have a lost/found register.
Put up a notice in the local shop. If the cat can be handled, cut a strip of white
paper and write a message on it asking the cat's owner to ring you. Fix this round
its neck with paperclips or selotape. This is very important. Sometimes people
lose their cats because somebody picks them up as a stray, hands in the cat to
a cat rescue, which holds it for four or five days then has it put down.
2. The next stage in rescuing/helping a stray cat is to start regular feeding,
same time and same place somewhere where the cat feels safe. Keep dogs and other
cats out of the way. The cat must begin to associate you with the food. If the
cat is in bad condition feed it kitten food to get its strength back.
3. After about one to two months, it should start being clear if this is
a strayed pet cat or a wild one which will never be tame. If it is a wild one,
you can make it into an outdoor pet' but do not expect it ever to be really
tame. But it is essential to neuter or spay it, to protect it from endless fights
or kitten bearing. Ring the Cats Protection League, tell them you will take responsibility
for it, and ask to borrow a cat trap. While it is at the vet's being neutered,
ask him to check for FIV or Feline leukaemia. If it tests positive, this cat may
spread disease to all neighbouring cats so euthanasia should be considered. Also
get it defleaed, earmited etc. while at the vet. Consider vaccination too. If
the cat is healthy (ie not FIV positive), and you return it to the original site,
you must also find it a dry place to sleep -- a cat flap into a shed or garage,
an adapted rabbit hutch (left open), or a box under a shed.
4. If it is a stray cat, it will start becoming tame and you can take it
into your house. But get it to a vet as soon as possible for neutering/spaying,
flea, worm and mite treatment, and (if you already have cats) think about checking
for FIV or Feline Leukaemia. Otherwise it may spread disease to your existing
cats. Ask him if he can check if it has been microchipped , a sign of an original
loving home. If so, you may be able to restore it to its original owners.
5. When introducing a rescue cat to a new home keep the cat in the one
room, with the door closed with litter and bedding until it seems to feel secure
there. Only then leave the door open. Do not attempt to get it to use a cat flap,
until it is secure in the whole house. Forcing it to do things will make its fear
more. This must be taken very slowly indeed. I have an advice sheet about introducing
a new cat to existing cats.
6. If you decide to keep the stray cat The secret of taming cats, is never
to approach them but let them come to you. I would start by feeding at set times
and remaining in the room while they eat, at what is a safe distance for them.
Over the weeks, move very slightly nearer to the food bowls, until you are putting
out the bowls near you and they feel confident enough to approach you in order
to eat.
Get some really good cat treats or some chicken or prawns for use while you are
sitting still watching TV. Put the treat at a distance safe enough for the cats
and over the weeks slowly close the distance. Eventually the cats will come to
you looking for the treats. After several months, you may be able to stroke the
cats gently down the back while they eat their food or eat a treat.
Patience is essential because if you go too fast and they get really frightened,
taming them may be set back for several weeks. Rehabilitating truly terrified
cats is hard work, but it is wonderfully rewarding to see them regain trust and
happiness.
Various readers have reminded me that a continuous flow of gentle talk, while
taming a cat is helpful in accustoming it to human company. Gentle play, with
something like a long piece of string, will also help with a young adult or kitten.
7. If you decide to hand over a stray cat to a rescue shelter, do check
what will happen to it. Euthanasia policies differ. You cannot assume that all
rescue shelters will keep an elderly or sick cat some have them put down. You
can always hand over the cat, then offer to take it back if it is not, say, claimed
after two months.
NOTE
If you are thinking of going in for cat rescue, there is a video and booklet on
the control of feral cats obtainable from the Universities Federation for Animal
Welfare, The Old School, Brewhouse Hill, Wheathampstead, AL4 8AN. 01582 831818.
The Cat Rescue Manual costs £16.50 include p&p from FAB, Taeselbury,
High St, Tisbury, SP3 6LD. This is a key document of anybody starting to recue
cats.
Liquivite tinned food for sick cats obtainable from 0181 340 2926