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An Ex-Expatriate

~ and what she saw

An Ex-Expatriate

Tag Archives: Cats

Bingo Fun for Ferals

25 Wednesday Sep 2024

Posted by farfalle1 in Cats, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

animal-welfare, Cats, feral-cats, TNR, Trap-Neuter-Release

Recently a couple of friends and I went to a fund-raiser for our friend Kathy Lynch’s project: Fearless Feral Feeders. The name tells part of the story, but it doesn’t say it all – in addition to feeding feral cats in the Mesa, Arizona, area, Kathy and her doughty volunteers operate a trap-neuter-release program. For those unfamiliar with this idea, trap–neuter–release is a method that attempts to manage populations of feral cats by live-trapping them, having them neutered, ear-tipped for identification, and, if possible, vaccinated, then releasing them back into the outdoors to live their lives as best and as long as they can without procreating and adding to the feral cat problem.

The fund-raiser was a big Bingo game, and it was loads of fun. Held in an enormous VFW hall, we were there with 130 others folks and a dozen or so volunteers.

As you might guess from the above photo, supper was served: pulled pork bbq sandwiches, loads of fresh fruit, several delicious salads and, my downfall, cakes (yes, plural, one in the shape of a cat).

Also included in the ticket price was a little brown bag with 10 bingo game sheets, a pen, three red tickets, a pen, 3 crayons and a drinks chit.

It was a bit complicated for those of us who had not participated in such an event previously. When we arrived we were given the opportunity to buy two kinds of tickets – white raffle tickets for tables with about 30 items on them (I bought 15 of these tickets). Raffle items were things like cat beds, cat food, cat games and many other general interest things, including a few items for dogs that snuck in when the cats were napping. Blue tickets for a 50-50 drawing were also on offer (50% of proceeds to the winner, 50% to Fearless; I bought 0 of these). The red tickets (see brown bag above) were for items on what Kathy called ‘garage sale items.’ Kathy interspersed drawings for the raffle items and the garage sale items between the bingo games; the 50-50 drawing was at the end of the event. In addition there was a table with a silent auction for more exciting items, including round trip air tickets on Southwest to anywhere in the U.S. Last but not least there were several tables of prizes for people who won the actual bingo games. If you understand all that you’ve picked it up quicker than I did the evening of the event.

Not long after we arrived bingo-caller extraordinaire Kathy got the games rolling.

She did a great job calling the numbers and her volunteers did a great job checking sheets and running prizes to winners; my friends and I did a less good job filling out our bingo sheets, though I must say we got better at it as the evening progressed. Kathy was quite funny as she called the numbers, making rhymes and mentioning people she recognized by name.

One of the people she paused to introduce to us all was Sterling Davis, otherwise known to many of the attendees as The Trap King. I’m sad that I’d never heard of him because he has a remarkable calling: he drives all around the country with his three cats in a van educating about and promoting TNR activities. You can see photos of some of his activities here. He clearly has a great time doing what he does, and he does so much good. I’ll be following his adventures from now on (and of course I think you should too).

Back to the game! The above shows the table of an inexperienced but well-organized bingo player – me. The water bottle pretty much says it all.

So, I hear you ask, did you clean up with prizes? Idid! Towards the end I won a bingo, and chose a cat scratching post from the appropriate table. A little later one of the numbers on my red tickets was called, and I chose two adorable leather-covered elephant figures from India (a bank and a candle-holder), so I left the event well-satisfied. My friends did not win anything, but like me they were satisfied with the evening because it was in support of something we all believe in.

Not everyone agrees with us, however. The American Bird Conservancy says this about TNR: “Not only is this systematic abandonment inhumane to the cats, it perpetuates numerous problems such as wildlife predation, transmission of disease, and property destruction.” I understand where they’re coming from – bird-watching is another of my favorite hobbies, and feral cats are a terrible problem for birds. But the cats have already been inhumanely abandoned, if not born to a feral, and if we don’t neuter the adults, the problem will continue to grow exponentially. The unfixed ferals will still be preyed upon and will still be prone to disease. But after TNR they won’t be reproducing. It is nigh on impossible to domesticate a young or adult feral cat, so trap-neuter-rehome is not an option; there’s a better chance of domesticating feral kittens. Every shelter in the country spends a fair amount of time and money doing just that. The average life expectancy for a feral cat, neutered or not, is about 5 years. A queen can have three or four litters a year with up to 5 or 6 kittens a litter. You do the math – even if only half the kittens survive, one queen will increase feral population by a lot.

The best solution would be no feral cats at all. But (to mix metaphors horribly) that horse has left the stable. The problem exists. TNR, while not a complete solution, helps way more than doing nothing.

I shall now leave my soapbox and show you the wonderful items I won at the Bingo fund-raiser:

I know you are consumed with envy, but perhaps there will be a bingo game near you soon, and you, too, can win valuable prizes.

Thursdays at the Shelter

10 Monday Sep 2018

Posted by farfalle1 in Animals in the U.S., Cats, Paws and Claws, Photographs, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cats, Kittens

Last spring one of the Shelter’s volunteers, the divine Miss P., hosted a fund-raising event in her community. It was wildly successful and she raised a ton of money, all of which she donated to Paws and Claws.  Here she is, wearing her Crown of Magnificent Accomplishment with the Head Kennel Tech from the Shelter at a very serious recognition event hosted by Shelter staff.

0606181603b (1)Her wish was that the money be used to build a cat room. Or rather, to renovate our meet-and-greet room, which also serves as a photo studio (used by the Shelter’s fantastic photographer, Audrea Donnelly), and turn it into a room where cats can roam freely, sit in windows, fight with one another, and in general look so appealing that they will be adopted.

Shortly after the above photo was taken Miss P fled our hot valley for cooler climes. She will return in a few weeks (even though it’s still way too hot), and when she does, she will find the room, almost completed and fully occupied. The cats were able to move in a few weeks ago, just in time for our Clear the Shelter event. The renovations included dropping a new ceiling, replacing a solid wall with a glass wall, and adding a new door. In addition various bits and pieces of cat-friendly furniture have been drifting in.  The room isn’t quite finished yet; still to come are climbing shelves on the walls, and moving out some unneeded furniture. But this is what Miss P will find when she gets back:

new cat room

Unfortunately this pic is a bit out of focus (like the photographer??)

0825180848c

Some kitties like to be in their kennels, some prefer to be out.

0825180848

0825180847

These babes have grown so much they are almost ready to go home now.

0825180846b

Uncle Gene. For a short time he was our mascot, but he has been adopted. What a lover – we miss him.

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The room, working as it is meant to!

0818180659

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These two photos were taken on Clear the Shelter Day. The ones old enough to go home were all adopted that day.

Just this last Saturday when we arrived at the Shelter we noticed a raggedy looking large box by the front door.  I paid it no heed, but one of the other volunteers looked in and found a terrific cat tree, brand new and still unassembled. She brought it in, and we set to work. It was slow going until a lovely couple came in and jumped in to help. In short order the tree was together and installed in the new room. Many thanks to the anonymous donor and to the couple who did 90% of the assemblage, thus saving the wits of two ‘older’ volunteers!

0901181126

This was a complete photobomb. That little tuxedo kitten put himself there while the photographer was instructing the volunteers to smile. THANK YOU for putting the cat tree together!!! It had a Lot of pieces.

 

Icing the cat’s nose

31 Friday Oct 2008

Posted by farfalle1 in Animals in Italy, Cats, Italian habits and customs, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Cats, Luciano, Medical practice in Italy, Veterinary practice in Italy

Luciano is an old cat, but at 16 not exactly ancient. He has, however, a panoply of interesting ailments that keep us in frequent contact with his doctors. He has three: Ralph Siegal, Fausto Finetti and Veronica, who is a brand new vet and whose last name we have not yet learned. Ralph has been waiting for Luciano’s kidneys to carry him off for three years now, but the cat keeps cashing in his extra lives and fooling all of us. Luciano’s other main diagnosis is hyper-thyroidism.

As prescribed, Kitty eats special food that is kind to kidneys – high in fiber and relatively low in protein.  It is available commercially for E 2 a tin, of which he can eat two a day.  Rather than bankrupt ourselves any sooner than absolutely necessary, we decided to make our own cat food, using an excellent recipe we found (of course!) on the internet. Here is a link to a site with cat food recipes for cats with various ailments.  We’ve been making a variant of the Hills kidney diet food.

There is no perfect cure for the thyroid problem, according to Dott. Ralph, but there is a pill that can help.  Unfortunately it is not available in Italy, but can be found in France.  So we have prevailed upon our friends who travel that way to carry back the cat’s medicine.

Which brings me around to the subject of medical care, the approach to which is much the same for animals as for people: caution! don’t over-medicate! wait and see!  Poor Luciano developed a big bump between his eyes last week.  When we took him to the vet (Dott. Veronica this time) she suggested that since the cat is pretty much blind (left that out, didn’t I) he had probably run into something and had a great big bruise.  So we left the office with instructions to ice the lump and administer cortesone pills.  Have you ever iced a cat’s nose? It’s interesting.  Actually, Luciano is quite patient with it, but I sure wouldn’t want to try it on a cat with teeth (I forgot to mention he’s toothless, didn’t I).

I believe that had we been in the US that an X-ray would have been taken on our first visit.  Instead we spent five days icing the cat’s nose and watching the lump grow.  Then we took him back and Dott. Fausto recommended an X-Ray, given the following day in a different office.  So, after three trips the cat’s lump, which proved to be an abscess, was X-rayed, opened and cleared up.  I’m not in any way saying that we don’t all receive excellent medical care here, but sometimes I think the caution is less than helpful.  The poor old cat had to make three trips to accomplish what, in the States, would have been done on the first trip. And if it had been a bruise?  There would have been one wasted X-ray.  And that’s one difference between Italy and the US.  Here waste is anathema – you don’t want a test unless it’s 99% certain to tell you something really useful, and only if other less expensive approaches have failed.  Is it dangerous?  No, because doctors and vets here are just as smart and well-trained as they are in the US, and they are careful.  Is it inconvenient?  Frequently. Is it frustrating?  Absolutely! We’ve been back for one aftercare visit, and will return again Monday for another, making a grand total of five visits.  We haven’t been billed for anything yet, but one aspect of cautious care is that it does seem to be less costly.

We’ve seen the same approach in our own medical care here.  Problems are discussed for ages and curative steps are incremental.  But then, Italian doctors don’t have to worry about the malpractice suits that threaten American doctors.  Eventually (so far!) we always get better.  And I have to add that when one of us had a very serious acute condition the initial care was immediate and excellent. Once danger was past, however, caution was again the watchword, and a condition that was treated in three days in a US hospital took twelve days for the exact same outcome in Italy.

I’m not sure what any of this proves.  Socialized medicine certainly has its pluses and minuses, and this is not an appropriate forum for that topic.  I guess if we’ve learned anything new from the last week’s experiences it’s this: it’s really hard to ice a cat’s nose.

Cats in Italy

15 Thursday May 2008

Posted by farfalle1 in Cats, Italy, Photographs, Rapallo

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Cats, Italy, Photographs

Italy is full of cats: country cats, city cats, polite cats, rakish cats, fat cats (!) and hungry cats.  Just the other day when I went to throw away the garbage a cat leapt out of the box and made me jump a mile.

Every town has at least one Cat Lady (or man, but usually a lady – why?) – that person who puts out an old tin pan of food for the cats whom no one else is feeding.  Cats come and go as they wish.  If a door or window is open, sooner or later a cat is going to go through it.

Last time I was in Rome I noticed there were a lot fewer cats than the previous visit.  Perhaps there is a cat control policy there now – I hope so.  Anyone know?

I’ve been addicted to taking photos of cats since we moved here.  No matter what the scene, a cat seems to make it more picturesque. Over on the right in Links you’ll find Cats of Italy – click on it (if you dare!) and you will be whisked away to a web album of part of my collection.  I really DID edit some of them out – honest.  (It took a lot of self-control not to put all of Luciano’s portraits in.)  I recommend using the Slideshow option if you really are going to look at all those cats.

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