Re: OT: Success with Rescue Cat

2007-08-25 Thread catatonya
Great news!

Caroline Kaufmann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:Okay, since there's been 
lots of debate and dare I say, controversy, over the Malnourished Rescue Cat my 
mom and I took in and have been caring for, I wanted everyone to know that she 
is GOING HOME and we have successfully reunited her with her family.
   
  Long story short, we pretty much took EVERYONE'S advice and tried a variety 
of tactics (as I previously mentioned-- signs posted, I posted on websites, 
etc.).  As I had mentioned, from the Rabies tag, all we were able to obtain is 
the telephone number and street name (not number) of the owner and the name 
of the cat- Nosey.  My mom and I pretty much sat on it for a while since by 
then, we'd already taken her to the Vet and started her on Clavamox and she 
needed so much rehabilitation anyway.  We tried to decide what to do and we 
just hated the idea of totally cold call to this number...not knowing ANYTHING 
about the person and whether they were a good owner.
   
  We are almost finished with the Clavamox and have finished one tube of 
Terramycin and Nosey is still exhibiting Upper Respiratory Infection symptoms, 
thus my mom said we have to either: 1) take her back to the vet this week, as 
needs more care, or 2) call the owners and make sure they take her to the vet.
   
  Since I had the owner phone number, I FINALLY remembered that the 
Whitepages.com has this handy tab where you can do a reverse look-up- using 
the phone number...it will give you a name and address.  Bingo!  I got the 
street address we'd been wanting, which also provided me with the NAMES of the 
two people living there  So, then I of course googled their names...and low 
and behold, one of them is a Partner at a law firm here and of course, my mouth 
dropped open (I am a lawyer too- and although this is a big city, it's a SMALL 
legal community), thus I knew I had to contact her at that point.  I also knew 
she could definitely afford the vet bill Nosey incurred (they live on very 
rich street- I know that sounds weird, but the property value of the houses 
on that street is ridiculous).  Anyway, I feel like the ultimate pet detective, 
seriously.  Sometimes I think all I need in life is google and the white or 
yellowpages.com!!!  
   
  My mom and I discussed it and I decided to send her an email at her firm's 
email address from my work email, so she would know where I work and that I am 
an attorney too.  I took the initial vague route first (as was discussed on 
this list serve)...to feel her out, etc.  She replied and said it's their cat 
and they looked for her for weeks and weeks, but didn't check online sites 
(which she apologized for) and asked when they could come get her.  After 
another consult with my mom, my mom wanted me to send her another email where I 
socked it to her with the malnutrition, that she would have died if we hadn't 
taken her in, she went to the vet and this and that was done and the bill is 
this amount, we've been feeding her this  that, she needs to go back to the 
vet because the URI is still lingering, I advise she go back and get this 
treatment (a  full blood panel to check liver/kidney function, fecal for 
tapeworms, etc.).  AND then I asked if she was outdoor/indoor cat
 and said if so, I recommend she NOT be an outdoor cat because she does not 
fair well outside, she has this URI that won't go away, and she's deathly 
afraid of storms and if she is out when one comes, she will run and hide.  
WHEW!  All that.  I also apologized for hitting her with all this at once and 
at work and admitted that I wanted to feel her out initially before I admitted 
that we had the cat in our house and have done intensive care/rehabbing.  
   
  She responded really well!!!  She gave me info about Nosey's background- 
they've had Nosey since birth and she lives with her Mother and Brother cats.  
They are mostly outside cats because they live on a large piece of property 
with a covered porch.  She said the cats seldom go beyond the immediate 
neighbors (who love them), but the mother cat became an indoor cat a few years 
ago when she developed a URI!!!  So, hopefully, now that poor Nosey has one 
that she can't seem to shake, they will make her an indoor cat now (which I did 
press upon her).  She said they will compensate us for the care we did, thanked 
us, and said they will continue with further vet care for Nosey.  
   
  We are going to try to connect tonight to do the hand-off.  My mom and I both 
really happy that we've had a great result, but I have to admit that it took 
some detecting on my part, as we weren't going to turn this cat over to the 
great unknown!  I will never know how Nosey got one mile away from her home, 
and in so doing, she had to have crossed one of the busiest state roads in 
Louisville (4 lanes of non-stop busy traffic, 45 mph speed limit) to get to our 
neighborhood???!!  
   
  Thanks to everybody who provided insight into Nosey's 

Re: OT: Success with Rescue Cat

2007-08-22 Thread wendy
Wow Caroline!  How wonderful!  I am so happy that you feel good about the 
caregiver of this kitty and I really hope the transfer goes well.  Did she 
sound happy, relieved, surprised, etc?  Or did you communicate solely via 
email?  Please let us know how it goes tonight.  I am really curious and I hope 
you walk away feeling like you did something really important that made a 
difference, because you did.  And I hope, when you see them reunite, you are 
beyond comfortable with how much the owners love their furbaby.  What you did 
was wonderful, taking her in like that.  And look how it made your mom change, 
now considering doing more rescue!  Isn't that great, in and of itself?!  

My hat's off to you and your mom,
:)
Wendy
 
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: Caroline Kaufmann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2007 12:49:03 PM
Subject: OT: Success with Rescue Cat


Okay, since there's been lots of debate and dare I say, controversy, over the 
Malnourished Rescue Cat my mom and I took in and have been caring for, I wanted 
everyone to know that she is GOING HOME and we have successfully reunited her 
with her family.
 
Long story short, we pretty much took EVERYONE'S advice and tried a variety of 
tactics (as I previously mentioned-- signs posted, I posted on websites, etc.). 
 As I had mentioned, from the Rabies tag, all we were able to obtain is the 
telephone number and street name (not number) of the owner and the name of 
the cat- Nosey.  My mom and I pretty much sat on it for a while since by 
then, we'd already taken her to the Vet and started her on Clavamox and she 
needed so much rehabilitation anyway.  We tried to decide what to do and we 
just hated the idea of totally cold call to this number...not knowing ANYTHING 
about the person and whether they were a good owner.
 
We are almost finished with the Clavamox and have finished one tube of 
Terramycin and Nosey is still exhibiting Upper Respiratory Infection symptoms, 
thus my mom said we have to either: 1) take her back to the vet this week, as 
needs more care, or 2) call the owners and make sure they take her to the vet.
 
Since I had the owner phone number, I FINALLY remembered that the 
Whitepages.com has this handy tab where you can do a reverse look-up- using 
the phone number...it will give you a name and address.  Bingo!  I got the 
street address we'd been wanting, which also provided me with the NAMES of the 
two people living there  So, then I of course googled their names...and low 
and behold, one of them is a Partner at a law firm here and of course, my mouth 
dropped open (I am a lawyer too- and although this is a big city, it's a SMALL 
legal community), thus I knew I had to contact her at that point.  I also knew 
she could definitely afford the vet bill Nosey incurred (they live on very 
rich street- I know that sounds weird, but the property value of the houses 
on that street is ridiculous).  Anyway, I feel like the ultimate pet detective, 
seriously.  Sometimes I think all I need in life is google and the white or 
yellowpages.com!!!  
 
My mom and I discussed it and I decided to send her an email at her firm's 
email address from my work email, so she would know where I work and that I am 
an attorney too.  I took the initial vague route first (as was discussed on 
this list serve)...to feel her out, etc.  She replied and said it's their cat 
and they looked for her for weeks and weeks, but didn't check online sites 
(which she apologized for) and asked when they could come get her.  After 
another consult with my mom, my mom wanted me to send her another email where I 
socked it to her with the malnutrition, that she would have died if we hadn't 
taken her in, she went to the vet and this and that was done and the bill is 
this amount, we've been feeding her this  that, she needs to go back to the 
vet because the URI is still lingering, I advise she go back and get this 
treatment (a  full blood panel to check liver/kidney function, fecal for 
tapeworms, etc.).  AND then I asked if she was
 outdoor/indoor cat and said if so, I recommend she NOT be an outdoor cat 
because she does not fair well outside, she has this URI that won't go away, 
and she's deathly afraid of storms and if she is out when one comes, she will 
run and hide.  WHEW!  All that.  I also apologized for hitting her with all 
this at once and at work and admitted that I wanted to feel her out initially 
before I admitted that we had the cat in our house and have done intensive 
care/rehabbing.  
 
She responded really well!!!  She gave me info about Nosey's background- 
they've had Nosey since birth and she lives with her Mother and Brother cats.  
They are mostly outside cats because they live on a large piece of property 
with a covered

Re: OT: Success with Rescue Cat

2007-08-22 Thread glenda Goodman
Absolutely amazing! How absolutely cool! This is one
lucky cat to have gotten so much help! I loved this
story...Glenda
--- Caroline Kaufmann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:


-
Okay, since there's been lots of debate and dare I
say, controversy, over the Malnourished Rescue Cat my
mom and I took in and have been caring for, I wanted
everyone to know that she is GOING HOME and we have
successfully reunited her with her family.
 
Long story short, we pretty much took EVERYONE'S
advice and tried a variety of tactics (as I previously
mentioned-- signs posted, I posted on websites, etc.).
 As I had mentioned, from the Rabies tag, all we were
able to obtain is the telephone number and street name
(not number) of the owner and the name of the cat-
Nosey.  My mom and I pretty much sat on it for a
while since by then, we'd already taken her to the Vet
and started her on Clavamox and she needed so much
rehabilitation anyway.  We tried to decide what to do
and we just hated the idea of totally cold call to
this number...not knowing ANYTHING about the person
and whether they were a good owner.
 
We are almost finished with the Clavamox and have
finished one tube of Terramycin and Nosey is still
exhibiting Upper Respiratory Infection symptoms, thus
my mom said we have to either: 1) take her back to the
vet this week, as needs more care, or 2) call the
owners and make sure they take her to the vet.
 
Since I had the owner phone number, I FINALLY
remembered that the Whitepages.com has this handy tab
where you can do a reverse look-up- using the phone
number...it will give you a name and address.  Bingo! 
I got the street address we'd been wanting, which also
provided me with the NAMES of the two people living
there  So, then I of course googled their
names...and low and behold, one of them is a Partner
at a law firm here and of course, my mouth dropped
open (I am a lawyer too- and although this is a big
city, it's a SMALL legal community), thus I knew I had
to contact her at that point.  I also knew she could
definitely afford the vet bill Nosey incurred (they
live on very rich street- I know that sounds weird,
but the property value of the houses on that street is
ridiculous).  Anyway, I feel like the ultimate pet
detective, seriously.  Sometimes I think all I need in
life is google and the white or yellowpages.com!!!
 
 
My mom and I discussed it and I decided to send her an
email at her firm's email address from my work email,
so she would know where I work and that I am an
attorney too.  I took the initial vague route first
(as was discussed on this list serve)...to feel her
out, etc.  She replied and said it's their cat and
they looked for her for weeks and weeks, but didn't
check online sites (which she apologized for) and
asked when they could come get her.  After another
consult with my mom, my mom wanted me to send her
another email where I socked it to her with the
malnutrition, that she would have died if we hadn't
taken her in, she went to the vet and this and that
was done and the bill is this amount, we've been
feeding her this  that, she needs to go back to the
vet because the URI is still lingering, I advise she
go back and get this treatment (a  full blood panel to
check liver/kidney function, fecal for tapeworms,
etc.).  AND then I asked if she was outdoor/indoor cat
and said if so, I recommend she NOT be an outdoor cat
because she does not fair well outside, she has this
URI that won't go away, and she's deathly afraid of
storms and if she is out when one comes, she will run
and hide.  WHEW!  All that.  I also apologized for
hitting her with all this at once and at work and
admitted that I wanted to feel her out initially
before I admitted that we had the cat in our house and
have done intensive care/rehabbing.  
 
She responded really well!!!  She gave me info about
Nosey's background- they've had Nosey since birth and
she lives with her Mother and Brother cats.  They are
mostly outside cats because they live on a large piece
of property with a covered porch.  She said the cats
seldom go beyond the immediate neighbors (who love
them), but the mother cat became an indoor cat a few
years ago when she developed a URI!!!  So, hopefully,
now that poor Nosey has one that she can't seem to
shake, they will make her an indoor cat now (which I
did press upon her).  She said they will compensate us
for the care we did, thanked us, and said they will
continue with further vet care for Nosey.  
 
We are going to try to connect tonight to do the
hand-off.  My mom and I both really happy that we've
had a great result, but I have to admit that it took
some detecting on my part, as we weren't going to
turn this cat over to the great unknown!  I will never
know how Nosey got one mile away from her home, and in
so doing, she had to have crossed one of the busiest
state roads in Louisville (4 lanes of non-stop busy
traffic, 45 mph speed limit) to get to our
neighborhood???!!  
 
Thanks 

RE: OT: Success with Rescue Cat

2007-08-22 Thread Chris
Happy Dance for Nosey--bet that little one is going to be one happy little
girl and that her mom is going to give her a good talking to about wandering
off!  And good for you for saving this little girl's life and getting her
home!

Christiane Biagi
914-632-4672
Cell:  914-720-6888
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
Katrina Animal Reunion Team (KART)
www.findkpets.org
 
Join Us  Help Reunite Katrina-displaced Families with their Animals
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of glenda Goodman
Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2007 8:43 PM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: OT: Success with Rescue Cat

Absolutely amazing! How absolutely cool! This is one
lucky cat to have gotten so much help! I loved this
story...Glenda
--- Caroline Kaufmann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:


-
Okay, since there's been lots of debate and dare I
say, controversy, over the Malnourished Rescue Cat my
mom and I took in and have been caring for, I wanted
everyone to know that she is GOING HOME and we have
successfully reunited her with her family.
 
Long story short, we pretty much took EVERYONE'S
advice and tried a variety of tactics (as I previously
mentioned-- signs posted, I posted on websites, etc.).
 As I had mentioned, from the Rabies tag, all we were
able to obtain is the telephone number and street name
(not number) of the owner and the name of the cat-
Nosey.  My mom and I pretty much sat on it for a
while since by then, we'd already taken her to the Vet
and started her on Clavamox and she needed so much
rehabilitation anyway.  We tried to decide what to do
and we just hated the idea of totally cold call to
this number...not knowing ANYTHING about the person
and whether they were a good owner.
 
We are almost finished with the Clavamox and have
finished one tube of Terramycin and Nosey is still
exhibiting Upper Respiratory Infection symptoms, thus
my mom said we have to either: 1) take her back to the
vet this week, as needs more care, or 2) call the
owners and make sure they take her to the vet.
 
Since I had the owner phone number, I FINALLY
remembered that the Whitepages.com has this handy tab
where you can do a reverse look-up- using the phone
number...it will give you a name and address.  Bingo! 
I got the street address we'd been wanting, which also
provided me with the NAMES of the two people living
there  So, then I of course googled their
names...and low and behold, one of them is a Partner
at a law firm here and of course, my mouth dropped
open (I am a lawyer too- and although this is a big
city, it's a SMALL legal community), thus I knew I had
to contact her at that point.  I also knew she could
definitely afford the vet bill Nosey incurred (they
live on very rich street- I know that sounds weird,
but the property value of the houses on that street is
ridiculous).  Anyway, I feel like the ultimate pet
detective, seriously.  Sometimes I think all I need in
life is google and the white or yellowpages.com!!!
 
 
My mom and I discussed it and I decided to send her an
email at her firm's email address from my work email,
so she would know where I work and that I am an
attorney too.  I took the initial vague route first
(as was discussed on this list serve)...to feel her
out, etc.  She replied and said it's their cat and
they looked for her for weeks and weeks, but didn't
check online sites (which she apologized for) and
asked when they could come get her.  After another
consult with my mom, my mom wanted me to send her
another email where I socked it to her with the
malnutrition, that she would have died if we hadn't
taken her in, she went to the vet and this and that
was done and the bill is this amount, we've been
feeding her this  that, she needs to go back to the
vet because the URI is still lingering, I advise she
go back and get this treatment (a  full blood panel to
check liver/kidney function, fecal for tapeworms,
etc.).  AND then I asked if she was outdoor/indoor cat
and said if so, I recommend she NOT be an outdoor cat
because she does not fair well outside, she has this
URI that won't go away, and she's deathly afraid of
storms and if she is out when one comes, she will run
and hide.  WHEW!  All that.  I also apologized for
hitting her with all this at once and at work and
admitted that I wanted to feel her out initially
before I admitted that we had the cat in our house and
have done intensive care/rehabbing.  
 
She responded really well!!!  She gave me info about
Nosey's background- they've had Nosey since birth and
she lives with her Mother and Brother cats.  They are
mostly outside cats because they live on a large piece
of property with a covered porch.  She said the cats
seldom go beyond the immediate neighbors (who love
them), but the mother cat became an indoor cat a few
years ago when she developed a URI!!!  So, hopefully,
now that poor Nosey has one that she can't seem to
shake, they will make her an indoor cat now (which