Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die? (Laura Svoboda)

2010-11-09 Thread Claudia Veiga





Today's Topics:

  1. What to do after they die? (Laura Svoboda)
  2. Re: What to do after they die? (Peggy Verdonck)
  3. Re: Eosinophilic granuloma in Spanky's nasal passage
      (Michelle Brockman )
  4. Re: Eosinophilic granuloma in Spanky's nasal passage
      (designercats)
  5. Re: Eosinophilic granuloma in Spanky's nasal passage (Natalie)
  6. Re: What to do after they die? (Gloria Lane)
  7. Re: What to do after they die? (create_me_...@yahoo.com)
  8. Re: Eosinophilic granuloma in Spanky's nasal passage
      (designercats)
  9. Re: What to do after they die? (LauraM)
  10. Re: What to do after they die? (Peggy Verdonck)
  11. OT- Homeless cat in NYC needs shelter for winter/    permanent
      home! (POTT, BEVERLY)
  12. Re: Eosinophilic granuloma in Spanky's nasal passage (Natalie)
  13. Re: What to do after they die? (Beth)
  14. Re: What to do after they die? (Peggy Verdonck)
  15. Re: General Motor Please add to the CLS :( (Sara Kasteleyn)



Laura,
 So sorry about Chloe, I'm sure she knew how much you love her and wanted her 
there, she's still connected with you spiritually. 

I send you my condolences,
Claudia


Message: 1
Date: Sun, 7 Nov 2010 10:25:23 -0800 (PST)
From: Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?
Message-ID: 15377.48524...@web30903.mail.mud.yahoo.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Hello,

I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone through 
yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to get my FLV 
cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday morning.  I 
wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started feeling 
droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.  
Anyway, 

can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat tunnel, 
litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have read that 
the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read that a 
person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home - leaving 
me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the virus on 
them 

to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone have any 
suggestions?


  
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Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

2010-11-08 Thread LauraM
I am so sorry about Chloe, Laura. I lost Celery 2 weeks ago. He went from 
healthy to dead in a week. I had made an appointment to have him euthanized on 
a Wednesday morning. Our appointment was at 3 PM. He went downhill in just 
those few hours. I put him in the car, got him to the vet's ten minutes away, 
filled out the paperwork, reached my hand down to pet him and he was already 
dead.

In my case, I keep my FeLV cats in my heated garage away from my healthy cats. 
I have always wondered about the possibility of tracking the virus in on my 
feet or on the dogs' paws. 

--- On Sun, 11/7/10, Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com wrote:


From: Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com
Subject: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Date: Sunday, November 7, 2010, 1:25 PM


Hello,

I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone through 
yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to get my FLV 
cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday morning.  I 
wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started feeling 
droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.  
Anyway, 
can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat tunnel, 
litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have read that 
the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read that a 
person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home - leaving 
me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the virus on 
them 
to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone have any 
suggestions?



      
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Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

2010-11-08 Thread Peggy Verdonck
That's not true. Cats can contract it even when their immuun system is
strong. They just don't get sick from right away. So healthy cats can also
get it. I would be very carefull with the things your cat used!

2010/11/7 Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net

 Im so aorry for your loss.  My vet said the virus lasts only a short while
 outside the body, a minute or so.  Healthy adult cats have good immunity to
 it anyhow.   I have lost several felv cats, and never do any extraordinary
 cleaning or waiting when they pass away.  In my opinion don't worry about
 it.

 Gloria

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Nov 7, 2010, at 12:25 PM, Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com wrote:

  Hello,
 
  I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone
 through
  yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to get
 my FLV
  cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday morning.
  I
  wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started
 feeling
  droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.
  Anyway,
  can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat
 tunnel,
  litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have
 read that
  the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read that
 a
  person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home -
 leaving
  me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the virus
 on them
  to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone
 have any
  suggestions?
 
 
 
 
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Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

2010-11-08 Thread Beth
It's true that healthy cats can get it, but since it needs a host to survive  
does not last outside the body, there is no need to start throwing things out. 
Fears like this are what make people so scared of FeLV cats  why vets 
routinely euthanize them. I would never discard something just because an FeLV 
cat used it.
Beth
Dont Litter, Fix Your Critter! www.Furkids.org   

--- On Mon, 11/8/10, Peggy Verdonck jetalitosunnys...@gmail.com wrote:

From: Peggy Verdonck jetalitosunnys...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Date: Monday, November 8, 2010, 9:01 AM

That's not true. Cats can contract it even when their immuun system is
strong. They just don't get sick from right away. So healthy cats can also
get it. I would be very carefull with the things your cat used!

2010/11/7 Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net

 Im so aorry for your loss.  My vet said the virus lasts only a short while
 outside the body, a minute or so.  Healthy adult cats have good immunity to
 it anyhow.   I have lost several felv cats, and never do any extraordinary
 cleaning or waiting when they pass away.  In my opinion don't worry about
 it.

 Gloria

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Nov 7, 2010, at 12:25 PM, Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com wrote:

  Hello,
 
  I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone
 through
  yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to get
 my FLV
  cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday morning.
  I
  wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started
 feeling
  droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.
  Anyway,
  can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat
 tunnel,
  litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have
 read that
  the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read that
 a
  person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home -
 leaving
  me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the virus
 on them
  to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone
 have any
  suggestions?
 
 
 
 
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  Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
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Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

2010-11-08 Thread Peggy Verdonck
I am not talking about discarding anything! I was talking about disinfecting
everything properly before using it for other cats! Yes, the virus needs a
host but it does survive outside the body for a couple of hours, not even
mentioning the secondary bacterial, viral and fungal infections a Felv cats
can suffer from!
Why would you not be extra cautious for your other, or somebody elses cats!

2010/11/8 Beth create_me_...@yahoo.com

 It's true that healthy cats can get it, but since it needs a host to
 survive  does not last outside the body, there is no need to start throwing
 things out. Fears like this are what make people so scared of FeLV cats 
 why vets routinely euthanize them. I would never discard something just
 because an FeLV cat used it.
 Beth
 Dont Litter, Fix Your Critter! www.Furkids.org http://www.furkids.org/

 --- On Mon, 11/8/10, Peggy Verdonck jetalitosunnys...@gmail.com wrote:

 From: Peggy Verdonck jetalitosunnys...@gmail.com
 Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Date: Monday, November 8, 2010, 9:01 AM

 That's not true. Cats can contract it even when their immuun system is
 strong. They just don't get sick from right away. So healthy cats can also
 get it. I would be very carefull with the things your cat used!

 2010/11/7 Gloria Lane gbl...@aristotle.net

  Im so aorry for your loss.  My vet said the virus lasts only a short
 while
  outside the body, a minute or so.  Healthy adult cats have good immunity
 to
  it anyhow.   I have lost several felv cats, and never do any
 extraordinary
  cleaning or waiting when they pass away.  In my opinion don't worry about
  it.
 
  Gloria
 
  Sent from my iPhone
 
  On Nov 7, 2010, at 12:25 PM, Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
   Hello,
  
   I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone
  through
   yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to
 get
  my FLV
   cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday
 morning.
   I
   wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started
  feeling
   droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.
   Anyway,
   can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat
  tunnel,
   litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have
  read that
   the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read
 that
  a
   person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home -
  leaving
   me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the
 virus
  on them
   to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone
  have any
   suggestions?
  
  
  
  
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I
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[Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

2010-11-07 Thread Laura Svoboda
Hello,

I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone through 
yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to get my FLV 
cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday morning.  I 
wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started feeling 
droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.  
Anyway, 
can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat tunnel, 
litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have read that 
the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read that a 
person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home - leaving 
me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the virus on 
them 
to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone have any 
suggestions?



  
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Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

2010-11-07 Thread Peggy Verdonck
I'm sorry to hear about your cat! You have done all you can. I'm struggling
with trying to get a cat to eat right now myself. I'm force feeding her with
AD now. A couple of syringes at a time.

The Felv virus can only survive a couple of hours, but there are other
bacterias of secondary infections Felv cats can suffer from that can still
be around in the house and on the things your cat used.
My vet told me to disinfect everything you can wash and wipe down (like
bowls, litter boxes and blankets) with a bleach and water dilutions. All the
things I couldn't wash or wipe down (like the cat tree) I sprayed with
Lysol, several times.
But just to make sure I would wait several weeks before you give it someone
else.

2010/11/7 Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com

 Hello,

 I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone
 through
 yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to get my
 FLV
 cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday morning.
  I
 wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started feeling
 droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.
  Anyway,
 can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat
 tunnel,
 litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have read
 that
 the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read that a
 person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home -
 leaving
 me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the virus on
 them
 to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone have
 any
 suggestions?




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 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
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Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

2010-11-07 Thread Gloria Lane
Im so aorry for your loss.  My vet said the virus lasts only a short while 
outside the body, a minute or so.  Healthy adult cats have good immunity to it 
anyhow.   I have lost several felv cats, and never do any extraordinary 
cleaning or waiting when they pass away.  In my opinion don't worry about it. 

Gloria

Sent from my iPhone

On Nov 7, 2010, at 12:25 PM, Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Hello,
 
 I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone 
 through 
 yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to get my 
 FLV 
 cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday morning.  I 
 wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started feeling 
 droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.  
 Anyway, 
 can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat 
 tunnel, 
 litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have read 
 that 
 the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read that a 
 person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home - 
 leaving 
 me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the virus on 
 them 
 to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone have 
 any 
 suggestions?
 
 
 
 
 ___
 Felvtalk mailing list
 Felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 http://felineleukemia.org/mailman/listinfo/felvtalk_felineleukemia.org

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Re: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

2010-11-07 Thread create_me_new
So sorry about your kitty. I never do anything special. Just clean like they 
had a cold. I wouldn't do anything. Her tree will be fine.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-Original Message-
From: Laura Svoboda lazygra...@yahoo.com
Sender: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
Date: Sun, 7 Nov 2010 10:25:23 
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Reply-To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: [Felvtalk] What to do after they die?

Hello,

I tried sending a post several days ago, but my membership had not gone through 
yet so my post was rejected.  I was asking for suggestions on how to get my FLV 
cat, Chloe, to eat.  Very sadly, she passed away early yesterday morning.  I 
wish I had found this group earlier, but from the time she started feeling 
droopy to the time she passed away was just three weeks - way too fast.  
Anyway, 
can anyone tell me what I need to do, if anything, to her cat tree, cat tunnel, 
litter box, toys, etc. before I pass them on to another home?  I have read that 
the virus does not live long outside of the body, but have also read that a 
person should wait 30 days before introducing another cat in the home - leaving 
me to believe that perhaps her things may still have enough of the virus on 
them 
to get other cats sick.  That is the last thing I'd want.  Does anyone have any 
suggestions?



  
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