Friday, May 3, 2013

Queens


Why, and how is it, in the neighborhoods I go into each morning, that am I the only one that is trying to help these cats?  I've been seeing what I think is a very very pregnant cat on Hayward.  Don't people look out their window, don't people see pregnant cats all around them?  Are they calling for help?  I know cats are brought in to Rochester Animal Services on Verona Street, mothers and their kittens, because that is where Another Change Pet Rescue gets a lot of theirs, but how it seems to be me who sees these cats walking around with their bulging bellies, where are those cats being trapped at, not in my hood!  How can people turn a blind eye and ignore this problem when its happening right in their front yards?  At my last spot this morning, I got close enough, and it was light enough, for me to see a kitten - she was thinking she was secure enough because we had a fence in between us - who looks like she is pregnant.  She has a kitten face, and a kitten upper half, but she is also so fluffy - a very beautiful cat for sure, that its hard to tell if she is pregnant or not.  But I suspect she is.  She is one of the litter that was born last fall and I never got them done.  She is the only kitten left that I see there.  I believe mom might still be there, but I don't know.  I know the others there are neutered.  Obviously, there is a boy around that is not.  But the ones that faithfully wait for me are all eartipped.  Shame on me, but then again, I can't do it all my self.

Here are some facts:

Gestation is the period from conception to birth. From the first day of a successful mating, it averages 65 days. Kittens born from day 63 to day 69 fall within the normal range. Siamese cats may carry their kittens 71 days. However, if the kittens are born before day 60, they usually will be too immature to survive.


The larger issue should be addressed first, that of an enormous cat overpopulation problem, primarily caused by cat owners' failure to spay or neuter their cats. Often the resulting pregnant female cats are thrown out on the street, where they and their surviving kittens continue to mate, and the offspring from those matings continue to mate. The horrifying reality is that a pregnant female cat and her descendants can account for the births of several hundred kittens in just a few years.

Pros

1.Spaying a rescued pregnant cat will help contain the overpopulation problem. There are simply too few homes for the huge number of homeless cats.

2.Spaying a pregnant rescued cat will help prevent the deaths of living cats and kittens. Even though a pregnant female cat might be adopted by the finder, with good homes waiting for her kittens, each of those kittens will indirectly be responsible for the death of a shelter cat or kitten that might have been adopted into one of those homes.

A case in point is a rescuer who also fosters cats, with space limits to her ability to house them. She recently had to make a choice between spaying/aborting a pregnant cat that had been dumped on her doorstep, or sending a litter of kittens she had been fostering to the local shelter, where they would have immediately been killed. So for the "greater good" she had the new cat spayed, even though it cost a lot of emotional pain.

3.Very young cats and very old cats rarely enjoy the kind of physical condition that would warrant allowing them to give birth. Birthing and nursing a litter of kittens would easily take their last ounce of strength, and could kill them. This truth is even more evident in the case of pregnant strays, who may have already borne dozens of litters of kittens. (A female cat is capable of bearing at least three litters of kittens each year.) The kindest and most compassionate action anyone could take with one of these cats is to spay/abort her.

4.The only time a pregnant stray cat should be allowed to give birth is in the case of being near-term. There is a Roe vs Wade aspect to this argument, which brings up a whole different issues of viability - "when does it occur during pregnancy?"

Cons

1.The taking of life, whether it be human or animal, already born or a fetus, is immoral. There are no "excuses" that make it all right.

2.Shelters and rescue organizations are institutions, and their primary concern is the movement of cats out, to make room for those coming in. In that sort of atmosphere, moral considerations may take second place. However, an individual who is willing to keep both the mother cat and the kittens or find good, permanent homes for them, should not be made to feel guilty for allowing the birth.

3.Where is the evidence that the people from the "good homes" might have instead adopted cats from shelters? Perhaps they weren't even looking for a cat until they heard a friend, neighbor, or co-worker had adoptable kittens.

Where It Stands

There will never be a complete resolution to this issue until cat owners become responsible caregivers, by spaying and neutering their cats. As more and more kittens are born each year, more and more stray cats will appear, and the feline overpopulation problem will increase exponentially. That is why this issue is just a small part of a greater issue: Spay and Neuter.

Have a nice weekend.

3 comments:

  1. I hear you on that, irresponsible people, whether they own the cats them selves or not, are the cause, and the solution to this They let themselves down by ignoring the problem and more than likely that is a pattern in their life.. As always, it is left to just a few, to step up, the same people doing the same thing only more and more of it, all the time. Your blog Janine and other great associations like Alley Cat, Lollypop farm ect are vital to these cats and finding a solution, it is why we all support them.

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  2. You're kind of "preaching to the choir" today. Why not print this out and tack it to some doors around your feeding areas.

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  3. You face a never ending dilema with no solution. The neighborhoods you go to are low-income, sad situations for most folks living there. They can NOT AFFORD to feed themselves (never mind spay/neuter or even FEED a pet) - they want the love a pet provides yet can't take care of it and therefore it becomes a problem! Vet bills are very costly as we all know. Does this make the folks 'irresponsible' or 'bad' people? Nah - just sad people who can't take care of their lives properly! The stray 'pets' are a by-product....... Nothing - No one can/will change it even though some give it a great effort (like you do)

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