say the cat was found. don't say YOU have it. you SAW it.
wendy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You could post a flyer right on their mailbox and every other mailbox in the
neighborhood, stating that the cat was found, with some description and that
further description and payment of vet bill would be required to receive kitty
back. I'd leave off the amount. Good ideas Melissa!
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change
the world - indeed it is the only thing that ever has! ~~~ Margaret Meade
~~~
- Original Message
From: Melissa Lind [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, August 10, 2007 8:36:35 AM
Subject: RE: Update on Malnourished, Rescue cat
Caroline,
I think its great what you are doing! Im very happy that your mom is
getting on board with it! I know my family admires (even though they may not
understand) my compassion for animals, but getting them to help, even
reluctantly, is something I havent been able to do as of late. Good for you!
As for the owner-issue, with my rescued cats back in April, I advertised them
as found cats (without description), and stated that the owners must describe
the cat and pay the vet bill. I thought that if they really loved their kitty
that they would do anything to get it backno matter the cost. And if they
couldnt afford it, then they would at least try their hardest to convince me
that they deserved the kitty back even if they couldnt pay. I did not think
this was out of line at all, and of course, as my husband predicted, no one
came forward to claim the kitties. I knew that one was a stray (lived out of a
dumpster) and the other might have been a back-door feeder but was severely
neglected.
If I understand correctly (Ive been reading stories very quickly), you have
the contact info of the owners? I would get kitty all fixed up nicethen let
them know the bill. If they love kitty, theyll pay (or at least try).
Im very happy for you guysespecially at your abilities to get lowered vet
billsway to go!!!
Melissa
-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Caroline
Kaufmann
Sent: Thursday, August 09, 2007 3:29 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: OT: Update on Malnourished, Rescue cat
My mom took the cat we rescued Sat. to her regular vet today. I
couldn't get a hold of my Shamrock contact (she lost her cell phone in the
bushes somewhere crawling around doing a kitten rescue- typical- this explains
why I couldn't get a hold of her!). My mom was just really frustrated and felt
she couldn't wait on Shamrock or anyone of those groups to help us get the cat
into a vet that would treat her half price/discounted. She wanted to make sure
we were dealing only with malnutrition and an upper respiratory infection. She
ended up seeing a relief vet and my mom says she spent the first 15 mins
arguing with the vet over what the cat needed, what they were/weren't going to
do to her, and finding the owner. The vet pressured my mom into calling the
vet number listed on the rabies tag AGAIN- even though we never heard from him
and know that he has other clinics that are open in Louisville- well, when she
called, she got a live person! That person looked up
the rabies tag and gave my mom the owner information, so we have that now.
The cat's name is Nosey...I mean..., I don't knowyour alls' guesses are
as good as mine...that's all I will say about that.
My mom bargained down the vet and since she now had the owner info, I guess
the dr. let her off the hook as far as not doing EVERYTHING that a vet would
usually do with a rescued cat. They did a fecal and surprisingly, she doesn't
have worms. Although, she could still have tape worms since I found a live
flea on her- but we are going to wait on that. I can always get a tapeworm
pill from Shamrock if I need to. She weighs 5 lbs, 5 ounces!!!
I told you she was malnourished! The vet had trouble aging her and
guessed 5 years. I think she's a little off there-- she has tarter on her
teeth, but not tons and she has no grey tarter- just the yellow, so I think
she's younger than 5, but over 2 years. I think the vet's being thrown off by
the malnourishment.
She sneezed for the vet, so she's putting her on oral clavamox.
Surprisingly, the vet said everything we've been doing for her is right and
then some...we wrote out a list that included everything- the colostrum, food,
etc., which my mom handed to the vet when she walked in. So I guess we know
more of what we are doing than we thought. AND my usually reluctant to do
rescues mother has even said that she is willing to do more of this as long
as she has the resources set up ahead of time- meaning, ready access to a vet,
if vet care is needed, that will treat a