The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too : Feral Cats The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too : Feral Cats
Showing posts with label Feral Cats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Feral Cats. Show all posts

Saturday, October 11, 2014

N. Tonawanda Passes Ordinance in Support of Operation Island Cats


NORTH TONAWANDA, N.Y. (WIVB) –  It was the final hurdle for Operation Island Cats.

Danielle Coogan raised $12,000, gathered volunteers and gained community support to control the population of cats on Tonawanda Island, but city law wasn’t on her side.

Coogan and several of her supporters gathered at the North Tonawanda Common Council meeting Tuesday night hoping to change that.

To read more on this story, click here: N. Tonawanda Passes Ordinance in Support of Operation Island Cats







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Thursday, October 9, 2014

Hundreds of Cats Take Over Tonawanda Island


Mike Charnock, owner of the Shores Waterfront Restaurant & Marina, said, “They’re throughout the whole island.”

Forgotten or unwanted pets have been left to roam untamed and free.

Wayne Howard of North Tonawanda said, “They’re just everywhere. People drop them off. I’ve caught people dumping them on the road; they just unload them on the island.”

Estimates are hundreds of abandoned and feral cats are on this 85-acre island.

To read more on this story, click here: Hundreds of Cats Take Over Tonawanda Island







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Saturday, December 28, 2013

A Dog and Several Feral Cats Take Shelter in Local Nativity Scenes


Christmas nativity scenes in towns, churches, and front lawns usually contain a usual cast of plastic religious figures, Joseph, Mary, and baby Jesus, of course, curled up in a manger. Perhaps the three wise men with their gifts, some shepherds, a couple of angels.

If any animals feature in the display, it is usually a donkey, an ox, some sheep, and maybe the wise men’s camels.

But a few animals are making headlines this Christmas week for adding themselves to their local nativity scenes.

Last Friday, in the small town of Glendale, Ohio, someone noticed something unusual in their village square nativity scene: curled up in the hay near Jesus and his manger was a white and brown American Pit Bull Terrier.

The Pittie was exhausted, injured, with wounds to his eye and one of his legs. Concerned about the dog’s condition, Glendale residents called town officials, who were able to secure the dog in one of their offices while searching for his owner.

Glendale village administrator Loretta Rokey borrowed a kennel from a friend. She tells FOX 19 she knew it was important to get the injured pup to a veterinarian immediately, so she took the dog to Noah’s Ark Animal Clinic for treatment. While the Pittie received the medical attention he needed, members of the nearby rescue group Cincinnati Pit Crew (CPC) joined Rokey at the clinic, ready to take the dog into their care.

CPC decided to give the dog a name befitting where he was found, Gabriel, after the angel who foretells Jesus’s birth.

“Tonight, our hearts are very full,” the CPC writes on their Facebook page. “Rescue isn’t easy work, but it’s always rewarding at the end of the day. Some very special people came upon this today and through networking with various rescues, CPC was able to help find a safe place for Gabriel and start the process of finding him a loving family.”

Because of the community’s efforts, Gabriel will now be able to enjoy the Christmas holiday at his new foster home. St. Francis of Assisi, both the patron saint of animals and the person credited with creating the very first nativity scene in the year 1223, would surely be delighted.

Meanwhile, two Brooklyn sisters are getting a kick out of some feline additions to their family nativity scene display.

Annette and Sue Amendola have been erecting their homemade nativity scene for more than a decade in a lot next door to their home. However, for the past few seasons, their display has became more of a “cativity” after a group of feral cats started nesting near the baby Jesus and his holy posse.

“People love it, but they really get a laugh out of the cats,” Sue Amendola tells DNAinfo New York of the nativity.

The kitties, including grey tabby cat Bandit, Bandit’s Sister, Blue Eyes, and four other unnamed cats, have set up shop in the small makeshift stable built by the Amendola sisters. The cats aren’t afraid to make themselves comfortable; in fact, Bandit has no qualms with pushing the plastic savior aside and napping on his hay bale manger.

People have flocked to the Amendola’s block to catch a glimpse of the Christmas kitties, noting that they could actually be enacting a certain Biblical feline folktale. Tabbies are said to have gotten the ‘M’ marking on their foreheads for lending new mother Mary a hand that cold night after Jesus’s birth. As the chilly winds blew into the small stable, the infant Jesus started to cry. When Mary called to the stable animals to help her warm the baby, it is said that a small tabby hopped into the manger, snuggling with little Jesus to keep him nice and toasty. Mary, grateful to the kind kitty, bestows her first initial, the letter ‘M’ on the cat’s small forehead as a token of her thanks.

And it seems the Amendola sisters try to pay it forward to their kitty nativity friends all year long. Even after the holidays are over and all the lights and ornaments are stocked away, they keep the wooden stable open for their feral friends, giving them a warm place to rest.

For more information about Gabriel, or to learn when the nativity Pittie will be available for adoption, visit the Cincinnati Pit Crew website http://www.cincinnatipitcrew.org/ and Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/CincinnatiPitCrew.























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