Re: new hope for Boo

2008-02-29 Thread Lynne
Ah thanks Anita.  We had to rush him in this morning a day early because he was 
breathing through his mouth.  Dr. Gill, BooBoo's biggest admirer drew another 
100 cc from his lungs.  He immediately felt better and Dr. Gill handed him over 
to Bob to take home.  As soon as he got home he ate like a little horse and now 
is sleeping.  My husband and I keep asking each other if we're sure this is 
what we want to do and we both agree we've made a committment to try what's 
available to us and that's what we're going to do.  It will break my heart when 
our 19 year old goes but he has lead such a good life and still is but poor 
little BooBoo didn't deserve this and it could have easily been prevented by 
one frickin vaccine that a stupid cat breeder neglected to do.  I hope the 
woman who took the 300 bucks from us for him uses the money to go out for 
dinner and chokes.  I'm appalled that they know what we're going through and 
didn't at the very least give back the money to help us offset his  vet bills.  
I'm not done with these people.  I'm just too busy with Boo at the moment to 
get really vindictive.

Lynne
  - Original Message - 
  From: Stray Cat Alliance 
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
  Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 10:56 AM
  Subject: RE: new hope for Boo


  Lynne, my heart truly goes out to you, your husband and Boo. What love and 
compassion you have - that is truly worth its weight in gold. Love is the best 
medicine and you obviously have a lot of that! I am praying the treatments help 
Boo.
   
  Best wishes,
  Anita

  Every year shelters kill almost 5,000,000 cats, dogs, puppies  kittens.  

  Most were beautiful, loving creatures (even feral cats!) that died simply 
because they did not have a home.  
  Every puppy or kitten born costs a shelter animal its life. 

  Save lives, spay-neuter, support Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR)  adopt for life!
   
  Visit http://www.castawaycritters.org/info/display?PageID=153 for information 
on Spay/Neuter in Mid-Central PA
  Visit http://www.alleycat.org for information on humane control of the feral 
and stray cat population
  Visit http://www.cpaa.info for information on life-saving programs and 
organizations in Mid-Central PA



   






From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: new hope for Boo
Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2008 17:17:18 -0500


Well, after bawling a lot last night and conferring with my husband while 
at work today I faxed off another letter to my vet letting him know that Bob 
and I would try any treatment that may possibly give BooBoo more time on this 
earth with us and I made a couple suggestions.  To my surprise he told me I 
could pick the interferon up tomorrow at the pharmacy I deal with and he would 
start the injections Saturday.  The other vet said it would do no good at this 
stage, but BooBoo's primary caregiver is more willing to try to help him, that 
is if we wish to go through with it.  I was so desparate today I wondered if he 
could be transfused to give him a better shot at battling this and he will be 
transfused next week.  His vet said they have a donor for him that is 
vaccinated yearly.  I didn't actually think there would be a live donor and was 
kind of dismayed to think another cat would have to do this for us but the vet 
assured me with cats their blood store is totally back to normal in a short 
time.  I even had a pharmacy tech offer her Himalayan as a donor.  I truly do 
not know if this will do any good whatsoever but what is there left to do.  If 
new blood and interferon can't help him, I honestly believe we can do nothing 
more.  I asked about other drugs too but the vet said he was really happy and 
thankful we're willing to go this far for him.  He has 3 cats of his own and 
does love cats.  He told us most positive cats or cats with FIP aren't given 
these chances so this is a first for him.  I know he will do everything he can 
to help BooBoo.  He really loves him too..If we can just give him a fighting 
chance here I'll try this Transfer Factor stuff that came in the mail today.  

Lynne


--
  Need to know the score, the latest news, or you need your HotmailĀ®-get your 
fix. Check it out. 


Re: new hope for Boo

2008-02-29 Thread dede hicken
I came in a little late to all this that BooBoo has
been going through, and I missed
something...obviously.  You got this cat from a
Breeder  And they did NOT give you your money
back??? (Not that it would have helped Boo, but the
gesture would have been nice)

I hope you fry their (   ).  People like this should
be prosacuted for the sake of the cats and the misery
they put the people through.  I hope you are saving
every single receipt.

So glad Boo is feeling better.  I hope both he and you
have a lovely weekend!

Dede 



--- Lynne [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Ah thanks Anita.  We had to rush him in this morning
 a day early because he was breathing through his
 mouth.  Dr. Gill, BooBoo's biggest admirer drew
 another 100 cc from his lungs.  He immediately felt
 better and Dr. Gill handed him over to Bob to take
 home.  As soon as he got home he ate like a little
 horse and now is sleeping.  My husband and I keep
 asking each other if we're sure this is what we want
 to do and we both agree we've made a committment to
 try what's available to us and that's what we're
 going to do.  It will break my heart when our 19
 year old goes but he has lead such a good life and
 still is but poor little BooBoo didn't deserve this
 and it could have easily been prevented by one
 frickin vaccine that a stupid cat breeder neglected
 to do.  I hope the woman who took the 300 bucks from
 us for him uses the money to go out for dinner and
 chokes.  I'm appalled that they know what we're
 going through and didn't at the very least give back
 the money to help us offset his  vet bills.  I'm not
 done with these people.  I'm just too busy with Boo
 at the moment to get really vindictive.
 
 Lynne
   - Original Message - 
   From: Stray Cat Alliance 
   To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org 
   Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 10:56 AM
   Subject: RE: new hope for Boo
 
 
   Lynne, my heart truly goes out to you, your
 husband and Boo. What love and compassion you have -
 that is truly worth its weight in gold. Love is the
 best medicine and you obviously have a lot of that!
 I am praying the treatments help Boo.

   Best wishes,
   Anita
 
   Every year shelters kill almost 5,000,000 cats,
 dogs, puppies  kittens.  
 
   Most were beautiful, loving creatures (even feral
 cats!) that died simply because they did not have a
 home.  
   Every puppy or kitten born costs a shelter animal
 its life. 
 
   Save lives, spay-neuter, support
 Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR)  adopt for life!

   Visit

http://www.castawaycritters.org/info/display?PageID=153
 for information on Spay/Neuter in Mid-Central PA
   Visit http://www.alleycat.org for information on
 humane control of the feral and stray cat population
   Visit http://www.cpaa.info for information on
 life-saving programs and organizations in
 Mid-Central PA
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 


 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Subject: new hope for Boo
 Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2008 17:17:18 -0500
 
 
 Well, after bawling a lot last night and
 conferring with my husband while at work today I
 faxed off another letter to my vet letting him know
 that Bob and I would try any treatment that may
 possibly give BooBoo more time on this earth with us
 and I made a couple suggestions.  To my surprise he
 told me I could pick the interferon up tomorrow at
 the pharmacy I deal with and he would start the
 injections Saturday.  The other vet said it would do
 no good at this stage, but BooBoo's primary
 caregiver is more willing to try to help him, that
 is if we wish to go through with it.  I was so
 desparate today I wondered if he could be transfused
 to give him a better shot at battling this and he
 will be transfused next week.  His vet said they
 have a donor for him that is vaccinated yearly.  I
 didn't actually think there would be a live donor
 and was kind of dismayed to think another cat would
 have to do this for us but the vet assured me with
 cats their blood store is totally back to normal in
 a short time.  I even had a pharmacy tech offer her
 Himalayan as a donor.  I truly do not know if this
 will do any good whatsoever but what is there left
 to do.  If new blood and interferon can't help him,
 I honestly believe we can do nothing more.  I asked
 about other drugs too but the vet said he was really
 happy and thankful we're willing to go this far for
 him.  He has 3 cats of his own and does love cats. 
 He told us most positive cats or cats with FIP
 aren't given these chances so this is a first for
 him.  I know he will do everything he can to help
 BooBoo.  He really loves him too..If we can just
 give him a fighting chance here I'll try this
 Transfer Factor stuff that came in the mail today.  
 
 Lynne
 
 

--
   Need to know the score, the latest news, or you
 need your

Re: new hope for Boo

2008-02-29 Thread Lynne
Dede, she was not a registered breeder but just had all these Himalayans.  I
found out about BooBoo being for sale online of all places.  The only reason
I bought him was because he is BooBoo, a cat I had got to know well through
the previous summer and fall as he would come to my house all of the time
and we'd feed, groom and tend to his wounds.  He had a little collar on and
I would put messages on his collar for them to take him to the vet because
of his bloodied ears etc and one time the owner came around wanting to know
if I had him, which I didn't and I lit into her about her neglect and
threatened to take him to the humane society  if she didn't keep care of
him.  She and I aren't exactly buddies.  I dealt with her two daughters when
I bought Boo.  The daughter told me that to her knowledge he had been
vaccinated, I didn't ask for proof of vaccination but assumed he had been.
This is one of those buyer beware situations I guess.  I'm convinced now
they knew he was not well.  After they agreed to sell him to me we were not
able to actually have him for almost 2 weeks.  They kept making excuses
about family wanting to see him, he was asleep with the other cats, etc etc.
I would ask the daughter, is there something wrong with him, is he ok and
she would just laugh it off and say, he's great.  Even if I had known he was
ill I would have taken him.  It's weird but it's like this cat was destined
to be ours.  Once the cold weather came and he stayed inside, I would come
home every day from work and hope that he would come out from under the
trailer in our driveway and I would steal him so he'd never have to leave
again.  It was a dream come true to get him and now this.

Lynne
- Original Message -
From: dede hicken [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 3:57 PM
Subject: Re: new hope for Boo


 I came in a little late to all this that BooBoo has
 been going through, and I missed
 something...obviously.  You got this cat from a
 Breeder  And they did NOT give you your money
 back??? (Not that it would have helped Boo, but the
 gesture would have been nice)

 I hope you fry their (   ).  People like this should
 be prosacuted for the sake of the cats and the misery
 they put the people through.  I hope you are saving
 every single receipt.

 So glad Boo is feeling better.  I hope both he and you
 have a lovely weekend!

 Dede



 --- Lynne [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  Ah thanks Anita.  We had to rush him in this morning
  a day early because he was breathing through his
  mouth.  Dr. Gill, BooBoo's biggest admirer drew
  another 100 cc from his lungs.  He immediately felt
  better and Dr. Gill handed him over to Bob to take
  home.  As soon as he got home he ate like a little
  horse and now is sleeping.  My husband and I keep
  asking each other if we're sure this is what we want
  to do and we both agree we've made a committment to
  try what's available to us and that's what we're
  going to do.  It will break my heart when our 19
  year old goes but he has lead such a good life and
  still is but poor little BooBoo didn't deserve this
  and it could have easily been prevented by one
  frickin vaccine that a stupid cat breeder neglected
  to do.  I hope the woman who took the 300 bucks from
  us for him uses the money to go out for dinner and
  chokes.  I'm appalled that they know what we're
  going through and didn't at the very least give back
  the money to help us offset his  vet bills.  I'm not
  done with these people.  I'm just too busy with Boo
  at the moment to get really vindictive.
 
  Lynne
- Original Message -
From: Stray Cat Alliance
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 10:56 AM
Subject: RE: new hope for Boo
 
 
Lynne, my heart truly goes out to you, your
  husband and Boo. What love and compassion you have -
  that is truly worth its weight in gold. Love is the
  best medicine and you obviously have a lot of that!
  I am praying the treatments help Boo.
 
Best wishes,
Anita
 
Every year shelters kill almost 5,000,000 cats,
  dogs, puppies  kittens.
 
Most were beautiful, loving creatures (even feral
  cats!) that died simply because they did not have a
  home.
Every puppy or kitten born costs a shelter animal
  its life.
 
Save lives, spay-neuter, support
  Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR)  adopt for life!
 
Visit
 
 http://www.castawaycritters.org/info/display?PageID=153
  for information on Spay/Neuter in Mid-Central PA
Visit http://www.alleycat.org for information on
  humane control of the feral and stray cat population
Visit http://www.cpaa.info for information on
  life-saving programs and organizations in
  Mid-Central PA
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 --
--
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Subject: new hope for Boo
  Date: Thu, 28 Feb

Re: new hope for Boo

2008-02-29 Thread dede hicken
I would believe that in most states, the minute you
take money for something, and verify it is healthy or
it works, you are committed to be truthful about it. 
If not, it seems like fraud.

One thing is for sure, Boo would have never gotten the
care you have given him had he stayed there.  Even
with a shorter life, it is better to know love and
have quality in your existence.

You are fortunate that Boo does so well after the
aspirations.  My soul mate, Smokey died from cancer,
and each time we did the aspiration, he'd get a bit
worse...plus he wasn't eating.  It must make you feel
great to see him eating so well.

All the best,
Dede



--- Lynne [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Dede, she was not a registered breeder but just had
 all these Himalayans.  I
 found out about BooBoo being for sale online of all
 places.  The only reason
 I bought him was because he is BooBoo, a cat I had
 got to know well through
 the previous summer and fall as he would come to my
 house all of the time
 and we'd feed, groom and tend to his wounds.  He had
 a little collar on and
 I would put messages on his collar for them to take
 him to the vet because
 of his bloodied ears etc and one time the owner came
 around wanting to know
 if I had him, which I didn't and I lit into her
 about her neglect and
 threatened to take him to the humane society  if she
 didn't keep care of
 him.  She and I aren't exactly buddies.  I dealt
 with her two daughters when
 I bought Boo.  The daughter told me that to her
 knowledge he had been
 vaccinated, I didn't ask for proof of vaccination
 but assumed he had been.
 This is one of those buyer beware situations I
 guess.  I'm convinced now
 they knew he was not well.  After they agreed to
 sell him to me we were not
 able to actually have him for almost 2 weeks.  They
 kept making excuses
 about family wanting to see him, he was asleep with
 the other cats, etc etc.
 I would ask the daughter, is there something wrong
 with him, is he ok and
 she would just laugh it off and say, he's great. 
 Even if I had known he was
 ill I would have taken him.  It's weird but it's
 like this cat was destined
 to be ours.  Once the cold weather came and he
 stayed inside, I would come
 home every day from work and hope that he would come
 out from under the
 trailer in our driveway and I would steal him so
 he'd never have to leave
 again.  It was a dream come true to get him and now
 this.
 
 Lynne
 - Original Message -
 From: dede hicken [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 3:57 PM
 Subject: Re: new hope for Boo
 
 
  I came in a little late to all this that BooBoo
 has
  been going through, and I missed
  something...obviously.  You got this cat from a
  Breeder  And they did NOT give you your money
  back??? (Not that it would have helped Boo, but
 the
  gesture would have been nice)
 
  I hope you fry their (   ).  People like this
 should
  be prosacuted for the sake of the cats and the
 misery
  they put the people through.  I hope you are
 saving
  every single receipt.
 
  So glad Boo is feeling better.  I hope both he and
 you
  have a lovely weekend!
 
  Dede
 
 
 
  --- Lynne [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
   Ah thanks Anita.  We had to rush him in this
 morning
   a day early because he was breathing through his
   mouth.  Dr. Gill, BooBoo's biggest admirer drew
   another 100 cc from his lungs.  He immediately
 felt
   better and Dr. Gill handed him over to Bob to
 take
   home.  As soon as he got home he ate like a
 little
   horse and now is sleeping.  My husband and I
 keep
   asking each other if we're sure this is what we
 want
   to do and we both agree we've made a committment
 to
   try what's available to us and that's what we're
   going to do.  It will break my heart when our 19
   year old goes but he has lead such a good life
 and
   still is but poor little BooBoo didn't deserve
 this
   and it could have easily been prevented by one
   frickin vaccine that a stupid cat breeder
 neglected
   to do.  I hope the woman who took the 300 bucks
 from
   us for him uses the money to go out for dinner
 and
   chokes.  I'm appalled that they know what we're
   going through and didn't at the very least give
 back
   the money to help us offset his  vet bills.  I'm
 not
   done with these people.  I'm just too busy with
 Boo
   at the moment to get really vindictive.
  
   Lynne
 - Original Message -
 From: Stray Cat Alliance
 To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
 Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 10:56 AM
 Subject: RE: new hope for Boo
  
  
 Lynne, my heart truly goes out to you, your
   husband and Boo. What love and compassion you
 have -
   that is truly worth its weight in gold. Love is
 the
   best medicine and you obviously have a lot of
 that!
   I am praying the treatments help Boo.
  
 Best wishes,
 Anita
  
 Every year shelters kill almost 5,000,000
 cats,
   dogs, puppies  kittens

Re: new hope for Boo

2008-02-29 Thread Lynne
Ah, poor Smokey.  I wish it could have helped him. Of course Boo doesn't
have cancer, that we know of, but after these aspirations he's a new cat for
a couple days.  Even his vet is amazed at how he rebounds.  Unfortunately,
this is turning out to be a weekly thing and I don't know how long his
little body can tolerate it.  They've had to shave two areas on his sides to
put the needles in.  Its terrible but when he stretches out on the bed he
looks like one of those skinned rabbits in the frozen meat department.  I
tried cooking one of those things once when Bob and I first were married and
we had to toss it out because it was just so nightmarish looking.  Now
BooBoo kind of looks like that.  I keep combing his long hair over the
patches.  Poor little guy.

Lynne
- Original Message -
From: dede hicken [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 5:52 PM
Subject: Re: new hope for Boo


 I would believe that in most states, the minute you
 take money for something, and verify it is healthy or
 it works, you are committed to be truthful about it.
 If not, it seems like fraud.

 One thing is for sure, Boo would have never gotten the
 care you have given him had he stayed there.  Even
 with a shorter life, it is better to know love and
 have quality in your existence.

 You are fortunate that Boo does so well after the
 aspirations.  My soul mate, Smokey died from cancer,
 and each time we did the aspiration, he'd get a bit
 worse...plus he wasn't eating.  It must make you feel
 great to see him eating so well.

 All the best,
 Dede



 --- Lynne [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  Dede, she was not a registered breeder but just had
  all these Himalayans.  I
  found out about BooBoo being for sale online of all
  places.  The only reason
  I bought him was because he is BooBoo, a cat I had
  got to know well through
  the previous summer and fall as he would come to my
  house all of the time
  and we'd feed, groom and tend to his wounds.  He had
  a little collar on and
  I would put messages on his collar for them to take
  him to the vet because
  of his bloodied ears etc and one time the owner came
  around wanting to know
  if I had him, which I didn't and I lit into her
  about her neglect and
  threatened to take him to the humane society  if she
  didn't keep care of
  him.  She and I aren't exactly buddies.  I dealt
  with her two daughters when
  I bought Boo.  The daughter told me that to her
  knowledge he had been
  vaccinated, I didn't ask for proof of vaccination
  but assumed he had been.
  This is one of those buyer beware situations I
  guess.  I'm convinced now
  they knew he was not well.  After they agreed to
  sell him to me we were not
  able to actually have him for almost 2 weeks.  They
  kept making excuses
  about family wanting to see him, he was asleep with
  the other cats, etc etc.
  I would ask the daughter, is there something wrong
  with him, is he ok and
  she would just laugh it off and say, he's great.
  Even if I had known he was
  ill I would have taken him.  It's weird but it's
  like this cat was destined
  to be ours.  Once the cold weather came and he
  stayed inside, I would come
  home every day from work and hope that he would come
  out from under the
  trailer in our driveway and I would steal him so
  he'd never have to leave
  again.  It was a dream come true to get him and now
  this.
 
  Lynne
  - Original Message -
  From: dede hicken [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
  Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 3:57 PM
  Subject: Re: new hope for Boo
 
 
   I came in a little late to all this that BooBoo
  has
   been going through, and I missed
   something...obviously.  You got this cat from a
   Breeder  And they did NOT give you your money
   back??? (Not that it would have helped Boo, but
  the
   gesture would have been nice)
  
   I hope you fry their (   ).  People like this
  should
   be prosacuted for the sake of the cats and the
  misery
   they put the people through.  I hope you are
  saving
   every single receipt.
  
   So glad Boo is feeling better.  I hope both he and
  you
   have a lovely weekend!
  
   Dede
  
  
  
   --- Lynne [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
Ah thanks Anita.  We had to rush him in this
  morning
a day early because he was breathing through his
mouth.  Dr. Gill, BooBoo's biggest admirer drew
another 100 cc from his lungs.  He immediately
  felt
better and Dr. Gill handed him over to Bob to
  take
home.  As soon as he got home he ate like a
  little
horse and now is sleeping.  My husband and I
  keep
asking each other if we're sure this is what we
  want
to do and we both agree we've made a committment
  to
try what's available to us and that's what we're
going to do.  It will break my heart when our 19
year old goes but he has lead such a good life
  and
still is but poor little BooBoo didn't deserve

Re: new hope for Boo

2008-02-29 Thread Marylyn
He doesn't think he is poor.look at the love around him.  And cats  
don't just by appearances the way people do.

On Feb 29, 2008, at 5:19 PM, Lynne wrote:

Ah, poor Smokey.  I wish it could have helped him. Of course Boo  
doesn't
have cancer, that we know of, but after these aspirations he's a new  
cat for
a couple days.  Even his vet is amazed at how he rebounds.   
Unfortunately,

this is turning out to be a weekly thing and I don't know how long his
little body can tolerate it.  They've had to shave two areas on his  
sides to
put the needles in.  Its terrible but when he stretches out on the  
bed he
looks like one of those skinned rabbits in the frozen meat  
department.  I
tried cooking one of those things once when Bob and I first were  
married and

we had to toss it out because it was just so nightmarish looking.  Now
BooBoo kind of looks like that.  I keep combing his long hair over the
patches.  Poor little guy.

Lynne
- Original Message -
From: dede hicken [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 5:52 PM
Subject: Re: new hope for Boo



I would believe that in most states, the minute you
take money for something, and verify it is healthy or
it works, you are committed to be truthful about it.
If not, it seems like fraud.

One thing is for sure, Boo would have never gotten the
care you have given him had he stayed there.  Even
with a shorter life, it is better to know love and
have quality in your existence.

You are fortunate that Boo does so well after the
aspirations.  My soul mate, Smokey died from cancer,
and each time we did the aspiration, he'd get a bit
worse...plus he wasn't eating.  It must make you feel
great to see him eating so well.

All the best,
Dede



--- Lynne [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


Dede, she was not a registered breeder but just had
all these Himalayans.  I
found out about BooBoo being for sale online of all
places.  The only reason
I bought him was because he is BooBoo, a cat I had
got to know well through
the previous summer and fall as he would come to my
house all of the time
and we'd feed, groom and tend to his wounds.  He had
a little collar on and
I would put messages on his collar for them to take
him to the vet because
of his bloodied ears etc and one time the owner came
around wanting to know
if I had him, which I didn't and I lit into her
about her neglect and
threatened to take him to the humane society  if she
didn't keep care of
him.  She and I aren't exactly buddies.  I dealt
with her two daughters when
I bought Boo.  The daughter told me that to her
knowledge he had been
vaccinated, I didn't ask for proof of vaccination
but assumed he had been.
This is one of those buyer beware situations I
guess.  I'm convinced now
they knew he was not well.  After they agreed to
sell him to me we were not
able to actually have him for almost 2 weeks.  They
kept making excuses
about family wanting to see him, he was asleep with
the other cats, etc etc.
I would ask the daughter, is there something wrong
with him, is he ok and
she would just laugh it off and say, he's great.
Even if I had known he was
ill I would have taken him.  It's weird but it's
like this cat was destined
to be ours.  Once the cold weather came and he
stayed inside, I would come
home every day from work and hope that he would come
out from under the
trailer in our driveway and I would steal him so
he'd never have to leave
again.  It was a dream come true to get him and now
this.

Lynne
- Original Message -
From: dede hicken [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 3:57 PM
Subject: Re: new hope for Boo



I came in a little late to all this that BooBoo

has

been going through, and I missed
something...obviously.  You got this cat from a
Breeder  And they did NOT give you your money
back??? (Not that it would have helped Boo, but

the

gesture would have been nice)

I hope you fry their (   ).  People like this

should

be prosacuted for the sake of the cats and the

misery

they put the people through.  I hope you are

saving

every single receipt.

So glad Boo is feeling better.  I hope both he and

you

have a lovely weekend!

Dede



--- Lynne [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


Ah thanks Anita.  We had to rush him in this

morning

a day early because he was breathing through his
mouth.  Dr. Gill, BooBoo's biggest admirer drew
another 100 cc from his lungs.  He immediately

felt

better and Dr. Gill handed him over to Bob to

take

home.  As soon as he got home he ate like a

little

horse and now is sleeping.  My husband and I

keep

asking each other if we're sure this is what we

want

to do and we both agree we've made a committment

to

try what's available to us and that's what we're
going to do.  It will break my heart when our 19
year old goes but he has lead such a good life

and

still is but poor little BooBoo didn't deserve

this

and it could have easily been prevented by one
frickin

new hope for Boo

2008-02-28 Thread Lynne
Well, after bawling a lot last night and conferring with my husband while at 
work today I faxed off another letter to my vet letting him know that Bob and I 
would try any treatment that may possibly give BooBoo more time on this earth 
with us and I made a couple suggestions.  To my surprise he told me I could 
pick the interferon up tomorrow at the pharmacy I deal with and he would start 
the injections Saturday.  The other vet said it would do no good at this stage, 
but BooBoo's primary caregiver is more willing to try to help him, that is if 
we wish to go through with it.  I was so desparate today I wondered if he could 
be transfused to give him a better shot at battling this and he will be 
transfused next week.  His vet said they have a donor for him that is 
vaccinated yearly.  I didn't actually think there would be a live donor and was 
kind of dismayed to think another cat would have to do this for us but the vet 
assured me with cats their blood store is totally back to normal in a short 
time.  I even had a pharmacy tech offer her Himalayan as a donor.  I truly do 
not know if this will do any good whatsoever but what is there left to do.  If 
new blood and interferon can't help him, I honestly believe we can do nothing 
more.  I asked about other drugs too but the vet said he was really happy and 
thankful we're willing to go this far for him.  He has 3 cats of his own and 
does love cats.  He told us most positive cats or cats with FIP aren't given 
these chances so this is a first for him.  I know he will do everything he can 
to help BooBoo.  He really loves him too..If we can just give him a fighting 
chance here I'll try this Transfer Factor stuff that came in the mail today.  

Lynne