Cats Know How to Ask for Help, You Just Have to Pay Attention

Last week in the midst of another deep freeze here in Chicago I was checking on my outdoor cat colonies and found this TNR’d cat from the Mother Colony just sitting in the middle of the sidewalk, trying to warm himself in the sun.

Munkimo on the sidewalk When I got closer he ran up the sidewalk to his feeder’s house. He was shivering and looked much thinner. He has not looked like himself within the last month or so, but he never let me get too close to him. This time was different. He meowed at me repeatedly, and then started winding around my legs, rubbing and purring. I saw blood on his back. I put down a can of wet cat food and he scarfed it down. There was another plate of dry food still there, and a cardboard box with a towel in it. Munkimo at his feeder's house The feeder poked her head out the window and said she had not noticed anything different about him, but that he was trying to get into her house the past few weeks. She never let him indoors, and said he is now always on her stoop. He used to leave after eating, so I wonder if he lost his shelter, or perhaps it was just much too cold to matter. I explained he looked injured and sick, and she said her landlord doesn’t allow pets in the building. This is government housing, and she has limited means to care for cats. With her blessing, I came back with a trap for him, which was hardly needed. He was all over me to get more food, so I just placed him in the trap with a full plate.

The vet clinic said the wounds on his back were bite wounds that were so old and infected that the skin and hair just peeled off. They cleaned up the area and gave him antibiotics. He was also dehydrated, weighed only five pounds, had a fever and tested FIV+. Munkimo back wounds When I first TNR’d him in March of 2011 he was a lot sleeker, cleaner and healthier at 7.5 pounds. I actually trapped him in my yard, but he didn’t return after his surgery.  Munkimo during TNR Instead I found him feeding at the Mother Colony two blocks away from me and kept tabs on him these past few years.

Here he is during the summer, while his feeder explains to me that she only feeds him, no other cats. She also did not realize he had an ear tip or anything else like that.

He was always waiting by her door for food and she seemed to diligently feed him. Munkimo at her door

I don’t know what happened to him recently, but he is indoors with me for now. I took him to North Center Animal Hospital for another look. They gave him more antibiotics, and he is also now being treated for roundworms. His blood work showed that he had low red/white blood cells and low protein levels, but these were due to the infection and malnutrition.

His little monkey paws were also a mess.  Munkimo's paws

Once indoors he seems fairly content to sleep a lot. Seriously, look at those monkey paws! Munkimo sleeping The funny thing is that he also seems to prefer to sleep on a hard surface. I’ve tried every configuration of a cat bed, towel and blanket, and he has shunned them all. He scrunches his body to get away from them.

Munkimo in the corner When I removed everything, he finally spread out and seemed comfortable. It’s like he wants to sleep on a tatami mat. Maybe this cat is Japanese? So I named this little five pound Japanese monkey cat Munkimo. Munkimo tatami mat

Munkimo is also named in honor of my Polish monkey pet cat, Mowpa, that I had to euthanize last year the same day I took Munkimo to the vet this year.

Now a week later Munkimo’s monkey paws seem to be cleaned up and healing. Munkimo's healing paws

As well as his back. Munkimo's healing back

In the meantime Munkimo is a very chill, polite, quiet cat that likes to stare at me a lot.  Munkimo stares

A LOT. Munkimo up close

Please keep your fingers crossed that he continues to heal.

Dawn says:

what ever happened to Munkimo, do you still have him ? Thank you for taking care of him : )

Vanessa says:

He’s doing great! He’s fed daily by a woman on the next block that I donate wet food to. Here’s a new photo: https://www.facebook.com/catsinmyyard/photos/pb.178373245600398.-2207520000.1410529562./550869915017394/?type=3&theater

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This View from My Basement Window Brought to You By the Power of Outdoor Electric Outlets

Yesterday was -11 degrees Fahrenheit in Chiberia. Dice enjoyed drinking water from his heated water bowl, next to his heated water dish, behind his heated cat house.  Dice out my window

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Another Outdoor Cat Path

I was certain that I shoveled out all the cat paths around my house, but paw prints don’t lie. These cat tracks in the snow in my front yard show what I missed. I love how the cats step in each other’s paw prints again and again. Feral cats can survive the colder temperatures as long as they don’t get wet, so shoveling out their cat paths help them stay dry. This is also a great way to find outdoor cats in your neighborhood.  cat tracks in my front yard

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The Feral Villa is Now a Possum Villa

I’ve had the Feral Villa in my yard for years now. The outdoor cats have always loved it, and it’s proven to be so popular in my yard that our band named our last album after it. This year I upgraded the villa and installed an outdoor heating pad. The pads are activated by body weight and the cats love it. All three cat houses now have the pads and I always wanted a photo showing it being used. But this is not quite what I had in mind.

Yesterday I caught Dash, our TNR’d feral grey cat that’s been in our yard since 2007, in the Rubbermaid bin shelter rather than one of our luxe heated cat houses. I laughed to myself and thought “cats want what they want,” and it goes to show how well they brave the elements if he’s going to choose a plastic storage bin over a wood house with a shingled roof. Normally he uses the Feral Villa because that is “his.” He stays apart from the other colony cats, who use the other cat houses together.

I told Jim about it and he also laughed. Then hours later we went out to dinner and he looked at me and said, “I bet that opossum is in the Feral Villa. That’s why Dash wasn’t using it.”

I stared at him for a beat and said, “You think Doggy is in the cat house?”

Jim didn’t know yet that I had named the opossum Doggy so he was completely amused and confused at the same time. We were at a place by our house called Handlebar that has a lot of posters on their walls advertising local rock shows. One of them was for a band called the doggiewoggies, or something like that, so we decided to name the possum Doggy Woggy.

And then we went home and I found out, as always, that Jim was right.

Occupy Feral Villa!

Occupy Feral Villa!

This is Doggy Woggy in the Feral Villa enjoying the black heating pad. You can open the villa from the top. He did not move at all during this, and didn’t even come out when I closed it.

I have no problem with this possum, but he can’t really move in like this. I mean, maybe he can, but I can’t have a possum family in the future. I live on a city lot, and my neighbors all have large dogs. I used to have a raccoon family visit all last summer to raid the garden. To discourage them from staying, my neighbor kept his outdoor lights on all night, played a radio, and I made sure not to leave cat food lying around, so they eventually moved on.

Also, I was feeling really bad for Dash. I felt better this morning, though, because when I opened up the villa I found Dash inside there again. He dashed out like a normal cat (cats don’t care about photo ops!) and glared at me for interrupting his morning nap.

Michelle says:

I love what you are doing , so very kind. Can you tell me where you can get the mats that are heat activated by body weight? They are awesome. I want to do this in my backyard in St. Louis. I have alot of fur babies who I take care of.

Thanks

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The Cat and the Opossum

I went outside and almost screamed because I mistook the opossum for Bouncy Bear near their feral cat feeding station. OK, I know they don’t really look alike, but it was dark and they were close together by the food and they’re both grey and white. And he also hissed at me because I’m sure I scared him. I haven’t seen the opossum since before this whole Polar Vortex/Chiberia mess. the cat and the opossum For the record, they both could care less about each other.

Opossums are the safest of all wildlife to have around. They do not carry rabies or any other disease. I am a wildlife rehabber, specializing in opossums and also have some feral feeding stations. Often times they sleep together and eat together. Opossums will keep the area rid of poisonous snakes which makes it safer for the cats. They really are a good animal to have around and not dangerous to have around in any way. They have a hard time finding food in these times so it’s nice he was able to grab a snack before moving on….

Vanessa says:

Thanks for sharing, Beth, I’m happy to have the opossum here, he has been coming over sporadically since the fall. You are right – he seems to coexist just fine with the cats. Please feel free to share any other tips!

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Pepe le Pew Is Now an Indoor Cat

The Rockstar Colony story has come full circle. At least for one of the cats.

I finished TNR for this cat colony two years ago.

Then last fall they lost their home to new construction and I had no idea where their feeder moved to. I thought they would have nowhere to go.

Instead, a neighbor named Christina stepped up and started feeding them.

The colony also has a new outdoor cat shelter and a heated water bowl.

Pepe le Pew, one of the original colony cats, even had his own doppelganger and came regularly. He knew a good thing when he saw it and adapted quickly.

I'll have what he's having.

I’ll have what he’s having.

Christina told me when she started feeding the colony that any of these outdoor cats could come inside with her if they showed they wanted to.

Pepe le Pew was always super friendly. He loves to pose. Just look at him!

And he always acted like this!

But the old feeder did not want him adopted out at the time. Then for some reason, he did not take Pepe le Pew with him when he left.

Well, it looks like Pepe wanted to finally come inside.

I saw him in Christina’s window today, looking outside at the snow and at Kojak, their pet dog. Kojak is also a friend to the cats and loves this weather. Silly Pepe probably thinks he still wants to go outside. Kojak looks like he’s laughing at that idea.

Kojak and Pepe

Christina still feeds the other Rockstar Colony cats, but they don’t come around as often. She found out that the old feeder actually just moved into an apartment across the street. I told her that I tried calling him but he never returned my calls. She said that was not surprising, because when they ask him about the cats, he just says they all left. But she’s seen the cats go in and out of his new basement. At this point I’m just glad the cats are all fixed, and that they have multiple places to choose from to find shelter.

 

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When a TNR’d Colony Cat Shows Up With a Collar On

Today was really nice out finally so I decided to go for a run here and check on the feral cat colonies. I have not been able to do that since the new year started and we were hammered with this snow and polar vortex and Chiberia mess. I was also out of town during most of this – I’m a flight attendant and work ended up sending me out all over the country.

Well, today’s run was great. I saw Macario for the first time since he “ran away.”

Macario the outdoor cat was trapped by another colony cat caregiver that I’m friends with in the neighborhood. The cats in her yard are called the Thompson Twins Colony.

She trapped Macario using a humane Tru-Catch trap this past August, 2013.   Macario in trap

She could see there was clearly something wrong with his paw. Macario with hurt foot

After testing at North Center Animal Hospital, that big red thing turned out to be a benign tumor. The vet removed it. Macario’s caregiver had a fundrasier for his $500+ vet bill and we were able to contribute to it.

During his recovery, she noticed that he seemed friendly, and the goal was to get him adopted out or admitted to a no-kill shelter.

But Macario had other plans. One night he dashed out an open door and did not return.

We were worried, but then again, there are a lot of feral cat colonies around here being fed and sheltered so we knew he would be fine. A lot of the cats that I have TNR’d here visit multiple feeding stations regularly and cross-over into other colonies. 

Today I saw Macario for the first time since then. He went right into the open back door of this house and up their back porch, where I was able to get a good picture of him and confirm that this was Macario. Macario back porch So Macario is actually part of the Martino Awesome Colony, where another friend of mine TNR’d six other cats in 2009/2010. He was clearly at home here, and now he was also sporting a green flea collar. Interestingly enough, the black cat I saw inside peeking out at me did not have a collar.  indoor black cat Martino Awesome Colony I’ve talked to the people at this house before but at the time, they insisted they were only feeding a few cats. I’ll have to talk them again to make sure that the rest of the cats are spayed/neutered.

I’ve TNR’d multiple outdoor cats in this area that have shown up again sporting some sort of collar. There are a lot of  cats here whose owners allow them in and out of their homes. Or sometimes, the cats become friendlier after being spay/neutered and THEN they are “adopted” by the people who are feeding them. Luckily most people are receptive to getting their pets spayed or neutered once we talk about it, as well as trap-neuter-return for feral cats.

 

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Trapping Through the Snow

If the cat colony is hungry enough, they can be trapped any time of year. When I first started doing TNR: Trap-Neuter-Return, I was trapping year-round because kittens were being born year-round. I also was trying to get an injured cat. Now that the colony numbers are stabilized I can be more selective with the timing.

This was when I first trapped the Eleanor Rigby Colony a few years back. The outdoor cats were bonded and swarmed the traps together, completely ignoring the snow. They were very interested in the canned sardines in oil that I used for bait.

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