Once the reasons are pinpointed they can be addressed — cats taken to vets, litter box situations improved,
neighborhood cats managed, etc..
Not exact matches
All the Riverfront
Cats are either rescue kittens from outdoors now living the good life indoors or feral neighborhood cats that are lovingly managed with food, attention, and affect
Cats are either rescue kittens from outdoors now living the good life indoors or feral
neighborhood cats that are lovingly managed with food, attention, and affect
cats that are lovingly
managed with food, attention, and affection.
The program is dedicated to humanely controlling feral
cat colonies by providing
neighborhoods with the resources and support they need to
manage feral
cat populations.
The program helps
manage free - roaming
cat populations without harming them and can eventually lead to a humane end to a
cat overpopulation situation in your
neighborhood.
Work with your local animal control or feral
cat group to help
manage your
neighborhood's community and stray
cat populations.
- loaning traps - offering easy - to - follow trapping instructions - providing below - cost and sometimes free spays / neuters / vaccines for community
cats at our LifeLine Spay & Neuter Clinics - educating the public about community
cats - advising how to affectively
manage cat colonies - offering solutions to help mediate neighbor complaints - supporting trappers throughout trapping process and the throughout the life of the colony - helping connect people with others interested in helping community
cats in their area and fostering the growth of grassroots efforts in
neighborhoods throughout the 20 county metro area - giving referrals for community
cat resources throughout the metro area
Trap - neuter - return the
cats (via a community
cat program first rather than taking them to the shelter) Community
cat programs allow the public to care and
manage the
cats in their home
neighborhood while at the same time creating a safety net / monitoring system to identify
cats that are in need or medical care or not faring well outdoors.
Whether it's a group of neighbors who band together to get a
neighborhood feral spayed and keep a collective eye on her well - being, or whether it's the elderly woman who barely has enough money to feed herself, but always
manages to scrape together enough for her «outside
cats,» feral
cats who have these advocates in their corner are the fortunate ones.
Since May 2004, Bogue has assisted in the vaccination, neutering and care of a
managed colony of feral
cats in his Winter Park
neighborhood.