09/02/2023
As a person who works with a rescue, this can't be talked about enough!
We are overwhelmed with the amount of cats and kittens and too few fosters.
Everyone who uses my shop already helps, all your tips go towards our in-house foster cats, and has been for over 3 years. So, Thank You for being apart of helping financially. Annie & Davin ❤️
***Shared from a local friends post***
It’s officially September. Winter is coming. For us rescuers (and rescues), we know what’s coming, people feeding cats outside will soon start to be calling rescues for help with the cat they’ve fed all summer.
Please consider this, if you feed it, fix it.
If you’re feeding an outdoor cat, you must care about it. Please consider doing what it takes to get it fixed so that it’s not breeding outside. Winter is so harsh on our outdoor animals, and having kittens outside especially during winter, a lot of times they don’t survive.
And guess what? Currently our local animal shelter is closed for intakes because they are too full.
If you are going to save this cat that you care about, it’s going to have to be YOU that saves it. (read this sentence again)
If you need help figuring out how to, or figuring out logistics on how to get your outdoor cat fixed, I’m offering to guide you through the process. It’s not free and it’s not easy.
The best part is, you just might find out the cat you’re feeding is someone’s lost pet, and reuniting an animal with their family is the best feeling! And if the kitty is not friendly, you’ve helped it greatly by fixing it. Male hormones will calm down and there will be less fighting, so less injuries, less breeding, females will not have to suffer through pregnancy and birthing problems, and kittens won’t have to try to survive our winter without food, water, warmth and love. Thank you!
* kitten picture for attention, this is a kitten I rescued, she was born outside this summer and will not have to spend this winter under a trailer with kittens of her own