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Cat Care Articles What To Do when Your Cat is Lost in Menands Cat Resources Cat Rescue
First, cats do not "run away" or "stray." They investigate new places and
find themselves trapped, they get lost if driven away from their
territory Menands is no exception, they are spirited off by circumstances beyond their control,
they become ill or injured and creep away to a quiet dark place. But they
rarely voluntarily leave their home, even if badly treated. It is
imperative when a cat turns up missing to begin an aggressive search
immediately. Your cat's life could depend on it.
Try to think like a cat, your cat specifically. Look around and try to
imagine what could have happened to account for the disappearance and help
you look in the right places.
Cats are excellent hiders. Look first in your immediate area. Check the
house carefully. Then check again, even in those spaces where you are
certain a cat could not fit (chances are, they can). Listen for sounds of
distress (cats explore weird spaces and can be fatally attracted dark
places and to vertical spaces -- look behind the water heater, for
example, or in that closet or cupboard or attic you accessed a while
back). If there have been changes in the environment lately, with nifty
new places for a cat to explore, look there. Don't forget to look in your
own backyard in case the cat has been injured or gotten stuck
somewhere.
Then go door-to-door, taking a pad and pen with you to write down your
name and number. Better still, first make up a quick poster with a brief
description, a clear photo, and the cat's name and your name/phone and run
copies at the nearest photocopy center -- be sure to make your phone
number (or at least the "lost cat" part) prominent enough to be seen by a
passing car.
Ask your neighbors to look and listen for a cat in their area. Ask them
to check their garage or other outbuildings, look in their trees, check
their basement. And ask them to call your cat's name and listen carefully
for signs of distress. Leave your poster or name/phone with and a
description and name of the cat. Tell them you may check back with them
later. Then ask permission to enter their property to look for yourself
(the cat might be too frightened to respond to a stranger). Most people
will gladly cooperate.
Ask neighbors if they have noticed a "new" cat in the area, even if they
think it belongs to someone else. Sometimes people "find" cats or kittens
and decide to keep them, either assuming they are "stray" or that they are
not likely to be claimed by an owner. Children sometimes "find" new pets
in this way and carry them home, where the cat is either taken in or put
outside by the parent to find its way home again.
Don't rule out neighbor malice. Neighbors, even landlords, sometimes snatch cats and dump them in another neighborhood or worse. It is worth visiting shelters out of your area. It is also worth asking neighbors if they know of anyone in the area who might be trapping cats or who has a history or the potential of wishing cats harm. Be diplomatic.
Check the streets and alleys. An injured animal may not be able to get
home or may choose to withdraw into a quiet place. The sooner the cat can
be gotten to emergency care the better its chances of survival.
Sometimes cats climb into moving vans or parked cars and are not found
immediately. Was such a vehicle in your area at the time of
disappearance?
Ask neighborhood kids if they have seen anything. Give them your name and
number. Kids can be a great source of neighborhood goings-on.
Talk to your mail carrier and give him/her a flyer or a photo with the cat's name and your name/phone on the back.
Now put up posters around the neighborhood and take them back to those
neighbors you have already contacted if you weren't able to supply a
poster earlier. Leave posters at vet clinics, local shelters (even those
out of your area), and all over the neighborhood. When putting up your
posters don't forget to check the "found cat" posters. At the vet's ask
if an injured cat was brought in as a "stray" and ask for a description.
Vets will stabilize injured cats before they are taken into the animal
shelter.
Place a "lost cat" ad in both the city and the neighborhood papers. Also
check the "found" ads daily.
If you offer a reward, beware the hostage-taker or bogus calls. (I met a
couple whose bulldog pup was held hostage for $100 when they had offered
$50 reward; they paid out of fear for the pup's life.)
Check Animal Control frequently (every other day or at least every third
day) and be prepared to go down and look at the animals in the kennels; I
have heard cases of the lost animal being in the shelter but not reported
to the owner (by error, not design). Your description may not be
sufficient to help an attendant identify the cat over the phone. Leave a
photo at the front desk and ask to visit the quarantine area for sick and
injured animals (sometimes overflow animals are caged there as well). Ask
if any overflow cats are being held in the dog area. Also, sadly, review
the DOA list. If the cat had collar i.d., its chances of being returned
to you if found are much great, but don't count on it; the collar could
have been lost or even removed. Micro chipping is much more reliable.
Bear in mind that some citizens are loathe to take a found animal to the
shelter right away and will keep it for several days or longer before
turning it in.
Consider using a trained tracking dog. Contact local obedience class
teachers and inquire about hiring someone with a dog with Utility Dog
certification to locate the cat by scent.
Don't give up. Keep looking in those same old spots, calling and
listening. Try new spots; enlarge your search-area to the next block or
the next after that. Don't be embarrassed and try not to let yourself
become paralyzed with grief and anxiety (I know the feeling). Cats are
tough customers and can last many days without food or water. They also
can hide very well, remember, and may not be rescued by animal control or
a citizen for many weeks after their initial disappearance.
Finally, if you find your cat and he is indoor-outdoor, please give serious thought to converting to indoor-only, to save yourself the stress and very possibly your cat its life. The next adventure may not have such a happy ending. permission to print this article from Sharon Talbert of Friends of Campus Cats
Contact Mary or John
Mary@CrittersChoice.com
518-783-2273