Two More Graduates of the Fischer School of Feral Feline Socialization

Is that really a thing for socializing feral cats?

 

Well, no, but it should be. This past year I’ve met some really remarkable people who are willing to try to do everything possible to help us help bring more cats off the streets.

 

Pinky and The Brain are perfect examples. We trapped them popping in and out of outdoor drain pipes at the Pallet Colony in January.

 

Pinky’s nose was so pink at the time. The temps were brutal when we were trapping her. IMG_4428

She was incredibly vocal, so we thought immediately she may be friendly. IMG_4450

The Brain’s trapping was accidental. We placed a trap around the corner and found her in it at the last minute. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

It was pretty funny. We were rounding up the traps, thinking we were going to pack it up for the night, and Joann found her. Isn’t her marble coat gorgeous?

 

You can really see it in this photo. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

They are older kittens, bonded, most likely from the same litter, and needed some socialization in order to be admitted into a no-kill shelter.

 

Joann insisted on giving them a chance immediately after their TNR surgery at PAWS Chicago. She took them home to foster and socialize, and later for further vetting. IMG_4640

They were shy, but still did well around her. They purred and wanted to be pet. Problems only came about when Joann would try to get them into pet carriers for transport and vetting. At one point, The Brain got out and went straight for the rafters in her basement. IMG_7324 Robin F. agreed to further socialize them. We met Robin last fall when she took the KFC Colony kittens to be fostered. She and her family are amazing at showing cats and kittens the good life indoors. So, thus explains the title of this post, the Fischer School of Feral Feline Socialization took on the case of Pinky and The Brain.

 

Considering at this point they came from outdoor drain pipes, to the clinic, to Joann’s basement, to vet appointments, and then now to Robin’s house, all within long car rides in traps and carriers, Pinky and The Brain were doing remarkably well. They were first crated together in Robin’s foster room, where they slowly learned to play. 12596841_10207426238708233_1306199661_o And then relax. 12626198_10207426393752109_2080447738_n

And then strike a pose. 12771576_10207613734395508_7204517145681609394_o

Eventually she moved them into their own small room, her bathroom, where they could roam more and get comfortable.

 

The Brain was a bit shy at first again. 12669209_10207498980486732_1326762110_o

And then she got used to it. 12696331_10207513625212841_1512003329_o

Pinky was the same way, shy at first. 12696309_10207498979286702_600962021_o

And then playful. 12722325_10207513625332844_2054818121_o

She also wanted to get to know Robin’s other cats. 12736555_10207508276479126_583341465_o

And then they were totally comfortable and acted like typical indoor cats. You all know about cats in sinks, right? 12696790_10207491184891847_1023409900_o

Joann has them back at her place now, and said they are rolling over for tummy rubs. Next week they have an appointment for possible admission into PAWS Chicago. Fingers crossed they will be admitted!

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Outdoor Cats Breed Year-round

We tried trapping at the Pallet Colony on Friday night, but the alley was very busy and we only re-trapped ear-tipped cats. They all looked great.

 

At one point a man with a sheriff’s badge around his neck came up to my car and knocked on the window. Obviously he was not a sheriff – it was pretty funny. He jumped Ron’s fence and got him for us. Ron feeds and cares for the cats. We gave him two outdoor shelters, and wet and dry cat food. We called it a night.

 

Joann returned Saturday night and trapped the 18th cat from this colony so far. IMG_4686

She named the cat Vern, in honor of the maintenance man at the retirement center who has helped us immensely with information and access to the building.

 

The next day when she went to pick Vern up from PAWS Chicago’s spay/neuter clinic, she learned the cat is female.

 

Vern is actually Verna. And not only that, she was in heat.

 

The resilience of these colonies is amazing to me, and their capacity to breed even under the harshest conditions is astounding.

 

Verna is currently recovering nicely at my place. She freezes still when she sees me. The only thing she moves are her eyes, looking at what she can. She poses just the same, but I prefer this photo showing off her ear tip. IMG_4766

We’ve seen at least a half dozen more cats that need to be TNR’d, so we’re going back again to trap there tonight.

 

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Kittens Rescued from Drain Pipes Now All Off the Street

Six kittens finding shelter in drain pipes and heating vents at the retirement home were trapped and rescued.

 

The original call Erica from PAWS Chicago received about this colony was asking for help with a mama cat and four kittens. We are calling this the Pallet Colony now, and so far we’ve trapped 16 cats and kittens. ALL of the kittens we know about are now off the street.

 

Last week Joann trapped four kittens, about 10 weeks old, and all are now admitted into PAWS’ no-kill shelter.

 

They developed some URI issues, and were placed into foster homes. PAWS posted the cutest photos of them in their iso cages, and with their new names, Hunky Dory, Stardust, and Kaira. Thank you, PAWS and Erica!  12604825_1656019254649601_9223141072311691109_o 12622521_1656019294649597_5196560235880990643_o

Fitzgerald was the fourth kitten trapped. Joann was able to socialize him fairly fast at her home first, within a week, because of his age and his love for wet food. He was just admitted into PAWS and renamed Bowie. IMG_4642

We trapped two other older kittens, about six months old, Pinky and The Brain. Pinky was the one that kept popping her head out of the drain pipes to check out the traps.

 

They are currently too shy to be admitted into PAWS, but they are enjoying their indoor life. They are crated together and are pretty bonded. IMG_4640 They are now in a foster home with Robin, who is making sure they are being socialized properly. 12665768_10207426238708233_1306199661_n 12626198_10207426393752109_2080447738_n Thank you, Robin! Robin did a fantastic job fostering the KFC Colony kittens for us a few months ago.

 

Please let me know if you are interested in meeting these girls to adopt or to foster. Thanks!

 

 

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Helping Neighbors Through EveryBlock

Gertrude is 85 years old, has Parkinson’s Disease, and cares for the cats outside at her home in Portage Park.

 

Her neighbors help watch and care for her, and posted on Everyblock.com about two months ago looking for additional help with the cats. There were kittens born outside. I have found a lot of neighbors caring for cats in the past through EveryBlock. I highly recommend utilizing that site.

 

Since then, the adult feral cats were TNR’d. Joann answered the EveryBlock post and has been going to Gertrude’s home ever since to help socialize, care for and transport the kittens back and forth to PAWS Chicago for their vet appointments. Their initial admission date was delayed twice for a month now because the kittens were sick.

 

Today the kittens are going for what we are hoping will be their final admission date at PAWS and will be ready for adoption soon. Today is also the day that the five kittens from the KFC Colony will also hopefully be admitted.

 

Here is beautiful Gertrude with the kittens! Joann took these photos. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

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The Five KFC Colony Kittens are Sick Again

The KFC Colony Kittens became sick again after moving foster homes. Their next admission appointment to PAWS Chicago is this Thursday.

 

In the meantime, they became sick with what was diagnosed as coccidia and upper respiratory infections –  URI. Their latest vet bill was $608.98. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

That’s in addition to their other bills of $187.78

 

As of now they seem to be all right. They love tearing apart Joann’s laundry room, pretty much tearing off every piece of clothing off of the hangers. SelfTimer Off

And they’re obsessed with this watering can. They knock it over and take turns going inside. SelfTimer Off

If you would like to donate to any of their vetting costs, please donate through paypal.com at [email protected]

 

October’s vet bills have been beyond $3000 for the cats and kittens of the KFC and Kitchen Colonies, so any help is appreciated for us to continue with TNR.

 

Thanks for all of your support!

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Introducing the Kitchen Colony

The KFC Colony lost their home. The junkyard they hung out in is cleared out, and no one feeds there anymore.

 

The good news is that eight adult cats from there were adopted into indoor homes, and the five kittens are still being fostered now by Joann.

 

The other good news is that Joann found a colony caregiver, Patrice, a few blocks away who has seen some of the remaining cats visiting her feeding station. IMG_3601

The feeding station is located behind a restaurant, off of a bank parking lot. So I called this the Kitchen Colony.

 

Patrice has been doing TNR at this site since 2004. She doesn’t keep track, but she thinks she has vetted almost 100 cats from here. A lot of the cats were friendly and she found homes for them, and found homes for their kittens. This is unfortunately one of those areas where a lot of people let their intact cats out.

 

I wasn’t surprised as that was also going on at the junkyard a few blocks away. The Joyce Division Colony is also a few blocks away, and most of those cats were friendly when I did TNR there starting in 2010. Patrice also knew about that colony. She said she had been begging Joyce for years for her to do TNR on the cats. She said Joyce would feed all of them and play with their kittens outside. Again, unfortunately, this is a pretty common scenario. Then she said that one day Joyce told her a woman came by and fixed all of the cats. Obviously that was me, and we couldn’t believe we were finally meeting each other years later. I had always asked Joyce if she ever knew anyone that feeds but she wouldn’t tell me about anyone else. It was so great to connect the dots and finally meet.

 

The restaurant and bank gave Patrice permission to feed and care for the cats here for years now. The restaurant especially likes the cats because they help keep the rats away. It’s a perfect scenario as they feed right behind their dumpsters, which normally would attract rats because of the food debris.

 

Patrice also set up shelters at this site under tarps. IMG_3406 IMG_3407

It was a great time to meet Patrice because she was worried about winterizing her shelters even more. I gave her a few new shelters to switch out with the old ones.

 

Joann and I immediately agreed to help her because the site is pretty overwhelming. Patrice already had three kittens from this site in foster care. There’s a mix of all kinds of cats here, and it’s pretty confusing. Some are already TNR’d. Some are not. Some are friendly. We spotted a pregnant female. There’s a sick black cat that we would like to trap for vetting. There are more kittens.

 

We set up traps several nights this month at the feeding station, and in people’s yards. IMG_3520 IMG_3540 IMG_3544

We even tried a drop trap one of those nights. Joann was there so often that the bank security guard told her he was going to have her car towed!

 

So far we have trapped three female cats and two kittens.

 

Ruby was first. She is the colony ambassador. She is friendly and all of the colony cats pick on her. She kept rubbing up against our legs. IMG_3412

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Her ear was already tipped, but because she was not chipped, we have no idea who TNR’d her. Joann fully vetted her at Roscoe Village Animal Hospital for $390 and has been fostering her ever since in her home. She is FIV-/FeLV-. If you are interested in fostering or adopting Ruby, please contact me at [email protected]

 

Sally was also trapped the same day. She is the mother of the kittens that Patrice already had in foster care. Her TNR and FIV/FeLV test at PAWS Chicago was $41. She tested negative! IMG_3428

Joann tried fostering her indoors as well, because she follows Patrice all around outside.

Sally was miserable at her house, and acted feral. We returned her back outside. It is clear that she is just bonded to Patrice. It’s funny because Sally always spies on us from a safe distance. IMG_3599

But once Patrice is alone, she just follows her. Patrice texted us last night and said she couldn’t take it anymore and crated Sally in her garage. She is trying to see if she can acclimate her indoors.

 

We also trapped Birdie and her two kittens. Birdie went in one trap, and the two kittens went together in the other trap. Birdie is feral and was TNReturned. Her TNR package and FIV/FeLV test at PAWS was also $41 total and she also tested negative. IMG_3621

Patrice fully vetted and boarded Birdie’s two kittens for $420 at her vet, Family Pet Animal Hospital. Meet Clara and Darren. IMG_3602

My friend Elissa from Rockstar Pets agreed to socialize and foster them. It’s already working. IMG_0164

If you are interested in fostering or adopting Clara or Darren, you can also please contact me at [email protected]  They are FIV-/FeLV- and still need additional vetting.

 

In the meantime we will continue to TNR this colony!

cat lover says:

I enjoyed reading this wheras I also TNR and feed feral cats. I am in Los Angeles and love my feral cats….they are friendly and have become part of our lives! Thank you for caring for the cats!!!

Vanessa says:

Thanks for the kind words and for all that you do for the cats!

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TNA: Trap, Neuter, Adopt for the KFC Colony

When we first started TNR for the KFC Colony in their junkyard home, we didn’t know what to expect. Little did we expect that almost ALL of the cats were going to end up in indoor homes because almost all of the adult cats were friendly, and the kittens were young enough to be socialized.

 

It was a good thing for the cats, because they lost their home in the middle of this project.

 

Joann saw cats and kittens through the fence on her first visit to the junkyard. There were tons of construction materials and garbage for them to hide in.

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People were also leaving food.

 

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But we couldn’t figure out a way to get in. Everything was locked. She tried trapping in the neighbor’s yard and started leaving food as well.

 

One night a woman showed up to feed. We learned that her name is Corinne, and she has been feeding at this junkyard since last November. She drove almost every day from her home in Rogers Park to feed the cats. Another friend told her about it. Corinne fed all the time, and so did other people that randomly showed up with food, so when she tried to trap cats obviously it was pretty hard. They were not hungry enough to go in the traps. But she managed to trap about five or six cats, and almost all of them were friendly. She found homes for all of them within her network of friends, except for one cat that was feral, so he was TNReturned.

 

Corinne showed us how she got into the junkyard. There was a small gap in the chain link fence. She would trap a cat and then hoist it over the barbed wire. I have no idea how she did this by herself. IMG_3449

Corinne knew about the kittens, and knew who the mama cat was. She showed us photos of the cats she was still trying to trap. She said she had potential homes for all of them. She really was trying to do the best for the cats, but she was just overwhelmed at this point.

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That first day Joann and Corinne set traps together in the junkyard all five kittens were trapped. IMG_3339 They went into foster care with my friend Robin and will be admitted to PAWS Chicago tomorrow. Throughout their foster care their cost of vet care was $187.78 for eye meds and antibiotics.

 

The mama cat, Poppy, was also trapped that day. She was skin and bones and ravenous before and after her TNR. Her TNR clinic package cost $26, and testing cost $15. She tested negative for FIV and FeLV. IMG_3305 She was also friendly, and Corinne had very specific plans for her. She was adopted into an indoor home that had adopted her sister that Corinne trapped months before. Here she is being acclimated. IMG_3349

In the midst of this trapping, we met one of the contractors at the junkyard. He said we could do whatever we want. The junkyard was supposed to be cleared for a condo building, but it would be months before that happened.

 

Rusty was trapped next. His TNR clinic package and testing total was also $41, and he tested negative. IMG_3369

Corinne also had a specific home for him in mind as he was friendly and she had bonded to him outside and had lots of photos. unnamed

We trapped Diamond Jim next. Joann called me to help hoist him over the gap in the fence. IMG_3353

Diamond Jim’s TNR package was covered by this clinic so we just paid $20 for testing. Unfortunately he tested FIV+.

 

His paperwork also said he had a “superficial skin wound on his right rear leg (hock region).” The clinic gave him back to us and said he was acting “lazy” in the trap. DJ was definitely pretty lethargic, and also acting friendly, so we transferred him into the feral cat recovery lounge to test his temperament. After a few days we decided to bring him to Roscoe Village Animal Hospital to take a look. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

It turns out that his leg wound was infected and DJ had a temperature. He was weighed in at 11.2 pounds, which made a lot more sense than the weight listed as 7.5 pounds at the clinic. He was pretty heavy when we hoisted him over the fence! We treated him for everything at Roscoe Village. His total vet bill was $280. IMG_3463

After a week in the recovery lounge, Corinne was also able to place DJ into an indoor home!

That same week Joann showed up to trap and the junkyard was being cleared out. This was just days after we started, so obviously we did not have months to trap as had been explained to us. Trucks barreled into the yard and took away all of the materials. The kittens definitely would have been killed in the chaos. The workers agreed to watch the traps that Joann and Corinne had left, but when they came back that same night, the traps were also gone. We have no idea who took them.

 

This is what the junkyard looks like now.  IMG_3452

There were still a few cats that needed to be trapped here, but they dissipated now that the junkyard was cleared out.

 

We still don’t know what hapoened to the black cat in this photo, unnamed

 

or this siamese cat that was also a regular. IMG_0176

 

People stopped feeding. This all happened within the last few weeks. Total vetting costs from this colony was $569.78   and we lost $170 worth of equipment. Your donations make this possible! Thank you!

 

In the meantime, we found another feeding station a few blocks away where some of the missing cats, including the siamese, from this colony have been sighted. I call that colony the Kitchen Colony and I’ll be writing about that next.

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Kitten Costs

The kittens from the KFC Colony are adorable and doing well.

 

Whenever you are starting to TNR a new colony, usually kittens are involved. Vetting costs are almost always necessary and expensive when you are dealing with kittens.

 

When we first trapped and brought them inside, Tigger, the alpha male orange kitten’s eye looked like a problem. Joann brought him to her vet at Animal Medical Center. At the time we called him Mr. Orange because we were just trying to figure out which kitten was which, and their color was the easiest to distinguish them with. His eye was completely healed with the medication. The total cost was $116.78. Joann has insisted on paying all year out of pocket for any costs for the cats we are trying to help. Thank you, Joann! IMG_3461

Robin T. has been fostering these kittens ever since. This week, one of the tabby female kittens, Tabitha, started sneezing and then coughing. Today she had nasal discharge. Robin took Tabitha to her vet, who determined she most likely had a cold, and put her on oral antibiotics. Total cost was an additional $71, covered by your donations. Since the other kittens were already exposed, and still are not sick, we’re hoping that they are immune and will not also get sick.

 

Here’s Tabitha and her siblings listening to Robin’s daughter reading them a bed time story. This is one of the most precious photos I have ever seen. 12096405_10206753458329144_4432203286917100953_n In the meantime, PAWS Chicago has agreed to cover their vaccination and surgery costs, and will admit them into their program next week if they are all healthy and fully socialized. Doing TNR like this would not be possible without the help of fosters like Robin and people like Joann and local no-kill shelters like PAWS and donations from people like you. Thank you all!

 

 

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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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Mooha Conquers All Cat Houses

Thank you to Lisa M for her generous donation of an outdoor cat house and supplies!

 

Lisa shipped a Feral Cat Barn from Feline Furniture, along with half a dozen purr pads, a bottle of calming Feral Flower Formula, and the cutest cat card. IMG_1859

Everyone’s generosity and donations help us keep helping more cats. There’s no way we could keep doing this without your support. All of these items will be distributed to TNR’d cat colonies here in Chicago.

 

My cat Mooha helped unpack. She was especially obsessed with the shipping box, of course, but she also wanted to climb the cat house and remind us who’s top cat here.  IMG_1822

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