Everything you need to
know about community cats at your spay / neuter clinic is covered in this comprehensive booklet.
They might know Garfield and Grumpy Cat, but even a big cat lover might not
know about community cats.
Not exact matches
About the NYC Feral
Cat Initiative The NYC Feral
Cat Initiative (NYCFCI), a program of the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals, supports the efforts of organizations and individuals who work to help stray and feral
cats — collectively
known as «
community cats» — and perform Trap - Neuter - Return (TNR) in New York City.
You
know there is a caretaker for their colony and the neighbors don't currently complain
about the six
cats who live there, but will putting those four kittens back overwhelm the
community's carrying capacity?
It also gives you an opportunity to talk to
community members
about their options when they feel they can
no longer keep their
cat and why letting him out to join a
community cat colony is not the solution.
You can help protect
cats, and debunk misinformation that might come up during discussions or conflicts
about community cats, by
knowing accurate information.
By educating people on the truth
about community cats (also
known as feral
cats) and combatting the false claims, we can stop the killing.
Americans love animals to the tune of 90 million dogs and 94 million
cats in homes across the country, and yet many
know very little
about the daily work that animal control officers, veterinarians, volunteers, adoption counselors,
community cat coordinators, kennel managers, behaviorists, shelter directors and humane educators do to help the people and animals in their
communities.
Letting others
know, who also care for the
community cats,
about your plans and how they can help can be a great way to ensure
cats are safe.
The question for the NYCFCI table was, «If you
know someone feeding
cats in your neighborhood, which group should they contact
about learning how to fix the
cats to help the
cats and make them better neighbors for the
community?»
Alley
Cat Allies launched National Feral Cat Day in 2001 to raise awareness about feral cats (also known as community cats), promote Trap - Neuter - Return (or TNR, the humane approach to stabilizing feral cat populations), and empower and mobilize the millions of people who care for ca
Cat Allies launched National Feral
Cat Day in 2001 to raise awareness about feral cats (also known as community cats), promote Trap - Neuter - Return (or TNR, the humane approach to stabilizing feral cat populations), and empower and mobilize the millions of people who care for ca
Cat Day in 2001 to raise awareness
about feral
cats (also
known as
community cats), promote Trap - Neuter - Return (or TNR, the humane approach to stabilizing feral
cat populations), and empower and mobilize the millions of people who care for ca
cat populations), and empower and mobilize the millions of people who care for
cats.
If you care for
community cats, let us
know about the colony with
Cat Stats — the free, easy - to - use online system from Best Friends for tracking cat coloni
Cat Stats — the free, easy - to - use online system from Best Friends for tracking
cat coloni
cat colonies.
Everything Shelters Need to
Know About Canine Distemper is part of an ongoing series of educational programs from Maddie's Institute, the academic division of Maddie's Fund ®, providing the most innovative animal welfare information to shelter staff, veterinarians, rescue groups and
community members to increase the lifesaving of homeless dogs and
cats community - wide.
For more on what veterinarians must
know about when working with
community cats, visit: alleycat.org/Veterinarian.
That's 7.5 dogs and
cats for every 1,000 human residents,
about half the national average and ten times less than successful
No Kill
communities.
Find out everything you need to
know about keeping your
community cats healthy and helping them be good neighbors.
You can submit entries
about cats you
know that deserves to be recognized by the
community.
Veterinarian Christy Layton told Andrews, «The
community is at risk, because if they get bitten, we don't
know anything
about the vaccine history of these
cats.»
I am writing this statement not quite
knowing what the immediate outcome will be, but am aware of the potential collective impact that this distinctive
community of creators will have with Brian Belott's innovations in collage, Ákos Birkás's philosophy
about painting a certain situation, Regina Bogat's devotion to art making with clever variations on certain abstract themes, Matt Bollinger's extra-large and bracing graphite drawings, Paul DeMuro's painterly electricity, Marc Desgrandchamp's time - fragmented paintings, Michael Dotson's paintings of the «Disney - esque,» Michel Huelin's relationship with nature and software, Irena Jurek's very meaningful
cat character, Alix Le Méléder's proposals of four colors determined by the passage of the brush, David Lefebvre's painted images cut out of magazines or downloaded from a mobile phone, Pushpamala N.'s ethnographic documentations which have been compared to Cindy Sherman, Wang Keping's unique wooden sculptures that juxtapose vivid emotion with a marked sense of introversion, Katharina Ziemke's pictorial treatment of current events, and me, the co-host with a small drawing.