2015 Trap Neuter Return Case Study

Since 2007 I TNR’d 183 cats from 20 colony sites within one square mile around me. Today there are only 51 cats from that total left outside. That is a 72% reduction rate in nine years.

By Colony Chart 2015 Trap Neuter Return Case Study 2015

I am very happy with these numbers and track them carefully. I visit these colony sites and their feeders all the time to make sure everyone is doing well. The majority of these cats are microchipped to me and I consider myself responsible for them. These days I rarely trap a “new” truly feral cat that made their way to one of our feeding stations. Any “new” cats I find are either people’s indoor/outdoor pet cats (and I just make sure the cats are spayed/neutered), or part of a colony that I learned was relocated here.

 

The point of TNR is to reduce the outdoor cat overpopulation crisis humanely. I can never say it enough. I dream of the day of not seeing cats in every alley here. We are getting closer to that reality.

 

Since 2010 I also started TNR at other locations outside of this area to help out other colony cat caregivers. Last year I branched out even more and started doing TNR at more locations with other people, who are also trappers, caregivers and friends, including Heather, Joann, Melissa and Patrice. Thank you!

 

I call these sites “Satellite Colonies” since they are focused on just one person’s yard, rather than trying to contain an entire area. You can see efforts really escalated last year. We trapped 95 total cats and kittens from eight additional colonies. Out of those cats, one died during surgery. 38 were adopted straight into indoor homes or admitted into no-kill shelters. That is where the collaboration with these rescuer friends was crucial. In addition, I’d like to thank Corinne, Elissa, Joann, Patrice and Robin for fostering some of these cats and kittens!

Satellite Colonies 2015

Download the Trap Neuter Return Case Study 2015 PDF

Danielle Gordon says:

This is so interesting — thanks for sharing.

Vanessa says:

Thanks, Danielle! I’ve been tracking the numbers for years now. TNR works! Vanessa

This is very encouraging to see your hard stats on TNR’s effectiveness. It is the only proven method of controlling feral cat population without cruelty. Keep up the good work.

Vanessa says:

Thanks, John, and to you as well! We’re huge fans of Best Friends and all that you do for the animals. Vanessa

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RIP Buttercup

Buttercup was a tiny, FIV+ cat TNR’d from the Joyce Division Colony in March of 2011.

 

She was a hot mess from the beginning, but we were TNR’ing Joyce’s entire colony fast because some of the cats were already pregnant and brought her straight to the clinic. She was an adult cat who weighed only four pounds, had an upper respiratory infection, tongue lesions, loose stool, and tested FIV+. She groomed herself constantly, most likely from stress. Buttercup_03_30_11

I had never seen anything like that before. She was friendly, but it was the usual time when no-kill shelters are perpetually full. She just sat a few feet away from us, grooming herself constantly. This over-grooming was most likely caused by stress.

 

We couldn’t put her back outside like this. Joyce, her feeder, agreed to keep her inside on Clavamox for a week, and then never put her back outside again. Then when I found placement for Buttercup in no-kill shelters, Joyce refused because she was now attached to her.

 

In the meantime, Buttercup thrived being indoors, and she slowly stopped over-grooming as she relaxed. But she was still severely sick with URI’s for quite some time. It took a lot of conversations between me and Joyce to convince her to get vetting for Buttercup.

 

But we did, and Buttercup’s health improved. She more than doubled her weight – she was at ten pounds.  A few years passed, although I always called periodically to make sure all of Joyce’s cats, indoors and outdoors, were doing all right. Along with Joyce’s three indoor cats, we TNR’d 11 other outdoor cats. No other “new” cats showed up in the colony. Joyce’s indoor cats started getting along with Buttercup, even while weighing almost three times as much as her. Buttercup was holding her own and had a forever home. She looked fantastic. DSC06888

About two months ago Joyce called and asked me to take her and Buttercup to the clinic because Buttercup was limping. I told her to take Buttercup to a full service vet because clinics do not cover extra vetting. I couldn’t take them myself – at this point I was constantly working out of town.

 

We figured Buttercup must have injured herself. I called Joyce a few times and she was getting X-rays done.

 

Today I learned Joyce euthanized Buttercup about a month ago. Buttercup’s left front paw swelled up, and after several x-rays and thousands of dollars of medical costs/treatment, the vet figured out that she had bone cancer and an enlarged heart. Additional treatment would have included radiation, and it most likely would have been too much for Buttercup to endure.

 

RIP Buttercup. It was not an easy road, but Joyce gave her a much better and longer life than she would have had the last four years. She would have been easy pickings on the street – no way could a tiny, sick, constantly wet cat have survived much longer in a Chicago winter.

 

 

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Introducing the Creole Colony: The Story of an Overwhelmed Feeder, Hoarder, and Animal Lover

Danny moved to Humboldt Park decades ago and started feeding the cats outside. Currently he is feeding at least 25+ cats and kittens, inside and outside.

 

I  met Danny a few weeks ago when Tree House referred a call to me from another woman named Tonya who was looking for help with a mama calico cat and her kittens born in her yard.

 

I called Tonya and learned this was the calico cat’s second litter within the past six months. Tonya adopted her previous litter into her own home, and had them vetted at Treehouse. My friend Heather and I went to talk to Tonya and walked around her block with her. We walked door to door, and found Danny immediately. He had cat houses and feeding stations on his property. IMG_0631 IMG_0679

Danny was completely overwhelmed with feeding the cats. He told us there were about 15 friendly cats that he has brought inside with him, and he feeds another 10+ outdoor cats as well. Currently, there is also the calico cat family, another pregnant cat outside his house, and most likely other pregnant cats in his house. I have also met another neighbor directly across the street who feeds another colony of at least 3+ cats.

 

Danny talked about growing up poor in Louisiana, and how he is currently caring for his 92 year old mother and her 80 year old partner at his place. His mother is in a wheelchair and has cancer. In addition, he was trying to keep up with the care of the cats. He should be retired, but he keeps working as a handyman to keep up with the expenses for the cats. During our conversation, he pulled out antibiotics that he was trying to give them from the vet. He was almost in tears during this conversation.

 

Danny was totally on board with getting the cats spayed/neutered, and TNR. He said he was offered help throughout the years, but no one would follow through.

 

We made plans to meet the following day to start trapping. When Heather, Tonya and I showed up, he was again almost in tears. He said he did not expect us to show up, because people have always promised him help before without following through.

 

I told him that when I say I’m coming over, I’m coming over.

 

We brought feral cat shelters and set up traps in his backyard. IMG_0682 IMG_0685

By the next day, we had five cats in traps.

 

Four were clearly feral, all Siamese, and siblings. Meet Little Mama, Winky, Simono, and Princess. Two males, and two females. They had some medical conditions, including severe dental disease,  underweight, diarrhea, inflamed intestines, alopecia, distended abdomen, ropey intestines, and conjunctivitis.

 

Can you tell they’re siblings or what?

We also trapped Rudy. Rudy had to be kept overnight because he needed additional care. He was treated for tapeworms, and obviously had some conjunctivitis going on. IMG_0735 Danny recovered all of the cats on his own. We resumed trapping and got five more cats.

 

Meet Fuzzy, Jake, Lil Fuzzy, and Lola. All of them also had variations of tapeworm, dental disease, and intestinal disorders. Ss far we have been charged $40 for various worm medications, and have been advised to do $20 fecal tests/per cat to determine which parasites they have.

 

Jake’s tongue is sticking out because of the dental disease. A few of the other cats look like that as well.

In addition, we brought in Sammy.

 

Sammy didn’t make it. He died under anesthesia, and one of Danny’s other cats almost died as well. That cat was brought back to life with CPR.

 

Danny broke down with the news of Sammy’s death. I don’t even have a photo of Sammy to share with you, otherwise normally I write separate obituaries for cats. But I brought Danny to Treehouse’s clinic so that they could explain to him what happened. He was very upset. Very, very upset. He made arrangements to get Sammy’s ashes from them for $75+.

 

Unfortunately Danny is now not as trusting of this process. This is the second cat that has died under Treehouse’s care since December that I know of. I have never had cats die before during their spay/neuter surgeries in over twelve years of TNR. Also, the ear tips done now all month there are very bloody for multiple cats in multiple colonies. The sheets covering the traps are coming back sprayed with blood. It is concerning, because normally, I’ve never seen blood on the ear tips.

 

Along with the TNR, I’ve been working with Danny to provide a safe environment for the cats. His first floor apartment, where he stays with his mother, is fine. Rudy, the orange cat, has full reign of the house.

 

The rest of the cats are kept sequestered in various rooms, including his back porch. The back porch is filled with a lot of stuff, including full litter boxes and lots of cat food lying everywhere. There are at least five cats living there. I am hoping Danny will eventually help us clean up back there. IMG_0756 IMG_0758 IMG_0759 IMG_0761 IMG_0762

The garage where all of the siamese cats hang out also needs cleaning. We have provided feral bins to put in there. IMG_0774

Danny has currently shut down on us, although I remain hopeful he will continue working with us in the future, despite all obstacles. He knows where the calico mama cat and her kittens are. We’ve talked about bringing in the kittens for adoption. I brought him additional feral cat shelters, a feeding station, and a donation of almost 300 cans of wet food. He understands we’re trying to help him help the cats. If you are interested in helping, please,

 

email:

[email protected]

 

call:

773-609-2287

 

donate:

[email protected]

 

Thank you!

Tanya Mohan says:

Vanessa,

Your article is amazing. It captures a part of our communities that people do not realize exists so heavily. We all see the stray cats, and its time we all stop and think of their safety and where they are breeding. We will all continue to work with Danny and others to help manage this problem in our neighborhoods. People like Danny have hearts of gold and put themselves aside to care for these beautiful animals, but it is easy to get overwhelmed. The most important point you are making, and I cannot express this enough, is that HELP IS OUT THERE.

Problems like this are manageable – to those who reads this article, I saw a problem…..I called my local humane society, and I asked for help. Help reached me immediately, in the form of Vanessa and Heather. Thanks to their care and efforts, we are actively minimizing feral cat reproduction and medical problems near me. Knowledgeable help is out there – if you just pick up the phone and ASK FOR HELP!

Tanya

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Biggie Smiles Needs a New Home. Or Does He?

The Iron Works Colony is down to four TNR’d cats now. We spayed/neutered twelve cats and kittens total from here in October 2012. Obviously that’s a a two-thirds reduction in outdoor colony size in two years. TNR works.

 

The Iron Works Colony is one of my satellite colonies pretty far from where I live. I first heard about it from a co-worker and went there to TNR, and I keep in touch periodically.

 

When I visited the colony the other week Oscar, their feeder, had just gotten home. I watched two cats run down from his front steps to greet him. They were well-fed and obviously bonded to each other and him.

 

Oscar and his parents live in a well-kept house with a beautiful garden. The cats have heated shelter next door in their iron works business. IMG_8735 Years ago they started feeding cats and of course the population increased. When I first met Oscar he talked a lot about how much he loved the kittens. The kittens would get hit and killed by cars frequently, or he would give them away to friends and neighbors. Even though Oscar really loved having kittens mostly, he understood that the breeding had to stop. He also asked me repeatedly if I would “take the adults to a shelter.”

 

The adult cats are pretty friendly, especially this one I call Biggie Smiles. IMG_8739

This cat is all smiles all the time. IMG_8738

Seriously. IMG_8737

Biggie Smiles is completely bonded to Oscar. He ran right up to him, along with his TNR’d sibling, and they both tried to climb right into his car. They came near me, but never quite let me touch them.

 

Biggie would just rub and roll on everything. IMG_8747

IMG_8742

Including his brother. IMG_8744

Oscar asked me again if I would take the adults to a shelter. I’m not sure if that is the best solution for these cats. I can’t touch them easily, they have food and shelter, and are heavily bonded to each other. They’ve “adopted” Oscar, and this is the only home they know. But, of course I want the friendly cats to be adopted indoors. I hate hearing about kittens being killed on the street, or given away without being fixed. But we all know that reputable no-kill shelters are always full, and finding potential adopters takes a lot of effort. After doing the majority of the TNR work, when feeders ask me these questions, I am careful to make them understand that the responsibility is on them. If they want to find these cats home, they should try and do so. This is THEIR colony and yard, and by all means, they may be able to find another indoor solution for the cats on their own. I give them ideas and contact information on what I try to do when looking for another home for a cat. Oscar has given away a lot of kittens from his yard. Perhaps some of those people would also be interested in a fixed adult cat.

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RIP Betty

I TNR’d Betty from the Jose and the Pussycats Colony in February 2012. Most of this colony feeds and hangs out on the front porch. Betty lived all by herself on the back porch, and I was told she was a mama cat many times before her TNR. In fact, two of her daughters were living inside with her feeders. We took her daughters to the clinic to be spayed as well.

 

Betty was very feral, very old, and very deaf. The feeders think she lived in their backyard for the last fifteen years. She would not interact with any of the other cats in the colony. IMG00700-20120202-0926

Because of her deafness, I was able to get up close and see that she was sick. And that she had the most AMAZING amount of fur.  DSC07148

It took me three days to trap her. I spent hours in her feeder’s kitchen, watching the trap. This is a terrible photo, but this is what she did most of the time while I was waiting. She just hung out on top of the trap. It made me laugh so much, even though I was so desperate to get her, because she was so sick and congested.  And her coat is so crazy looking – it made her look huge, like a raccoon. mobydick_ontropoftrap

When I finally trapped her, she was on antibiotics for over a week before her spay surgery. She looked much better afterwards. Her tongue was always out, so obviously she needed a dental, but she tested negative for FIV/FeLV, and seemed to recover fairly well. DSC07253 I had grand plans of adopting her inside because she was so different looking, and her deafness and age made me think she was too vulnerable to be outside. Plus, frankly, the conditions she was living in the back porch were filthy, no matter how much I talked to the feeders, or offered to clean up. In fact, a lot of things about this colony were a mess, but I want to tell Betty’s story now, and not dwell on things that can’t be changed. When I brought back Betty after being recovered for two weeks, the feeders did not want her back. They had thought I took her away permanently. It was actually kind of a fight, but there was nowhere else for her to go.  It was so strange, though, because they immediately brought her food. They really do care about these cats, and allowed me to vet all of their indoor and outdoor cats without objection, and would even try to help with trapping. They fed wet and dry food multiple times a day, provided shelter for the colony on their front and back porches, and would never accept cat food donations from me. I would periodically bring clean outdoor clean shelters for her. But Betty was very feral, and would even snub the shelters I brought for her preferred old blankets.

 

This is the time of year where I clean out all of the shelters for the feeders. When I cleaned out Betty’s shelter two weeks ago, I could see she was very matted and congested again. I wasn’t sure if I should start trapping her immediately for treatment, because at this time of year she could not be shaved. She needed her fur for the winter.

 

I just stopped by the house today and the feeders told me they found Betty dead outside last week in the backyard. They always answer the door when I go there, but I can never get them to call me, even for something like this. I would’ve taken her immediately to the vet had I known, but who knows if she would have wanted that. I hope Betty died peacefully on her own terms, as a truly feral cat.  DSC07301

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TNR for an Overwhelmed Feeder

When I started TNR a decade ago I never fed cats outside. I learned about it because I was trying to catch a sick and injured cat that would not come near me. Even after their TNR I still did not feed since the cats seemed to “disappear” afterwards. What they were actually doing was going back to their feeders.

 

If you do TNR regularly for people who ONLY feed cats, you know how hard it is sometimes to convince them that this is the right thing to do.

 

Such was the case with the Joyce Division Colony. Tree House told me about the colony in the winter of 2010. Joyce was not an easy person to convince that the cats could be trapped and fixed. In fact, she never quite did it “my way.” I’d leave her traps, and she would usually coerce the cats in them herself. It was frustrating at first for me, but at the same time, this is how I ended up TNR’ing 10 cats for her. So this method actually ended up working. Nothing else would work anyways, because Joyce refused to try it. She wouldn’t even let me stay and trap in her yard.

 

One of the cats that showed up in her yard in 2011 was a mess. She was teeny, drooling, had URI, and for some reason she was completely wet. Buttercup

Buttercup tested FIV+ and weighed only four pounds. After her TNR, I asked Joyce if she could recover her in her house with a week’s worth of Clavamox to treat the URI. Joyce agreed, and then let her out in her empty apartment downstairs. Buttercup just sat there. She was fairly friendly, and definitely could not run from danger outside. She was constantly wet because she was over grooming herself. Not only was she sick, but she was probably stressed out from being dumped by someone. She would die quickly if we put her back out, and there was no space at the shelters for her. catemiddleton Well, a week’s recovery turned into months, and Joyce admitted to me that she could not let Buttercup go. Buttercup was now upstairs with her. So it looked like Buttercup was adopted indoors. When I visited her, though, her breathing was alarming. You could hear her wheezing from across the room. When I pointed this out to Joyce, she seemed surprised, and was not into the idea of taking Buttercup to the vet.

 

Joyce owns three other indoor cats in very good health, and I kept thinking they would also get sick, but that never happened. Joyce cares for and has a beautiful home for Buttercup and her other cats. She feeds them all the time. In fact, Buttercup now weighed over six pounds. It was just this weird kind of aversion again to going to the vet.

 

Regardless, after much persuading, I took Joyce and Buttercup to the vet. But it took almost a year to get there. In 2012, the vet said it was one of the worst cases of lung congestion they have ever heard. Joyce seemed surprised – I was more surprised that Buttercup was surviving it, and thriving otherwise. She actually looked really good, just stressed out, but her breathing sounded terrible. DSC07542

DSC07543

Her ears were filthy with ear mites also. DSC07546

After a series of vet visits and antibiotics, Buttercup’s congestion was cured. But she needs a dental. The vet even showed us this when she pulled a tooth out of her mouth right in front of us.

 

Two years later, and we still have not gone to get Buttercup a dental, but yet again, she is thriving. I just visited her and Joyce this week. All I can do is gently ask how things are going, and I’ll take them to the vet when they’re ready. IMG_8711

As for the colony, Joyce said she only feeds four cats now outside, and all are ear tipped. No new cats have showed up since 2012. This is down from 10 cats total TNR’d – one was obviously Buttercup, another cat was admitted to a shelter, one cat died a year after being TNR’d, and three others disappeared/died. In four years, the outdoor colony population is reduced by more than half.

 

Joyce feeds these four remaining cats twice a day, has shelter for them, and a gorgeous garden that she keeps seasonally decorated. Can you see the black cat? IMG_8718

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TNR Supplies

Jim cleaned and organized my TNR supplies in the garage last week while I was out of town on a work trip. I am a lucky, lucky woman to have him in my life.

 

First, he bought these shelves from Home Depot and set them all up.

 

The shelves fit most of the supplies needed for TNR, including:

Tru-catch brand standard-sized traps, fat cat traps, and recovery traps

– various-sized pet carriers

– dog crates

– plywood pieces to elevate the traps off of the cement floor

– extra straw for winter housing insulation

Garage TNR supplies

 

And another set of shelves for:

– garbage bags and plastic sheets for easy clean up

– trap covers, sheets and blankets

trap dividers/forks

– newspapers to line the traps

– soft plastic lids and bowls to feed the cats with in the traps

– zip ties to close the traps

heated water bowls

heated food bowls

warming pads

– plastic and aluminum pan litter boxes

More garage TNR supplies
straw bales

Hey Hay!

There’s more that needs to be cleaned out, including an awesome winter cat house that my friend Dorota donated, and these huge bales of straw donated by my friends Anna, Ellen and Alex. I’ll write more about these supplies later when I’m in town to distribute them.While Jim was cleaning out the garage, he even took the time to take some photos of the cats. Here’s Funny Face sharpening his claws on the sunflowers.  Funny Face sunflower scratching post

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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 Rockstar Colony Has a New Home!

The caregiver for Kitty Farrell, the tripod cat, read about the Rockstar Colony losing their home. She came by yesterday and dropped off a cat food donation for them! Thank you!

I’m always blown away by how much people care and want to help. By the way, Kitty Farrell is pretty much healed from her hind leg amputation. Today the caregiver is going to start slowly releasing her from the dog crate to see how she will react to being in a bigger room.

The Rockstar Colony is doing well. Their new feeder is feeding about three cats at this point: Pepe, Mama Cass Cat and Cheezburger Cat.

There’s a lot of commotion on their block because of the construction work where their old home used to be. There are already three foundations for new homes put in the ground. I think the rest of the colony migrated permanently towards the Jose and the Pussycats Colony the next block over. We’re not sure where they sleep at night now that they lost their shelter, but I have outdoor cat houses all over the area so hopefully they will figure it out by the time it gets really cold.

The Rockstar Colony’s new feeder also told me all three cats are welcome to stay inside with her! Pepe, now named Lightning because of the white lightning bolt stripe on his front leg, is already taking her up on her offer. It remains to be seen about the other two cats. I’m very excited because I wanted to try to adopt out Pepe Lightning last year since he was so friendly, but the original feeders insisted on keeping all the cats, especially him. It worried me because he was just too friendly for his own good to be outside all the time.

Now Pepe Lightning and his friends gets fed all the time and there’s no confusion about where they belong. I'll have what he's having.

I’ll have what he’s having.

 

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Kitten Season

Spring has sprung! To me this means the feral cats start going crazy and really enjoying themselves outside. We even named two of the cats in my yard Springy and Sprungy when we trapped them one April because we had no idea they existed. They just showed up late one night in our yard.

Since then just one of them has become a permanent part of the James Gang Colony and we call him Springy Sprungy, or sometimes Funny Face.

Springy Sprungy has begunny.

Springy Sprungy has begunny.

What spring really means to cat colony caretakers is that it’s the start of kitten season. Though at this point it seems like kitten season is happening year round. I feel like I have gotten the colonies in my area under control since I have not found kittens since 2009. At this point the new cats that are showing up in the colonies are really indoor/outdoor cats or dumped pet cats. I will still TNR them as fast as I can.

If you manage colonies and provide shelters for them chances are the mom cats will utilize those shelters. This is the family I found in 2009 at the Eleanor Rigby Colony Clover's family

 

Erica says:

OMG! You found them in this kitty condo?!?! This is so cute!! WOW!

Vanessa says:

Yes, they were born in that kitty condo and lived there for a few weeks!

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