Monday, November 23, 2020

Pussies Galore!

Happy Monday!  Its been a long weekend.  I delivered little Misty to her new home, and as always, its very hard to place a kitten into the arms of a person you know nothing about.   You have to have blind trust with adoptions.  You try to get to know them, friend them on Facebook, talk on phone briefly, but its just a hard thing to do.  Like handing your baby to a stranger.

I rescued Melville Red on Friday.  I scruffed him firmly and placed him in carrier.  He was not a happy boy, he cried incessantly, had his ears back and low growling by the time I arrived back home with him an hour later.  Thanks to Sharon, his adopter, she swung by just before his appointment at the vet to have him checked out and given his shots, deflea and dewormer.  Combo tested as well, flying colors.  Its always a great feeling to get a cat off the street, but there are so many more.


And speaking of so many more, Danielle and Chuck, the couple that help with the one colony on Parsells, and Chuck’s employer, DeGeorge Ceilings who allows him to have a shelter in the back of the parking lot, they rescued two kittens yesterday morning, and kept them in a crate overnight.  Danielle brought one to his appointment this morning at the clinic.  I am so grateful to both of them.  GOOD people.   We were only expecting one kitten, but I told them if they could get another as a companion, that would be good, and they did.  One beautiful red and one beautiful gray!  Thanks once again for fostering Cousin Patty!  We will need to get these two kittens socialized so if anyone has time…



Plus we have Brooklyn left with Foster Mom Sue, and the five at Saturday Sheryl’s house.  We need to get them all adopted.



Thats baby Brooklyn above.  Archie below

Eastwood below


Scarlet below


Simon below


Veronica below!

No big stuff happening on the streets.  It’s quiet out there.  Occasionally Homeless Will will ride up on his bike and tell me a joke, ask if I have a dollar, and tell me he loves me as he rides away penniless.  (I never carry money – and he knows it – but always tries).

There are baby baby kittens on Ferndale Crescent that I just can’t get.  All black.  The mother has had several litters.  As I said, this profession is exhausting and I just can’t do it alone anymore.  Somethings gotta give.

Sweet picture time.  Remember the kitten that was found in the dumpster off Hudson Avenue last year – with its legs ziptied – by a homeless couple?  Well, here she is after a year in her adoptive home.  The doctor that treated her fell instantly in love, and little Aayda “Bean” loves her big brother too!



Special thanks to June, Elisabeth and Sheryl for helping me immensely in so many ways.

Have a great day!



Monday, November 16, 2020

Life!

 

Oh Blog, I have missed you.  My new job and life are keeping me so busy, I just haven't had time for you!  Forgive me.

I want to start out by offering my condolences to a couple who have helped me immensely over the years helping to develop the website, the Facebook rescue page, building solid wood shelters, helping with fundraisers, posting pictures of available cats on two websites, etc. – Andrea her husband Lou.  Andrea lost her mom last week and I grieve for them.  I don’t think I will handle it well when I lose my mother.   She is my rock.

I am planning on rescuing the fluffy Melville boy this Friday.  Wish me luck.  A woman offered to take him into her fold, and I am so grateful.  The last time I tried this he pushed his way out of the carrier and took off for a week before he trusted me again.  I have an appointment for his shots and all the other good stuff as he was a former TNR of mine.  He now headbutts my head when I bend down to pour the food, so I know he is ready for a home.

And thanks to my friends Chuck and Danielle who help to feed a colony on Parsells (and thanks to Chuck’s employer DeGeorge Ceilings for allowing the shelters!), we will be rescuing a sweet little … maybe three month old… red tabby that Chuck is able to hold.  Kitten is part of a litter, but the others are a bit skittish.  Thank you two.  Your help is truly valuable.

Brooklyn is still looking for her forever home.  :(  All her sibs have been adopted.  Thanks again Sue for your awesome fostering.


Thanks to Sheryl for fostering these five kittens that are not even on a website yet.  We’ve got to get them adopted, but also to get them socialized.  They have been in a cage for a month now, and I really feel bad for them.  They are too skittish to be let loose in the room she has the cage in because of all the hiding spaces she has.  If someone is able to take them in and are good with socializing, I would really appreciate it.  If others have the time to go visit them and hold them, etc, that would be awesome as well.  Their names are South, West, East and North.  Oh, and Gates.  How original.

 





The fifth kitten I am STILL waiting on a picture of...  👽

Thanks and have a great day!



Friday, November 6, 2020

SASSY!

Today's post is a copy/paste from Facebook written by my friend, Beth Adams Pitoniak's husband Scott Pitoniak.  I've followed Beth for years through her morning radio show on WHAM, and continue to follow her on Facebook.  She quite often posted pictures of her beloved cat Sassy, whose name I copied a time or two for a new rescue.  Sassy recently passed, and her husband, a sports columnist, wrote something about Sassy that touched my heart, so for those of you that don't have Facebook, I share this article he wrote in the Rochester Business Journal recently.  So sweet.  Cats really do touch our hearts.

"Our pets do indeed leave paw prints on our souls. Please click on the link below and read and share my column about how our dearly departed cat Sassy taught me so much about life. If only we could be more like our pets, the world would be a better place. Peace and love everybody.



https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Frbj.net%2F2020%2F11%2F03%2Fhow-a-finicky-cat-named-sassy-taught-a-sportswriter-about-life%2F%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR2yHxxH6_-TMmHfTWbdXDt4330Int8AmWxl3GsBSEPulpqvChvyqX4zpLM&h=AT2TYoGXt_Qj4fOs1XeqX1F9Y2KpDiUK4OV8BmMGqBhjxojFu5Cry7Mx1rarMcjQ5RuyWhk8xk_KR2i-rxLmYze7WJj1G2W2Sbo4BwEU6yaNrVJB-3QOK_RFScO4WPzOhk5u4-BF-dq72WiUfg&__tn__=-UK-y-R&c[0]=AT2eowFQ47QKYu_YD5PgctRZapQlrj5CVG1QJkexddSJc2EHbz5oXzstnO-XsJp0jLwHCTm01Gcq0GiaPiWiJ5azig7wvIe2oQ2KrqCr2tISeuTFbefCC0kOWtWAe14m21NmmEf1QNTE_vs9DdWFvAYioL0CBX_9CVjlSNe8iHVHDYECy3I

Right about now — just three words into this column — I would have been interrupted by my cat, Sassy. She already would have leapt up onto my desk and started meowing orders for me to stop typing, so I could tend to more important matters — such as stroking her furry head, plopping food or treats into her bowl, or letting her outside for one of her mysterious neighborhood adventures. And I would have had no choice but to comply because Sassy was one relentless, headstrong feline. She never took no for an answer.

But as I write these words there are no interruptions, no derailments of thought. Just silence, as a lonely, teary-eyed writer tries to fill an empty screen and a hole in his heart.

See, Sassy, left this earthly realm Friday night, and the void is beyond enormous. What I wouldn’t give to have her here right now driving me to loving distraction.

My kids are adults in their 30s, who flew the nest long ago. My beloved bride works crazy, in-the-middle-of-the-night hours, so I see her less frequently than I would like. And I string words, sentences and paragraphs together mostly from home, in solitude. But thanks to the irascible, never-a-dull-moment Sassy, I rarely felt lonely. She wouldn’t let me.

We adopted her — or should I say she adopted us — on a rainy, overcast February day nearly a dozen years ago from a wonderful organization known as GRASP — Greece Residents Assisting Stray Pets. She was a “rescue cat,” and, as I long ago realized, we didn’t rescue her; she rescued us. Our timing — and hers — proved impeccable. A few months earlier, I had been “down-sized” after nearly 40 years in the daily newspaper business. Less than a week after that crushing blow, our precious cat, Oscar, died. Christmas that year wasn’t very merry.

A listener to the popular morning radio show my wife co-hosted knew how much Beth loved animals, and knew how much she was hurting from the loss of Oscar, with whom she had formed an eternal bond. She called Beth about fostering a cat from GRASP to provide a salve for our grief. That cat would be the indomitable Sassy. She was roughly 2 years old and already had been shuffled around to several foster homes.

When Beth mentioned the possibility of fostering a cat, I chuckled. Fostering implied something temporary, but I knew this wasn’t going to be temporary given Beth’s passion for our furry friends. On our drive home with our “foster,” Beth and Sassy sat in the backseat and lovingly conversed. I could sense another unbreakable bond forming. Upon arriving at our townhouse, we let Sassy out of her carrier and this whiskered wonder spent the next 20 minutes bounding about, exploring every nook and cranny. After a thorough inspection of our premises, she settled on Beth’s lap and fell asleep. We had aced the test. Sassy had agreed to adopt us. Our lives would never be the same.

For the next 11 years and eight months, she would exasperate and entertain. She definitely was high maintenance. We jokingly referred to her as a PITA — a pain in the you know what. Despite that well-earned moniker, we couldn’t help but love her. She had us wrapped around her little paws.

Like most cats, Sassy, was a remarkable athlete. Although our 12-pound superhero might not have been able to leap tall buildings in a single bound, she easily ascended tall countertops and occasionally climbed atop the refrigerator, an ideal perch to observe her human parents in action. Given her propensity for jumping and fetching tossed balls, we surmised she had been a dog in a previous life. I have vivid memories of her sprinting like a bat out of hell across our backyard to the breezeway door. She would have made one heck of a running back, though her lack of discipline and refusal to take orders probably would have resulted in her carrying the ball into the wrong end zone or up into the stands.

Sassy loved the outdoors, and occasionally caused angst by disappearing for hours at a time. Thankfully, she always returned home from her hunting expeditions, often with dead mouse in mouth. In a primal nod to her Serengeti big cat ancestors, our huntress was merely bringing us gifts — gifts I would be responsible for burying. Beth and I sometimes wondered if Sassy would have been happier as a mouser in a barn. Fortunately, we discovered she was happiest where she was. With us.

Some of our fondest moments occurred when the peripatetic Sassy was still. I loved walking into the living room and seeing her ensconced on Beth’s lap while my bride read a book. A cat and a book. An unbeatable combination. Sweet, too, were those moments when I was watching a ballgame or a movie in my recliner, and Sassy settled onto my chest. I’ve always been full of hot air, and she clearly appreciated all those British Thermal Units I generated. Each morning, before confronting the stresses of impending deadlines, I rubbed her chin for a minute or two while telling her how much I loved her. Such a soothing way to begin each day.

Sassy taught me much about unconditional love and living in the moment — something I and most humans are terrible at. Too often, we obsess about what’s next, rather than savoring what’s now. During those precious occasions when I stared into her piercing green eyes and listened to her purr loudly, I felt serenity and calm. It was as if she was pulling all the negative stuff away from me, allowing me to experience true tranquility.

She had been in declining health for some time, but was a trooper till the very end; a profile in perseverance. In a time of pandemic, polarization and isolation, she was my rock, my furry muse and mentor.

For the first time in a long time, I am completing a column from start to finish without distraction. And that makes my soul sad. What I wouldn’t give to have that lovable, finicky feline bugging the heck out of me right now."

Best-selling author and nationally honored journalist Scott Pitoniak is the Rochester Business Journal sports columnist. His latest book, “Remembrances of Swings Past: A Lifetime of Baseball Stories,”  is available in paperback and digitally at amazon.com.

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Election Day!

 Although the cats could give two rats about that.  

Another bone chilling morning out there, although not as bad this morning as it has been.  I am glad I've had some help securing shelters, tarps, bricks, ets.  The only thing I could use now are boards - the kind you can set up against the open portion of the little 'apartments' that are housed under the tarps, on top of the pallets.  I am set with bricks (thanks Paula and John, and June and Gary) to hold the tarps down in these brutal winds we get.  Thanks for the tarps as well.  Thanks to those that have sent food, it is so appreciated, as I go through 70 lbs per feeding.  Not to mention the wet.  Love those big cans (June and Gary- they get a case at the Dollar Store occasionally). 




I delivered Monroe to his new home on Saturday.  OMG, seriously a great cat.  The new mom has a dog, and Monroe could have not cared in the least.  He is renamed Mo, and has a great home.  I couldn't be happier.  Thanks to cousin Patty for fostering. We need more fosters so that we can get more adult cats off the street.  There are many out there, and they go like hotcakes.  People want these older sweeties.


I delivered Bano to his new home and he is acclimating well with his new sister Miku, although I need to get an update.  Miku is a bit younger than kitten Bano, and a little more frisky and wild as well.



I delivered Hudson as well.  He is doing beautifully, and adjusting to his new big sister Gibson!



I delivered Mini and Marvin as well (yes, it was a busy Saturday).  Mini has had some 'bathroom issues' and had to be seen at the vet yesterday, as well as Marvin having the sniffles ($$).  Ugh.  I should have stuck to my thoughts earlier on to not have kittens go to new homes until AFTER their surgeries.  Its just too hard on my pocket, and the adopters having to take the kittens themselves to the vet I use.  I need to stick to my guns with this next set of kittens that Sheryl is fostering - East, West, North, South and Gates.  Pictures coming soon.

NO MORE KITTENS!!

That's all I have today.  Get out there and vote!