• potate@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    My partner and I foster a lot of cats. Some of the sweetest cats take forever to get adopted just because they aren’t kittens anymore. One of our fosters has been with us for almost three years now - just because he isn’t a kitten and needs some inexpensive meds sprinkled on his food once a day.

    • Klanky@sopuli.xyz
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      3 months ago

      We adopted a male cat who was a couple years old, he had no teeth and has stomach problems so he needs special food. He had already been adopted once and returned because of the issues and he got bullied out of his foster home by some other cats. Felt so sorry for him, he’s the sweetest boy and our other cat tolerates him ok (they have an older sister/younger brother dynamic), and she doesn’t usually like other cats.

      The shelter staff made it sound like he was special needs but it’s literally just a slightly more expensive hard food. I guess after he was returned they wanted to make sure whoever adopted him knew what they were getting into. Love that little guy!

      • potate@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        66% of our resident cats are on prescription diets. Total non-issue. I think people just worry about other unanticipated costs.

    • PhobosAnomaly@feddit.uk
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      3 months ago

      That’s super awesome - both for the fostering, and for paying the cat tax in advance!

      I like the idea of getting an adult cat - a bit bigger, a bit wiser, and a bit warmer to the idea of having a bed and a human to call their own.

    • Wrench@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Looks like a Bengal. I’m surprised he wasn’t snapped up.

      BTW as an elder cat caretaker, if he stops eating hit meds willingly (which can easily happen if his condition flares up), we have had amazing success with cutting the tip off a syringe, loading it with canned food and front loading the tip with their pills.

      When cutting the tip, leave a tiny bit of material so the plunger still stops, but not so much that the pill gets jammed.

      3/4 of our cats actually open their mouths willingly to be pilled because they only taste the food, the pill is swallowed without them noticing.

      • potate@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        I LOVE that idea! One of our resident cats is a pain to give meds to so I’ll give it a try!

        And yes, Bo is half (or so) Bengal. He came to us completely feral but needed those meds so he didn’t go the TNR route. He’s turned into a super friendly guy who craves getting pets - just took a bit to get there. He’s also basically vocal chords on four legs - sings all day long.

        If anyone is interested in adopting, he’s listed with MEOW in Calgary, Canada!

        • Wrench@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Sounds like a Bengal to me!

          When modding the syringe, I find it easiest to remove the plunger, and using a drill bit from the inside that is slightly smaller than this inside diameter of the syringe. 1/32" leaves enough of a lip to still stop the plunger in my experience, but YMMV depending on the plunger style.

          We had a 5ml syringe with a fully plastic plunger (no rubber) that was amazing. Eventually lost it and haven’t been able to find a replacement yet, but rubber tipped plunger are fine too, just wear out faster.

    • littlewonder@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I won’t adopt kittens, personally. Those little shits are cute, sure, but they eat everything and claw everything and try to kill themselves on everything. Just like a toddler.

      Even if an older cat wasn’t trained at all, they still get some sort of common sense level up after they pass kitten age.

    • Xanthrax@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      SQUEEZIES! I know scruffing is wrong, but God dang, do they love sqeezies and butt spanks.

        • Xanthrax@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          It mostly depends on weight. I can lift my Yorkie by his butt skin and neck skin, and he loves it. If I did that to a heavier animal without loose skin, it would hurt them. Cats tend to lose that extra skin pretty fast. They just like getting squeezed there. (Mostly if they’re hand raised).

          • LowtierComputer@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            Of course everything is context sensitive. You can “scruff” a healthy adult cat without ever hurting them if you do it right. You don’t lift them up by that skin.

  • Lenny@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    And the non kitten fellows! We wanted a third cat after adopting two kittens years ago. We were so over the erratic nature combined with the roll the dice luck of whether they were floor pissers, plant eaters, etc, so we decided to look for adult cats. The only one the shelter had was this mongy manky stray who was estimated to be 5 years old. When we went in the adoption room with her, she looked at us and did a massive wet shit that made us all evacuate the room. Her adoption photos make her look mangy, aloof, old, dirty, and distant, not to mention smelly.

    Later, when the poo particles had settled, we went back in and picked her up. She sank into my arms and I just knew… I cried and couldn’t bear to let her go.

    Four years on, her shaggy fur has became soft, her distant eyes started slow blinking and showing emotion, her little frame filled out and she became an absolute hellhound for dinner time. When you walk in the door, no matter who you are (literally, you could be a burglar), she will run up to you and do this silent meow asking to be picked up. When you hold her, she purrs so much her body shakes and she drools until her face is dripping. She will climb into bed and play little spoon at night, and she loves laps all times of the day.

    We’ve had her 4 years and she no longer does wet shits, but is the same loving cat that melted when someone held her and showed her love. She converted me to older cats.

    • cheesymoonshadow@lemmings.world
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      3 months ago

      Gawd, between your story and the OP I’m just an emotional wreck right now. 😭😭 I have a 20yo cat and it breaks my heart so much to think of him in a shelter with nobody to hold him. Thank you for giving love to these old kitties.

    • Monzcarro@feddit.uk
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      3 months ago

      She sounds wonderful, I’m so happy she found a home with you!

      I would always adopt an adult rather than a kitten. We’ve had a kitten and he was hard work!

      Our orange cat was 2 when we had him from the shelter. He was found on the street with cat flu. They treated this, but he was still very skinny when we adopted him, with rough fur and cracked paw pads.

      We’ve had him just over a year and he gained a lot of weight at first, but now he trusts that there’s always going to be dinner for him. His fur is glossy and bright, and his paws are healthy. He’s incredibly loving, even with children, and loves sitting near us when we’re working.

      I’m glad we got him. Even our other cat (also adopted, but from a friend) is slowly warming to him!

    • Ænima@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      When we went in the adoption room with her, she looked at us and did a massive wet shit that made us all evacuate the room.

      I laughed so hard at this single sentence that I couldn’t stop even while writing this. Bravo!

  • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Oof. Much feels.

    Also, old cats yaoll like a mfer and develop incontinence. Give them the best last days you can, but when its time to let them go, let them go.

  • PhobosAnomaly@feddit.uk
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    3 months ago

    Man I’d love to be able to do that and give cats a good run-in for their twilight years but I don’t think I could - partly because one of the household is allergic to cats; but mainly I don’t think I could deal with the repeated emotional devastation of having to let them go at a much higher rate than a “normal” pet owner.

    Fair play to those that do. Pretty ballsy.

    • Elaine@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      I thought the same thing till I met a beloved old cat-daddy neighbor. Before he passed away he had asked if I could help find homes for his kitties. I took his two oldest cats without knowing what I was getting into (mostly) in a good way. I found out old cats howl and even though they are so rickety they move like an At-At from Star Wars they’ll scamper like a fool given the right stimulation. Totally worth it! Seven years later I still have one of them who is now 21 years old. She sleeps a lot but loves a good scritch and pet session. I wish I could make all of my cats infinite cats. Having lost pets just means I cherish them all even more.

      old cat tax

      • Snowcano@startrek.website
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        3 months ago

        As an old cat adopter I want to add one thing to this. Yes, it hurts to lose them when their time comes, but something I didn’t expect is that after the mourning I’ve always started to feel a sense of urgency to find the next old timer to rescue. I’ll remember the time and love I had from the ones before and I curse how much time was wasted while they waited in a shelter for someone to come for them. Why couldn’t I have found them sooner? They deserved so much more love and comfort, where the hell was I? Then we go out and find our new friends that have been waiting for us for so long and our family gets better again.

        It’s always tough knowing that our time with them is short, but that’s true of any animal relationship. In the end we’re left with the love for them which in my experience never diminishes. We may say more tearful goodbyes when connecting with the old ones, but over time the wonderful memories and love in our lives just accumulates more and more.

        I agree the responsibility (and occasional expense) of caring for older animals is not always in everyone’s capabilities, but I implore you not to avoid considering welcoming one (or more) into your life solely because of aversion to the pain that comes from losing them. The love they give outweighs it a thousandfold.

    • 4lan@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      giving them a good last couple years is totally worth any pain you will feel. You will know they died happy and loved instead of scared in a cage alone.

    • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Why not both? We rescued an abandoned Scottish fold, and now we spend plenty of money on her. She’s a sweetie!

      • VinnyDaCat@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Sure, if they’re abandoned.

        The issue is that we have so, so many stray cats. So, so many cats left in shelters. We do not need people to breed more cats just so people can have their very expensive and very specifically bred designer furbaby. We need people to take care of the ones that already exist and are already struggling.

        • 4lan@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          breeding should be outlawed until all cats have a home. same with human children

      • Barzaria@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 months ago

        Creating designer pets is immoral. Creating a side channel market for abandoned designer pets is immoral because it increases demand for designer pets (people can abandon their pets knowing they will be cared for).

  • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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    3 months ago

    My aunt did the same thing. She said the cat she adopted never forgot about it, either - just super sweet every day, happy to have a home and a good friend in the world.

  • captainastronaut@seattlelunarsociety.org
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    3 months ago

    My family has had some of the best cats this way. My mom would always go to the shelter and adopt the oldest one they had and we had so many truly wonderful sweet cats over the years.

  • Mac@mander.xyz
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    3 months ago

    I wish i had the capacity to adopt animals. I’ve always wanted to do this. Older animals being in shelters makes me sad.

    • 4lan@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      the only reason I only have one dog is my tiny apartment. I am moving to TX so I can live in a house with a yard soon. when my boy passes I plan to get an elderly dog and spoil it until it dies, then rinse and repeat until I die

      I see so much suffering in this world. I am exhausted from being depressed and anxious about it. I just want to help a tiny bit if I can, I can’t just wallow. that wont save any animals from dying alone on a cold floor. action will

  • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    Dumb question, but is it common for cats to end up in shelters? As I understand, they tend to fare not too badly as stray cats.

    Do they get put in shelters when they’re too old/sickly to hunt? Or are cats raised as housecats not good enough at it? Or do we generally put cats into shelters, because we don’t want them to hunt and obliterate the local wildlife?

    • frosch@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Totally not a dumb question tbh - the answer probably also highly depends on where you’re from.

      In Germany (also highly depends on county/city) yes, they do normally fare pretty well and shelters often operate multiple feeding stations where there are a lot of strays. So they get to know the „local strays“ and can keep an eye on them via volunteers and cams.

      When a cat is visibly sick, they catch them at this station, treat them and if the cat is alright, oftentimes release them again - shelters are notoriously full and money ist scarce for these organisations unfortunately…

      However, if there are conditions that make life for this cat (or others - e.g. FIV) dangerous, they are normally kept in the shelter and then opened for adoption as a „only indoors cat“.

      Also, older cats often end up in shelters because they often belonged to older people - and when they can’t care for the cats anymore, have to move or die one day, the cats have to go somewhere too.

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Where I am, strays are usually catch, sterilize, release. But if you caught a cat who was sick they’d treat it, and lots of cats end up at the shelter because people don’t fix their pet cat in time, and they get pregnant (even if you are responsible - we had a brother sister pair and I asked the vet what she would he fix them, he said “6 months”, I asked but when can they get pregnant? “4 months”. Thankfully it didn’t happen, they were fixed and lived long kitten free lives).

      And pets, if someone gets sick and can’t care for them they get surrendered.

    • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 months ago

      A lot of cats will make it to 20. Its the upper end of average, even. The oldest confirmed living cat is like 27.

      The real unbelievable one is that according to guineas records, the oldest cat ever was a whopping 38 years old, out of Austin Texas. 1967 to 2005.

      • SkyezOpen@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Good to hear. We have a pair of sisters pushing 14 and still going strong. They’re part Maine coin and fluffy as hell so we joke that they’re too majestic to ever die.

    • frosch@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Yea, they can live pretty long. It’s mostly the dangers out there (cars, people, poison, other animals) that shorten the lifespan drastically.

      That’s why indoor cats have a longer lifespan on average.

      Also, the kidneys… keep an eye on them and your cat should do pretty well for a long time

    • 4lan@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      my grandmothers cat lived into it’s mid 20s. it was so active until the end, you really couldnt tell it was that old