cat rescue

It’s been busy (3)

It’s been a very exciting day today … I finally have my bed back after 3 months on the sofa!  However, that’s not the really exciting bit … we’ve had some other news too.  Before I tell you that …. lets just rewind to Saturday three weeks ago …

… My friend Jenny and I were chatting on facebook about a little cat whom she might have fostered but for various reasons it was no longer going to happen.   I made the not entirely throw away comment that she could always foster Maya instead.  “Not entirely throwaway” because I’d seen Jenny with May when she’d visited and knew Maya liked her, and had thought many times that a home like Jenny’s would be just perfect for May.  I thought I might well be dreaming when Jenny said yes she’d give it a go!!!!!

maya donut bed1

So we explained it all to Maya, who as you can see was very interested in the plan.   Unfortunately, like Gertie in our previous story, although she was delighted with the idea of the destination, she hadn’t quite factored in the trauma of the journey.  This is a little cat who had been slowly gaining confidence but still couldn’t really be touched easily, and certainly wasn’t ready to sign up to being put in a cat carrier.  We tried to grab her in a towel but she slid out like soap in the bath and was away, behind the desk, round the side of poor old Gertie’s crate.  Way too much stuff in that room to make it an easy capture.  Furniture taken out and piled on landing.  May scuttled into the hidey hole on her cat tree and glued herself to the back of it.  Cat tree unfastened from the wall …. and moments later I’m lying on the floor with an open carrier on my stomach whilst Jenny tips the cat tree up with the hidey box over the carrier desperately trying to get Maya to let go.  It doesn’t work, I get more anxious and stressed.   Jenny puts on the motorbike gloves that were kindly donated to us when we had to get May to the vet for her spay op, and tries much more bravely than I would have, to get Maya to come out.  Eventually Maya rushes out and onto the windowsill and I corner her with the carrier and slam it shut.  Once cat is safe in carrier I burst into tears … distraught about having put such a frightened puss through all this trauma and worried sick it would set her back.   Poor Jenny then torn between trying to sort out me and cat.

MAYA'S PROGRESS07

Thankfully this car journey wasn’t a long one and we soon got May set up in her new bedroom.   I went home to worry about how long it might be until Jenny messaged me to ask me to take her back.

maya settling in at jenny's

It wasn’t like that though.  The move set her back for all of a couple of hours … and after that she began to make progress beyond my wildest dreams.   By the next day I was getting photos of Maya having her head stroked

maya being stroked

Faster than you could imagine Maya was getting to know her foster sisters

and venturing out of her igloo

MAYA'S PROGRESS01

One of the most lovely things to see was her actually stretched out relaxed rather than hunched up

Even more lovely was to see videos of her having a head and face massage …. sadly we don’t seem to be able to download those from facebook and upload them here so you’ll just have to imagine.

Before her first week was over, the crate had gone and she was exploring the rest of the house.  Still with the security of Uncle Bob’s trusty igloo to return to

MAYA'S PROGRESS03

However she was happy to follow her sisters Milly and Missy downstairs and play (loudly) when the humans were in bed.  And then come down and sit in the conservatory when the humans weren’t in bed

MAYA'S PROGRESS10

It’s heartbreakingly lovely to hear how she’s playing with her foster sisters.  Apparently she’s rather noisier than they are … we wonder if she might have her Lancashire clogs on when she’s chasing around.

Today her foster mummy made an announcement on facebook which was the news so much better than having our bed back:

“Milly and Missy are pleased to announce that they have a sister .. Miss Maya Maisie May  x”

MAYA'S PROGRESS06

She’s staying … it’s a furever home …. Could anything seriously be better than that?   I asked her (ex foster) mummy what Maya had said when she knew she had a permanent home there.  She said she asked whether  she could sit on the furniture now ..

MAYA'S PROGRESS11

Breaking news is that she’s now asleep on mummy’s bed …. there you go … give ’em an inch and they’ll take a mile.  Having said that … so many miles from where her story with us started back in April this year … living in a grubby outhouse, very pregnant, very poorly and terrified.

maya before in rescue

 

 

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It’s been busy (2)

Regular punters will be aware of the two older girlies in the back bedroom ….. Maya and Gertie.

They’d been here for a while and it seemed like it could take forever to find them good homes. A few people asked after Gertie … but then let her down quite badly. No one asked about adopting May.

Then … out of the blue and almost lost in our junk mail folder … a message for Gertie that looked promising. Her potential humans came to meet her, saw that she was an adorably purry girl … and reserved her.

I’m not entirely sure whether its happy or sad that we don’t have the photos to fill the gaps here … you’ll need to use your imagination I guess.

Gertie and I set off to her new home at lunch time last Sunday. It’s in West Yorkshire, so a bit of a trek .. though nothing is too much to get our lovely girl settled in a new home. Just as we’d got past the point where it wouldn’t be a nuisance to nip back home, and onto the ring road with no shops to buy baby wipes, Gertie got so anxious she needed to do a sloppy pooh. By the time we were able to pull in and do a bit of a clean up, she’d stood in it, put her hands in it, and flopped 😦 Rather than the glorious arrival in her new home that we’d hoped for, we had a bit of an undignified shuffle into the utility room.   The redeeming features of this whiffy journey were that a) her adoptive family are lovely b) Gertie is a sweetheart.   Her new mummy ran her a bath in a washing up bowl and I held her in a towel whilst we cleaned her up.  Gertie, bless her heart, purred her way through the ordeal, and then slid her way around her new laminate floor with wet feet, getting acquainted with the place.

gertie day 3

Such a happy ending for this little girl. She nearly died dumped outdoors whilst blind and with high blood pressure. She nearly died again having been taken to the vet by dog walkers who found her, but not being claimed was about to be put to sleep. Now here she is starting her new life. Go for it Gertie!

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Its been busy … (1)

There hasn’t been much time to update the blog recently … its been a bit crazy here. First the gorgeous Elsa had her kittens:

Quite a blur of ginger gorgeousness. It’s going to take a while before we can easily identify them each individually … though they are all different versions of ginger. It’s like Elsa only had one crayon to use whilst colouring them in … but has managed, using light and shade, to make each one beautifully and perfectly different.

We’re full and over full of course … However a couple of Sunday mornings ago, as I was dozing off for a nap after a bad night on the couch, facebook pinged asking if we could take two young kittens with no mummy. Within 30 minutes I was in the car going to collect them … from the other side of Doncaster.  Things with rescue tend to happen quickly … but when its kittens who aren’t weaned and have no mummy it has to happen even faster … faster than I can logically think about where we can put them…. but hey ho ….. indie inky

My mind going ten to the dozen about how to manage regular bottles once back at work the following day,  I was hugely relieved once I saw them, to realise that they were old enough to be eating a bit for themselves and wouldn’t need to be coming to work with me all week!  Still very needy and clingy and wanting milk though …

indie & inky arrive01

I can’t help but envy/admire Elsa and the ease with which she seems to manage her babies.  A snuggle, a purrrrrrrrrrrrrr, a swift lick and all seems to be well.  Meanwhile we’re boiling endless water to sterilise bottles and make up feeds, having the washing machine on almost constantly to deal with little furry accidents, and facing the challenge of kitten bathing.

indie bath2

Sadly little Indie (and his brother to a slightly lesser extent) were so horribly stinky that we had to brave the bath. I got it all prepared and braced myself for low flying kittens. Put Indie in the kitchen sink in warm water … fulling expecting all hell to break loose …… but he just stood there. I wet his fur, lathered him in shampoo …. and he stood there. I scrubbed a bit and then rinsed him off …… and he stood there. I picked him out, toweled him .. and he stood there. I started to blow dry him … his coat puffed out like a dandelion head … but he just stood there.

His brother Inky was more or less as good …but wasn’t so keen to pose for photos

inky blow dry

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I dream of my bed

A couple of weekends ago I was really excited about the prospect of sleeping my in own bed again.  You may remember I lost rights to my bedroom when we took in the D Team a couple of months ago.  Two of the B Team had gone to their new home the weekend previously …. and very happy they were too

benji and billy two weeks on

Then on the Saturday I took the three other B kittens to their new home ….. I do hope their mummy realises what treble trouble is going to be like

On Sunday morning I prepared to take mummy Betty to her lovely new home, happily running through in my head the order I’d do things in to get the B Team’s old room cleaned, move the D Team into there out of my bedroom, clean up my bedroom and get settled back in my own bed by the evening.    Taking Betty to her new home went to plan … here she is blissed out with her new found freedom from motherhood, an hour or two after arriving in her new home.

betty first day

The rest of the plan was … not so good.   As I was setting off to take Bet to her new home an email arrived about a mum and kits.  I’d heard about them earlier in the week, offered help, but not got a reply, so thought they were sorted.   They weren’t 😦    So after Betty was settled in her new place I came home, cleaned her room and went to collect the people who became the J Team.

J team1

They settled into what was the B Team’s room ……  the D Team stayed put in my bedroom …… and of course I stayed put on the sofa.  Not to worry though because the following weekend mum and one of the D Team kits were off to their new home, so maybe then we could manage the other D Team kits downstairs and I could have my bed.   We already had Shadow staying downstairs with the residents so it could be a bit of a grouchy squash.  Um ….. did I mention Shadow before?  She arrived on her own a few days before the J Team.   She’s no trouble at all so long as you have nerves of steel and don’t value your curtains.

cc shadow 3

Anyway …. back to the story.   It kind of got better because the other two D kittens had an offer of a lovely home and last Saturday was filled with taking the D Team to their 3 different homes.

Sunday was all about cleaning …. and blessedly reacquainting with our bed

amber & honey on my bed

It was comfy, it was blissful ..

jango in bed

It lasted three days … or rather nights ….

Then on Wednesday we had a call from the vets.   There was a very pregnant cat, obviously stray, not micro chippped, very desperate for a safe place to have her babies.   Scrambled home from work, dismantled bedroom and remade bed on sofa, bedroom turned into mother and baby unit, and then went to collect Elsa. (*mega thanks to aunty Jenny for helping with the quick turnaround)

elsa very pregnant

Some people would say I’m crazy … giving up my bed for stray cats and their babies.  It’s true I lose a lot of sleep by not having my bed.     It’s not easy sharing a narrow sofa with all the resident cats

My thought is that I could never sleep knowing that there’s a cat out there giving birth in a field, that I could have helped, if only I hadn’t been so precious about my bed.

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Summer Newsletter

 TwistedWhiskers

Bringing you all the latest mews from 8 Lives Cat Rescue
Summer 2015

Welcome to our Summer newsletter.  Time flies when we look at the year in quarters, despite seeming to stand still at the time.  All the lovely cats we were anxious to find homes for in our last news letter have found super homes, including our beloved Jack.  Here he is, with his cold and miserable allotment exchanged for his new best friend’s princess pink bedroom.

jack on allotment3jack pretty in pink

One born every minute – three tails of un planned pregnancies

Our saddest tail this quarter in some ways is Maya.  She arrived with us, very pregnant, very poorly, and very very scared.  Our vets worked hard to find a way of treating her without harming her babies.  Sadly the babes were born  premature and Maya wouldn’t even look at them.  One died at birth, however little Max put up a fight and we tried to hand rear him.  Sadly he was just too tiny, and too premmy, and broke our hearts a few days later.

Thankfully things have improved for Maya … she’s well again.   Her illness seems to have been nothing serious as such, just years of pregnancies and inadequate care.  She’s slowly gone from strength to strength … her health improving and then her confidence.  It’s a slow process, she’s clearly had a horrid experience of humans in the past.  We’re slowly getting there  … there’s a sense now that she sees humans as having the potential to be good.

We’re hoping someone with a love and understanding of cats will offer her a forever home, someone able to let her grow her confidence at her own pace.  We’re sure she has the potential to be a lovely companion for someone.  She may never be a lap cat, but she’s full of character … and a real little sweetie.

Things were very much better for Betty.  Although she also found herself pregnant and homeless, she landed on the home of a couple of lovely young women who have done their absolute best for her.   Here she is, hanging on to their door, asking for help.

betty before arriving in rescue

determined to get herself a home

They found her a space here in rescue where she could safely have her kits.  We’re pretty sure they’re her first litter …… unlike Maya, she’s only a very young cat.   She got into rescue 10 days  before her kits were born, had some good food and a safe space to have them.  Although rather bemused by what was happening with the birth and arrival of kittens, Betty quickly got her head around it and has made a lovely job of raising her little ones.  We’re delighted that she’s now going back to the women who found her for a furever home.

 

Daisy’s experience was somewhere in between Maya’s nightmare and Betty’s lucky escape.  Another youngster, barely more than a kitten herself, she ended up pregnant and giving birth in a shed.   She and her kits were discovered a few weeks later by a curious dog and his concerned human.

We didn’t have any space here really, but went out to scan her just to see if she was microchipped, which not surprisingly she wasn’t. It’s one (not entirely easy) thing, to reply to an email requesting help, and say “I’m sorry .. we’re full”. It’s quite another to see a young mum and three kittens in a shed, at risk of foxes, further pregnancy, and simply of boxes falling on them, and say no. So of course they came home with us. In a crate in the lounge because there was nowhere else .. they refused to eat or use the litter tray for 24 hours.    The only option was to move out of my bedroom, move the D Team in there, and sleep on the sofa.

daisy with the d team

 

This seems to have worked well for them …. though its been a bit tricky for me and the residents who normally like to share my bed.

And then there’s our little miracle – Gertie 

Gertie was a bit of a surprise arrival.  I was at work and a friend messaged me to say she’d been to visit her cat who was an inpatient at her vets.  Whilst there she’d seen Gertie who had been brought in as a poorly stray a week ago, and now her time was up.  Unclaimed and blind, Gertie was to be put to sleep.   I tried to ignore it and think of something else … focus on work ….. but it was hopeless … I couldn’t concentrate with the idea of  a cat we may be able to save, dying because no one could be bothered.  Somewhat recklessly I agreed to collect her from the vet on the way home from work, and then spent the gaps between appointments frantically googling for info about how to care for a blind cat.

Gertie arrives3

 

I was stunned by how beautiful she was when I picked her up, and relieved by how easily she managed to find her food and litter tray once we got home. The next day we went off to our own vet for a check up. Gertie walked around in circles in the surgery and then crashed into the wall. However, Claire, our lovely vet, said she thought it could be high blood pressure causing her illness and blindness, and that if treated she may regain her sight. Our vets are fab and I trust their judgment …. but really?! Nevertheless Gertie stayed overnight and through next day having her bp checked, was diagnosed with hypertension … and sent home with medication. Within a couple of days there was a huge difference … her pupils were responding to light and she was no longer walking into things.

gorgeous gertie1

 

Gertie is looking for an indoor home with humans who will snugggggle her lots and help make up for the horrid time she’s had so far in life.

2016 Calendar

Some of you will already have seen our lovely 2016 calendar … put together through help from our local photography group and some excellent photographers from our adoptive families, and a wonderful local business who have funded the printing of them.   Each month features one of our gorgeous 8 Lives cats:  there’s some of our permanent residents, plus Jak, Domino, Sugar, Jack,  Molly, Dorothy, Dave and Ralph and supporting photos of Alfie & Aslan, Lenny & Lily etc.   Please buy or more .. for stocking fillers at Christmas?  Help us to keep our funds at a level where we’re able to help the more needy cats like Gertie as well as some of the more average guests 🙂

cat calendar

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Maisie May ……. our lovely Maya

Our little Maisie May is becoming one of our longer stay guests.   We’ve been through quite a bit of drama together, and that has been stressful for both of us in different ways.   I’ve experienced the whole range of emotions towards her (and no doubt she has in turn to me):  confusion and annoyance when she was lost on the M62 with no battery left on her phone to contact me, and finally arrived at 2am!;  anxiety when she was pregnant and poorly and refusing to eat; anger (hard to admit but true) when little Max was born and she refused to even look at him, while I dithered around struggling to do what she might have done so easily in caring for him; heartbreak that she’d probably had pregnancy after pregnancy and never had enough care herself to be in any position to rear her kittens; despair that it would ever change; hope that it eventually might; and well …… just love really …. as we’ve started to really get to know each other.

Now she’s physically well, Maya has gradually hidden less, come out to play more, and slowly revealed herself as such a little character. There are a 1001 reasons you have to just love her, here are just a few:

1. Despite being a timid cat, her favourite toys are the noisy ones. She’s reluctant to play whilst I’m in the room very often, but gives away her leisure activities as I lie in bed listening to her rattling the balls around their track.

cc maya 3

2. I love the way she clearly and carefully measures risk against desire. If I drop a treat outside of her comfort zone I can see a flash of her registering its precise location ….. there’s a pause …… a calculation ……. a waiting for the moment. Sometimes that “moment” is about waiting while I leave the room, and I catch her when I return seconds later with a refreshed water bowl, sometimes its about waiting while I’ve gone for good, more often these days her desire for the treat gets the better of her and she comes out to grab it.

maya in pursuit of dreamies2

3. I love how she’s been so glued to her little igloo … especially in the early days she’d rarely come out of it whilst I was in her room. I particularly love how she’ll she something she likes, and snatch it into her igloo. At one stage she had at least 5 ping pong balls, 3 toy mice and a fluffy valerian cushion in there with her.

maya with her stash of toys

4. What I love even more is how although she still loves her igloo, she’s become more ready to come out of it to greet me and watch what I’m doing.

5. I’m fascinated by her fur. Various vet interventions meant that she had lots of areas shaved: tummy (for ultra sound when she was poorly and pregnant), side (when she was spayed), neck (for blood tests). On top of that. she’s shed hair like its going out of fashion – perhaps no longer needing so much now she’s not living rough. Here’s the curious thing though – she came here as a very brown tabby and as her coat has re grown she’s quite grey.

maya's fur growing back a different colour

6. I love her resourcefulness and dexterity. She loves to play the game of hooking Dreamies out of her toy, but she’s equally dexterous if she drops a little food when dragging it back into her bed …. she’ll fish under the cushion in her bed and manage to get all of it. When she decided her igloo was too warm one day, she cleverly turned it into a donut type of bed.

maya donut bed1

I think most of all I just love what a sweet little cat she is, despite her awful life so far. She’ll take a treat so gently from my fingers and gives all the signs of a beautiful personality just waiting to blossom. If the residents here would accept her she’d be a keeper … but sadly I know they won’t.

beautiful maya2

[In case you’re wondering …. Maya doesn’t live permanently in a crate! She and Gertie share a room, but don’t get on, so they time share the space, by each having a crate and alternating one of them is shut in and which one has the run of the room]

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keeping on ….. keeping on

You may have noticed that since the D Team arrived, its gone rather quiet on the blog.   I can assure you its not been so quiet off line.

We had a little panic with the B Team when Betty went off to be spayed.  Despite being over 7 weeks old at that point, no one other than Billy had shown any interest in being weaned.  I’d assumed when I booked the op they’d be eating for themselves by then, and then when they weren’t, hoped that a few hours without mum would prompt them reconsider their options for filling their tummies.   Spaying is a very quick and straightforward op and there’s very rarely any problem.  However Betty’s wound didn’t settle well initially and she ended up staying at the vet overnight.   The B Team had to have a crash course in eating: out came the blender and the kitten formula.   Thankfully within 24 hours Betty was home and recovering very well, and her kits were eating.

b team weaning

The D Team are estimated to be a couple of weeks younger than the Bs, though maybe because there’s only 3 of them, they’re already the size of the Bs.   They’re also a little slow with thinking about weaning.  I suspect its first time mums being quite indulgent.   Daisy is only a baby herself really, less than a year old, so this will be her first litter too.  The mums we’ve had where we know they’ve had previous litters are more likely to point the kits towards the Felix and retreat to a high shelf and let them get on with it.

daisy with the d team

Meanwhile the Zeds found themselves a young couple with nerves of steel who were ready to take on their crazy hyperactivity and are settling in nicely.   When I took them to their new home they’d been there 10 minutes before young Zebedee wriggled behind a bookcase we thought he couldn’t get to the back of, shuffled along until he was between the wall and the wardrobe and then started wailing .. which resulted in part of the wardrobe being dismantled to release him.   Poor Zacchaeus tries to be a good boy, but its tough when you have a brother with ADHD.   I spent the first week half expecting a text saying that the boys had been put on the bus to come back to us.  Nevertheless, here they are, in their smart new collars and looking like butter wouldn’t melt …….

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New arrivals – meet the D Team

Ok, so we’re full …… we know we’re full.    It’s chaotic around here with the Zeds bouncing around, and the two oldies, and Betty trying cope with kittens who are deeply reluctant to being weaned.  Not to mention the residents with Sooty needing to be kept in still, and Flipper collecting wildlife.  And my goodness its hot, don’t know what we’d do without our Flat Cat screens to allow us to open the windows some of the time at least.

betty & kits ..refusing to be weaned2

B Team refusing to grow up

However at the weekend we got a message from a lovely woman who was trying to help a mum and three kittens whom her dog had discovered living in their shed. All the other rescues were full too, she’d rung everyone ….. and finally found us on a google search. I ended up going out to check if mum was chipped. On the one hand it was a perfectly sensible first step in trying to help … on the other hand, I knew it was fatal. It’s one thing taking a deep breath and replying to an email saying “I’m sorry but we’re completely full …. here’s a list of other rescues to try …. ”    It’s quite another actually seeing a very young mum in the corner of a shed doing her best to protect her babies.   The woman had been doing her best to care for them,  had started feeding them as soon as she knew they were there, and done her utmost to protect them and get help, but the little ones were at risk of being taken by a fox and mum at risk of being pregnant again.  This lady had her own difficult personal situation to deal with and couldn’t do any more than she was doing.

mum with kits in shed

mum with kits in shed

The half formulated plan to leave them there but fund mum’s spay and sort out rehoming from there just dissolved. It just wasn’t safe for them to stay where they were. We brought them home and put them in a crate in the lounge.

daisy arrives4

A day later mum hadn’t eaten or used her litter tray … too stressed with the Zeds bouncing around and the residents grumbling about the seemingly endless stream of new arrivals. Desperate times call for desperate measures, so Daisy and the little Dots are now settling very happily into my bedroom whilst I settle on the sofa.

daisy settling in2

She’s the most beautiful little girl …. gorrrrrrgeous pale green eyes and a lovely gentle nature. Vet thinks she’s not a year old yet, poor little thing. Her kits are adorable …. and thankfully arrived in rescue early enough to learn to get used to humans.

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Oldies update

Things in the senior kitizens room haven’t been entirely easy over the last few months.   What with Maya being ill, and then losing her kits, and being so very timid.   And then Gertie arriving, friendly and purry but blind and confused and not at all well.

Going back about 3 weeks, Maya had returned from being spayed and was in a large crate so she could rest after her op, and hopefully start to engage a little more with the humans.    Gertie was just arrived and in another large crate in the same room because she couldn’t see where she was going and needed a smaller manageable space.  Both very different characters and different needs.

Progress was very quick with Gertie ….. once her blood pressure was treated some of her sight was regained.

The downside of this was that one of the first things she saw was Maya ….. and she was not pleased 😦   Having been released from her crate because she was no longer banging into things, the crate sadly had to be re erected as she was yowling at poor little May.   Maya’s response was to turn her igloo around so she didn’t have to see her.maya turned igloo roundI just love May with this igloo … she’s pretty much lived in it since she arrived here.   Everything she likes ends up in the igloo, her favourite toys, even her food!  In the early days there would be no sign of life with her, then when she thought I wasn’t watching, an arm would reach out, grab what she wanted and drag it back into her cave.

May with her stash of toys

May with her stash of toys

We’ve reached a way of living for these ladies that seems to work. They each have a large crate in the room. In the day time Gertie comes out of hers to snooze on the foot stool in the sunshine

gertie out the crate1

 

At tea time Gertie has her tablet in some tuna and enjoys having her jacket brushed for a while, and then goes into her crate.   Maya’s crate is then open and we work at bonding over some more of the tuna

maya tuna challenge3

 

Things are slowly getting better with Maya …. despite Gertie’s hostility to May, May is clearly observing Gert being picked up and cuddled and realising that the sky does not fall in as a result.   With the bribe of tuna its possible to stroke her carefully just a little.  Tiny things feel such an achievement ….. at breakfast time when there’s only really time to decant a pouch into her dish and clean her tray, I’ve been aware that instead of cowering in her igloo, Maya has been starting to nosey to see what flavour it is, and hasn’t dived for cover when I’ve picked up her water bowl to get fresh water for her.  She’s played a little more with me, not always from the safety of her igloo, and under the influence of catnip the other day …… she almost looked happy.

maya coming to play2

So in the evening after the tuna and her supper, I’ve put some cat treats in her favourite toys …… she loves the noisy ball track.  She dives out of the crate to play and get the treats.

In the morning she’s back in her igloo, her crate is closed, Gertie comes out and the cycle begins again.

Love these girls … both very different challenges …. both adorable.

 

 

 

 

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hidden in plain sight

I’ve just realised that we haven’t mentioned the Zeds here on our blog.  Strange how we’ve managed to forget them when they’re mostly right here in front of us, using the keyboard as a trampoline.   They arrived about 3 weeks ago, aged 5-6 weeks, having been born in a shed.   Mum was already pregnant again and ran off when people tried to catch the family to bring them in to rescue ….. not an ideal situation but the little ones came into rescue on their own.  [Thankfully mum has since been trapped and is now in foster care]

zebedee & zacchaeus

 

We went to collect them, expecting some fierce hissing and spitting …. and rather a lot of fleas.  Oddly enough there was none of it.   They were a bit nervous but otherwise fine.  Their shy-ness lasted about 24 hours, at which point they emerged from their igloo ready to take on the world – despite the residents being rather less than welcoming.

I have to confess a secret preference for tom kittens, they’re somehow more easy going and affectionate than little girls.  These two are no exception … absolutely adorable little boys.    The residents have grudgingly accepted that they’re here for a while.

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In some ways they’re quite different characters – Zacchaeus is the calmer more sensible one (RELATIVELY …. we ARE talking kittens here) and more likely to do as he’s told,   whereas Zebedee is just a complete crazy live wire.    The times they just settle down to sleep are probably the best.

IMG_2702

 

 

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