Hi Cassandra,

I am not trying to pressure you to keep the babies.  I understand the grief you 
are feeling over your other furbabies, as well as the practical aspects of 
taking them in.

But...how old are the babies?  Perhaps mama kitty would not abandon them while 
in your care.  But if she did, perhaps there is a way you can bottle feed them.

When we took in our two kittens (almost 15 years ago) they were seven days old. 
 I seem to recall them eating every two hours, then it tapered off each week 
until they were fully weaned at eight weeks of age.  At about the three week 
mark, on advice from the vet, we slowly began to add a bit of wet kitten food 
to their formula in a bowl which they began to learn to lap up.  (Plus they 
still got the bottle.)  My memory is a little fuzzy after 14+ years. lol  But, 
at some point they started eating from a bowl and were no longer interested in 
the bottle.  I think at about eight weeks.

Anyhow, we got help from my sister who lived next door.  Is there someone who 
can help you feed the babies while you are at work?

By the way, our bottle babies are still with us.  Tigger and Taylor will be 15 
years old October 1st. :)

Gina

"Rosenfeldt, Diane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:       Cassandra --
  
 This is a toughie, obviously, and I have no practical  advice to give, never 
having had young kittens.  But if you can make this  work it sounds like a 
chance for you and your husband (who sounds like a total  keeper, BTW!!) to 
continue the good work you started with your angel  kitties.  These new ones 
wouldn't be *replacing* the three you lost, BTW,  don't think of it that way.  
Entertain the possibility that Tomi, Kisa and  Koda have something to do with 
finding these new babies to  save.
  
 This must be so  frustrating -- time isn't on your side here, you obviously 
can't wait till the  kits' feeding schedule is less intense, or they could come 
to harm, but at the  same time, sometimes mom cats do extreme things when they 
think they and their  kits are in harm's way, which she might if they're 
captured.  Is there  anyone who could come in for a while and feed the kittens 
during the day until  their feeding schedules are less intense? Or is there 
maybe a foster person  who would give you liberal visitation rights until the 
kittens are  older.  It also seems to me that the momcat might be more  
tameable if the kits weren't an issue, so again, bad timing.  Is there a  way 
you could trap them and watch carefully for a while to see what her  instincts 
seem to be when confined?  Maybe if she/they were confined  outside, rather 
than go right from barn to house, it would be less of a  shock?  (I'm just 
throwing this stuff out as it occurs to me, sorry!   Hope some of
 it is relevant!)
  
 Diane  R.
  
  
---------------------------------
 
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of C &  J
Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2007 7:51 AM
To:  [email protected]
Subject: Re: Now i've got something of a  dilemma


 
 What worries me, is this mom is used to farm life, and for  starters, may not 
even want to live with us.  If she abandons her babies by  being moved here (I 
would lock her in a room with them, but she still could  abandon them), I don't 
know that I am able to feed the babies, both my husband  and I work mon-fri, 8 
hours a day.  We live 20-25 min drive away from work  outside of the city.  It 
is possible to come home at lunch time, but that  gives us only 10-15 mins to 
feed the babies.
  
 How often do babies need to eat?  Isn't it every couple  of hours?  And how 
long do they need to eat that frequently.  I could  probably take a few days 
off work to look after them, but do they need to eat  that frequently for a 
whole 4 weeks?  I really know nothing about looking  after baby kittens.
  
 I just don't want to do more harm than good here.
  
 Cassandra

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