Spay, Neuter and Protect (SNAP)

Spay, Neuter and Protect (SNAP) Providing humane solutions for feral cat care. We practice Trap-Neuter-Return!
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08/26/2021

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August, better known as “Augie,” turned 20 in April, becoming the oldest golden retriever in the world Even a dog in Tennessee can make an impact on history. August, better known as “Augie,” made history on April 24 when she turned 20, becoming the oldest golden retriever ever, according to ...

Karla Washington
01/03/2019

Karla Washington

This is a sweet pic from last month’s yoga class. What a great way to de-stress. Join us this Thursday night for yoga with cats! Reserve your spot: papascatcafe.com/reservations/

06/18/2018

Ants are a real problem. There is a simple way to help keep the bugs out of your cats’ food bowl. Put their food in a larger water bowl with water to create a moat. Ants cant swim and it also dubs as a water source.

12/19/2017

This cat has an ear tip!

This cat was found 12-18 near Ammonette St

10/05/2017

Central MO Pet Pantry

430 lbs of food donated today help feed the pets in our community!! Keep those donations rolling in!!

Dog and cat food can be dropped off at The Spay Neuter Project - Columbia, MO or Lizzi & Rocco's Natural Pet Market

09/26/2017
American Bar Association votes paws-up for TNR

Great news!

In a decision that will have wide and positive implications for cats, the American Bar Assocation’s House of Delegates voted last week to support programs that sterilize and return unowned cats to the community.

08/17/2017
Best Friends Animal Society

Best Friends Animal Society

Our dedicated legislative team has been hard at work promoting local and state ordinances related to facilitating trap-neuter-return programs, which are key to keeping community cats out of shelters and managing free-roaming cat populations.

This week, stray and free-roaming cats got a big boost in support thanks to the American Bar Association — a critical step that will help save feline lives. Read more in today’s blog post from from co-founder Francis Battista. -emily

08/09/2017

Tomahawk Live Trap

New Product! Professional Series Transfer Cage - Model 333 is a three chamber transfer cage for transporting up to three animals at a time. It is made of 1/2x1 wire mesh throughout the cage and 1/4" reinforcing rods. Each chamber is separated by a removable sliding door so that it can be used as one large transfer cage, a double transfer cage or a triple transfer cage.

http://www.livetrap.com/index.php?dispatch=products.view&product_id=32980

07/25/2017

Barn relocation done right!

When you have to relocate………

We firmly believe that relocation should only be a last resort – free roaming cats know their territories and are comfortable there. Their territory is their home; they know their way around, their safe places and their food source.

But, sometimes relocation is inevitable. In this case a number of semi feral cats that had been with a hoarder were dumped on a rescuer. She was told that if the cats came back they would be in danger – she was not to bring the cats back and she was not to come on the property. So homes must be found.

Well, if you do have to relocate, sometimes you find the perfect place. In this case a lady with a large horse barn was looking for cats. A visit was made to the barn to do an evaluation and talk about acclimation if the cats were moved out there. Quite often cages are set up with hiding places, food, water and litter boxes and the cats acclimate to their new location in the cage set up where they are fed and get comfortable with their new surroundings. But no, here the people said they would use one of their horse stalls and build an enclosure for the cats. A part of the stall was framed in and enclosed with a wire mesh resulting in a spacious area for the cats……in fact it was very similar to the enclosure where they had previously been housed. Shelving, a cat tree, a dog house and a kennel were added to provide secure hiding places for the cats, but also places where they could explore and see their new surroundings. The people want to get to know the cats and hope that in time they will be able to interact with them – they truly care about the cats they will be getting.

Once the cats are released they will find areas of clutter where they can hide if they choose, inside as well as outside. The barn is well away from any busy roads and in a rural setting similar to the setting that the cats originated from.

Three cats have now moved in to the enclosure and they are already beginning to interact with the people. Knowing the conditions where they came from, these cats are going to have a great chance to have a much better life than if they had remained, especially given the circumstances at that location.

If you do have relocate cats, please check out the potential barn, shed, garage, etc. Make sure that there is a secure place for the cats to acclimate to their new home and that the environment is similar to the environment that the cats have been used to. Make sure the people will care about the cats – do what they need to do to insure their best chance of survival in their new home, and not expect them just to live off of the rodents that they catch.

Relocation is not ideal, but with a lot of work it can be successful.

07/19/2017
Alley Cat Allies

Alley Cat Allies

Community cats in northern New Jersey have made a feathered friend—a goose named Trooper! According to a news article, Trooper has been hanging around the cats since June, when the colony caregiver found the baby goose stuck in a fence and got him out. Trooper recovered from minor injuries and is still regularly seen with the felines. He even eats out of the cats’ food bowl!

"I think the story of Trooper can teach us something about how animals can co-exist,” Monu Sohal, who runs a Trap-Neuter-Return program, told reporters.

Read more at http://www.northjersey.com/story/news/2017/07/08/goose-and-feral-cats-forge-friendship/455004001/

05/03/2017
College Campus Decides To Embrace Feral Cats & The Results Are Inspiring

College Campus Decides To Embrace Feral Cats & The Results Are Inspiring

Like many college campuses across the country, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln had a feral cat problem. In 2008, a band of faculty and staff created the volunteer group, Husker Cats – named for UNL’s mascot, the Cornhusker. The project has managed …

03/07/2017

Broken Promises SW

We hate when this happens!

02/27/2017

SNAP is no longer in business but we fully support Boone County Animal Care who focus their efforts on TNR but they also take in the young cats that can be rehabilitated and adopt them out as pets so they don't have to live on the streets.

09/29/2016
Call of the Cats: What I Learned about Life and Love from a Feral Colony

Call of the Cats: What I Learned about Life and Love from a Feral Colony

When Andrew Bloomfield moved into a modest bungalow in Southern California he was only vaguely aware that a colony of feral cats inhabited the deep foliage behind his new home. After one particularly poignant experience, he felt he had no choice but to intercede. So began the saga of Andrew’...

04/20/2016
Tinykittens

Tinykittens

One of the most incredible rescues I’ve ever seen happened yesterday, thanks to a lot of very caring people.

04/13/2016
Steve Dale

Steve Dale

Anne Beall provides real data, real facts regarding feral cats....

02/24/2016
List of governments supporting trap-neuter-return - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of governments supporting trap-neuter-return - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Governments with laws and/or policies supporting trap-neuter-return for community cats (free-roaming cats not belonging to individuals, including feral cats), are listed below. References are provided for each government body named, with start dates if they are known. The list is not expected to be…

02/12/2016
Study of the effect on shelter cat intakes and euthanasia from a shelter neuter return project...

Study of the effect on shelter cat intakes and euthanasia from a shelter neuter return project...

Cat impoundments were increasing at the municipal San Jose animal shelter in 2009, despite long-term successful low cost sterilization programs and attempts to lower the euthanasia rate of treatable-rehabilitatable impounds beginning in 2008. San Jose Animal Care and Services implemented a new strat…

01/20/2016

The Foundation For Homeless Cats

01/07/2016

Angels Among Us, Inc.

To love a feral is to love unconditionally

10/23/2015

The Cat House On The Kings.com

10/16/2015
Ways to Help Feral Cats

Ways to Help Feral Cats

Feral cats, unlike strays, have been born and raised in the wild or have been abandoned and must revert back to their primitive ways in order to survive. Most of these cats, fearful of humans and too skittish to be handled, often live in groups and take refuge wherever there is available food and sh…

10/16/2015

The Spay Neuter Project - Columbia, MO

We are proud to work with community (feral) cats and their care takers to help put the "N" in TNR. Trap, neuter and release of community cats has proven effective in reducing the feral cat population. Do you feed community cats that aren't fixed yet? Contact us for our "feral cat package" to get them fixed and released.
www.spayneuterprojectmo.org

10/15/2015

Alley Cat Allies

National is October 16! Tell the world you support cats and SHARE this post.

08/31/2015
Protect Trap-Neuter-Return in Washington, D.C. - Alley Cat Allies

Protect Trap-Neuter-Return in Washington, D.C. - Alley Cat Allies

Washington D.C.'s District Dept. of Energy and Environment's "Wildlife Action Plan" wants to "revisit" the policy on TNR, which D.C. has sanctioned for years. Tell D.C. that you support TNR and don't want cats rounded up and killed.

08/19/2015
Free Pet Rides to the Spay / Neuter Clinic 573- 999-5910

Free Pet Rides to the Spay / Neuter Clinic 573- 999-5910

Our next free ride will be Friday August 21st, 2015. Please contact me if your pet needs a ride to the clinic! Picks ups located in Centralia, Hallsville, Columbia and other areas. Please call 573-999-5910 for questions or to schedule a ride.

08/19/2015

It's not the ferals!

So, I was checking my voicemail this morning and there was one from a caller who said that she had her trees sprayed for caterpillars – trees occupied by three bird feeders - and now, she is upset that there are no birds at all for her to watch. She wonders if the spray could possibly have something to do with it. (Yes, spraying pesticides on your trees will have an effect on the songbirds.) It is not uncommon for us to get inquiries such as these, and it is with great frustration and sadness that we often are faced with educating people after the damage has been done. So, please let me take a moment to reach out to our Facebook friends and family and be proactive about this topic. All pesticides are designed to kill. Some are very targeted, such as B. T. (Bacillus thuringiensis) which primarily affects Lepidopterans (moths and butterflies), but most pesticides are broad and indiscriminate. When you make the choice to treat your house or landscape with rodenticides or grub treatment or mosquito foggers or any other pesticide treatment, you have an intent of ridding yourself of a specific creature that you find distasteful. However, nothing in nature exists in a vacuum. Everything is connected. When you affect one population, it has a ripple effect across the populations that depend upon and coexist with it. When you spray insecticide, for instance, it does not just kill the ‘bugs’ you don’t like, but kills all insects, including honeybees, butterflies and ladybugs. Likewise, when you spray, the insects do not simply disappear off the face of the earth. Many live a short time before they perish. In this time, they may be consumed by natural predators, like songbirds, small mammals and other insects. Pesticides may have a direct toxicity to these animals or may build up in their fat or blood and cause illness or death over time. Even so-called “green” chemicals are still intended to kill, and though they may be derived from natural sources or biodegrade quickly, they are still highly toxic to you and other organisms.
Friends, it is so very important in this day and age, with the steady decline of bird populations and the utter devastation of pollinator populations that we humans take a serious, proactive look at the choices we make and the practices we support – either directly or indirectly. It is vital that we do not go blindly into the world, but make ourselves informed and educated about products and practices and about science, industry and nature. Here at the Audubon Society of Rhode Island, we very much want to help people become educated and able to make informed choices. We are here to answer your questions and point you in the direction of reliable and scientifically accurate information. But we also encourage you to think and question BEFORE you act. Your actions have consequences. Thanks for listening!
(Photo Credit http://www.yorku.ca/bstutch/research.htm)

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