Gloria Lane
Tue, 01 Apr 2008 22:33:55 -0700
Not saying that you should necessarily do this,something to consider - and others here don't do that, but several of us do and find it works.
If you choose to find another home for your sweet kitty, I'm sure in that Michigan area where you live, or NJ/PA, that you can find someone to take and love Binxy.
Best of luck and hope this gives you help in some way. Gloria On Apr 1, 2008, at 11:07 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I recently adopted a 4 yr old cat from an ad on the local Detroit MetroCraigslist. I also have Velvet whom I adopted from the SPCA 16 yrs ago who obviously has been tested then and free from both FELV and FIV.I had been keeping the new cat, Binxy, totally separate in the bathroomuntil she settled down a little and stopped cowering behind the pipesunder the cabinet enough for me to take her to the Vet. Of course I knewin the back of my mind that she could have either disease since thepeople who gave her to me had obviously done little to care for her-- not spayed, nails unclipped, no brushing, ear mites, no vet visits in fouryears, etc. But, I have a soft spot for callies and I figured that an older cat had a far lesser chance of being adopted since most people want kittens. She is really cute. Anyhow, she tested positive for FELV today---the Vet himself did the test so there is little chance that it was not done properly. This leaves me in quite a dilemma. For Velvet's sake, keeping Binxy justisn't a realistic option and she can't stay in the bathroom much longer. I am living in a shared housing situation and although my landlord doesallow animals, he let me know that the house needs the downstairs bathroom back. Plus what kind of life is that for a cat who is veryloving and social? Now that she is over her initial fear and shock overbeing unceremoniously dumped in a strange place, her cuddly, loving personality is emerging. Were she a more offish or mean type, the thought of having her peacefully put to sleep probably wouldn't be as difficult.Aside from the ear mites (and most likely worms) she seems to be healthy and I'm sure could have a good quality of life in a home as an only cator with another pos. cat---but how to find such a situation? I am at a total loss and don't know where to turn. I have already called several rescue groups in this area and been faced with the obvious---with the highly contagious nature of this disease, they just don't have theresources or facilities to deal with this and put all the other neg catsat risk. If I take her to the Humane Society, I'm pretty certain she would be immediately put down if they would even allow her into the building at all. I have never been faced with a situation like this as all of thecats which I have had throughout my life were from a Shelter, or rescuegroup and tested before they even came through my door. Do any of you have any suggestions or know of anybody or any group in this area which specializes in placing pos. cats? I really don't wantto see such a sweet cat be euthanized, but I just don't have a clue whatto do now and I must do something soon. I found this list as I wasdoing a google search for fel-pos rescue groups. Any other groups I haveencountered are either way out of my area or only take animals from other shelter or from off the street---not from the general public.If there are no resources in my current area in Pontiac-Detroit- Metro in Michigan, if you know of any near Philadelphia, Pa or nearby New Jersey, I am scheduled to go back there to visit friends soon and could take heralong. I am so hoping that some of you may know of some resources. Thanks in advance for any advice you could give me. I really appreciate it. Buttons -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://www.fastmail.fm - Access your email from home and the web