Have you been able to catch them and get them spayed and neutered?  Around here 
the animal groups will do that for free on feral cats then you can release them 
again to do their business without multiplying. 

--FT
Sent from iPhone

> On Mar 16, 2020, at 2:23 AM, Scott Ritchey via Mercedes 
> <mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:
> 
> We live on an old tobacco farm in rural NC.  The 11 outdoor rescue cats are 
> part of a group of 21 that were abandoned when some white-trash neighbors 
> abandoned their USDA-financed house two plus years ago.  My other neighbor 
> still has three of them and the rest disappeared, died, or got run over.  I 
> never wanted so many but I have more compassion for critters than can't help 
> themselves than for humans that won't.  
> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From:  Dan Penoff via Mercedes
>> 
>> Yikes. I like cats, but I only have one, and she’s 16 years old. A rescue 
>> the wife
>> picked up on the side of the road in a thunderstorm. Weighed .8 lbs. when she
>> was rescued, vet said she’d be unlikely to live more than a day or two.
>> 
>> 16 years later, she’s still here. Feisty yet lovable. Used to give the other 
>> three
>> purebred (Chartreux) cats we had pure hell as well as the wife’s former 
>> Shitzu.
>> Definitely a cat raised on the streets, outlived the others and probably has
>> another good 3-6 years.
>> 
>> -D
> 
> 
> _______________________________________
> http://www.okiebenz.com
> 
> To search list archives http://www.okiebenz.com/archive/
> 
> To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to:
> http://mail.okiebenz.com/mailman/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com
> 

_______________________________________
http://www.okiebenz.com

To search list archives http://www.okiebenz.com/archive/

To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to:
http://mail.okiebenz.com/mailman/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com

Reply via email to