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Monday, April 27, 2009

Fostering Kittens



For the past 18 months we have volunteered as a foster family for kittens from the local no-kill shelter. We foster the kittens who are too small or too young to be spayed or neutered. This frees up room at the shelter for cats that have already been spayed/neutered and are ready for adoption. The shelter provides everything we need - the kittens are vaccinated prior to coming to live with us. The shelter provides food, litter pans and litter and all veterinary care (if needed) while the kittens are in our care. We provide them with a safe place within our home (they usually stay in the bathroom at night and while we are gone.) We allow supervised play times with our cats so that the kittens get used to other cats and dogs. We socialize the kittens so that they are friendly, affectionate and relaxed. Many people ask how we can take these kittens in and then let them go to their new forever homes when the time comes. I had this same worry when we first started fostering. I soon discovered that I was looking forward to the kittens going to their new homes and we could have our bathroom back (so I could give it a good scrub down). It takes a lot of time to feed, water, scoop litter boxes, weigh them daily, play with them, etc. Out of all the kittens we have fostered (about a baker's dozen to date) we have only adopted one - Precious, our calico Maine Coon mix kitty. There have been a few that I got a bit teary eyed when the time came to take them back so they could be adopted, and there have been a few that I was glad to see go so I could see some semblance of peace and quiet at the house for a change! Overall though, it has been a very good experience all the way around. We get to play with these little darlings and watch them grow. They learn to trust and look forward to human interaction and learn to adapt to a busy household with other cats and dogs. So we view it as a win/win situation for everybody. If your local shelter or rescue agencies offer fostering, you might want to consider giving it a try. The worst that could happen is you end up adopting another cat or two - and that's not a bad thing after all, is it?!

8 comments:

Unknown said...

OH MY...I'd have to keep them all! I become so attached that I would hate to see them go...but, knowing that they were going to good homes would probably make it bearable. My MIL has a Maine Coon...he's a "scaredy cat" though. Runs under the bed when anyone comes and stays there until they leave...LOL

Anonymous said...

hmn...i think in my case it would be or three or four or...well, you get the point. I have such a soft spot for animals and anything that no one wants, so I know I'd get stuck with all of the runts:) That's such a great way to give back though. Good for you all!

Meghann said...

Good for you for opening your home - you are truly their angel!

Lin said...

Oh, he reminds me of my Hobbes who was just that tiny a few short months ago. :) I'm glad that you foster--like I wrote the other day, we've had kittens from fostered homes and they are the BEST! Good job!! Thank you for letting them go to new homes.

Audrey said...

I love kittens!! Even cats aren't too bad - just not quite as much fun.

Daisy said...

I think it's awesome that you foster the bebbeh kittens!

brokenteepee said...

How wonderful. I just keep taking in strays.....*sigh*

Marie said...

What a good thing you are doing!

If I didn't control myself I would have 100 cats. I would be the crazy cat lady on the evening news. lol

So I have limited myself to my two for now. Sigh. Maybe heaven will be a farm (with no work to do though lol) where I can have all the animals I want. :)