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LIFE SAVERS ANIMAL RESCUE
Feral Cat Program
(The Feral Cat Program
originated with the Oscar Wild Club,
which has now been incorporated into
Life Savers Animal Rescue).
The primary focus of the Program is to
educate the public on the humane
treatment and management of feral/wild
cats. We advocate and promote the Alley
Cat Allies (see their web site at:
www.alleycat.org)
philosophy of managing feral/wild cats
by Trap, Neuter, Return (TNR).
We believe these animals, a byproduct of
human failure to spay and neuter their
domestic pets, deserve a chance to
live. We believe the old method of
managing feral/wild cats by trapping and
killing them does not work. We
believe TNR better reflects the moral
values and ethics of the community we
live in.
Life Savers Animal Rescue
THE BASICS
What is a feral/wild cat?
A feral cat is a one that has either
lived its whole life with little or no
human contact and is not socialized, or
is a stray cat that was lost or
abandoned and his lived away from human
contact long enough to revert to a wild
or feral state. Feral cats avoid human
contact and cannot be touched by
strangers.
Is “feral cat” another term for “stray
cat”? What is the difference?
“Feral” is not another word for “stray.”
A stray cat is a domestic cat that has
been abandoned or has wandered away from
home and become lost. A stray cat may be
skittish in your presence, but because
stray cats once knew human
companionship, they can usually be
re-socialized and placed in homes.
Adult feral cats can
rarely be socialized and are most
content living outside. Feral kittens up
to 8 – 10 weeks of age, on the other
hand, can almost always be tamed and
placed in homes.
How can I tell if a cat is stray or
feral?
Observe the cat’s appearance and
behavior. A stray cat will often
approach you, although usually will not
get close enough for you touch it. If
you put food down, a stray cat will
likely start to eat right away. A stray
cat is often vocal, sometimes talking
insistently, and may look disheveled, as
if unaccustomed to dealing with
conditions on the street. A stray cat is
apt to be seen at all hours of the day.
A feral cat is silent,
will not approach humans, and generally
will be seen only from dusk to dawn,
unless extraordinarily hungry and
foraging for food. A feral cat has
adapted to outside conditions and is
likely to look well groomed. If you put
food down for a feral cat, he will wait
until you move away from the area before
approaching it to eat.
I would like to find a good home for a
feral cat I have been feeding. Is this
possible?
Generally, no. Adult feral cats usually
cannot be socialized and will not adjust
to living indoors. A great deal of time
and effort can go into attempting to
tame an adult feral cat, with no
assurance of success. This time and
effort is far better spent sterilizing
feral cats to break the cycle of
reproduction, and then allowing them to
remain in their environment.
I discovered some cats outside. Who can
I call to come and get them?
The first step is to determine if the
cats are tame or wild. If the cats are
tame (come up to you or don’t streak off
or appear to be docile), they most
likely belong to people living in the
neighborhood. You should knock on some
doors and post “found cat” flyers
throughout the neighborhood. After a few
days, if you get no response and you
decide they are lost or abandoned, you
can register the cats online at
www.pets911.com in the
Found Pet section. You can also
call the local animal shelter to see if
they will accept them, but be aware that
if it is not a “no kill” shelter they
could be euthanized as shelters are
chronically overcrowded.
If the cats are
obviously feral, animal control or the
municipality (partially funded by tax
dollars) is the only agency that MAY
come and get them, and the cats will
almost certainly be killed. Even no-kill
shelters and rescue groups find that
adult feral cats are virtually
impossible to adopt out.
THE SOLUTION
TRAP-NEUTER-RETURN – (TNR)
Feral cats live in colonies and
congregate near food sources. These
colonies can be managed in a humane,
compassionate manner called
trap-neuter-return, in which cats are
humanely and painlessly trapped in a
live-trap, spayed or neutered, and
returned to their colony site where a
volunteer caretaker (such as you)
provides food, water, and shelter, as
well as monitors them for ill health and
injury. They are not just returned to
the wild to fend for themselves.
TNR involves assessing
each cat (sickly or injured cats are
humanely euthanasized), neutering them,
giving them rabies vaccinations, and
ear-tipping (universal sign of neutered
feral cats). And contrary to popular
belief, feral cats can be re-trapped as
the need arises.
TNR is the ONLY CHANCE
feral cats have of living safe, healthy
lives without reproducing. But TNR is a
hands-on project requiring commitment
from one or more volunteer caretakers,
often with help from feral cat advocates
living in the area.
Please... Become part of the solution
and help solve the problem of cat
overpopulation!
We urge you to check out Alley Cat Allies
at:
www.alleycat.org
...a National Feral Cat Resource Center and
the leaders in humane management of
feral cats.
The members of Life Savers Animal
Rescue extend appreciation to Alley
Cat Allies for allowing us to use their
literature in an effort to educate
people in our area on the humane
treatment and management of feral cats.
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