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Nicholas, Beatnick
Nico was a feral cat that “came with the house.” He was trapped and neutered and became one of the most amazing and tolerant cats you’d ever know.
Nico bore the scars of many years of living outside as a feral cat. He was missing teeth, had scars from frostbite, and had a messed up toe. He was also hyperthyroid. He crossed the rainbow bridge one day for unknown reasons.
Sagey-pagey, Sage-arama
Spell was adopted from a local shelter. For no clear reason, he stayed in the shelter for an entire year before I adopted him.
Overall, Sage has been very healthy and has recently started asking about getting his driver license because he’s 16. In the last year, he has developed hyperthyroidism, and gets medication twice daily.
Pikey
Spike was an emergency long-term foster adoption. He was an amazing cat and though he wasn’t with us for long, his impact continues to be felt.
Spike was a 10-year-old former feral who was deaf, blind in one eye, toothless, and FIV+. He crossed the rainbow bridge after only being with us for a short while, most likely due to cancer that his body could not fight.
Snicks, Nicker-D
Snickerdoodle was adopted from a local shelter after spending six months waiting for his forever home.
His long stay in the shelter was due to his hyperthyroidism. Now a resident at Mew-Mew House, he gets medication twice a day. Recently, he’s starting showing signs of kidney failure, so weekly fluid therapy is now part of his regimen.
Skits
Skittles came to us as a hospice case. It was a little hard to believe that she was in such poor health given her spunkiness. Maybe it was her tortitude coming out.
She had congestive heart failure and was extremely hyperthyroid, so she had to take multiple pills twice a day. Ultimately, she lost her battle and succombed to kidney failure.
Nutters
Peanut came to us when his people had to move and they couldn’t take him. He couldn’t be surrendered to a shelter either.
Peanut was diabetic and needed insulin twice a day. The cost of insulin alone precluded a typical rehoming. Sadly, he made the journey across the rainbow bridge not because of his diabetes, but because of some sort of aneurysm or lesion of his brain. He is missed.
Dapples, Momma
Dapples was part of a feral colony. She was trapped and had a litter of kittens and then took on several other kittens. After the kittens were weaned, she was spayed and found to be very friendly. Rather than being returned to the colony, she came to live here.
She is among the youngest cats here and in good health. Dapples has discovered the joy of continuously available food and has lost her svelte figure. That’s ok. She’s everyone’s mom.
Snowy, Snowball
Snow came to live with us after the untimely death of her person. She had been in and out of shelters and her person did not want her to ever go back to a shelter again.
At 13 or 14 years old, Snow is in fairly good health. We did discover that she had tumors on both halves of her thyroid, and so had half of her thyroid removed. She will need to have medication twice a day for the rest of her life.
Zells
One day a local rescue organization posted about a cat at a local shelter that needed to not be in the shelter. The post was about Zelda, and we adopted her the following morning.
The only obvious health problem that Zelda has is a lack of teeth. She was very stressed out at the shelter, but is doing much better.
JJ
One day in March, Justin turned up sitting on the woodpile at Mew-Mew House. We brought him in and got him fully vetted and tried to find his family – he was clearly too friendly to be a feral. He was only about one year old.
No one has come forward as his family, so he is here now. Our original plan was to find a proper family for him, but with the onset of COVID soon after we found him, he’s now lived with us for several months. I dunno. He may be hard to give up.
Zeusifer, Zeu-cer-cize
Zeus is one of the younger members of the family, at 2 or 3 years old. He came from the 19th Ward of Rochester, where he apparently had an unfortunate incident with a car. He’s lucky though. Only his tail is paralyzed.
He’s an escape artist and really, really, really wants to be an outdoor-only cat. He may change his tune when the snow flies.
Ginny
Came to Mew-Mew House when she was surrendered at a local vet clinic for being too aggressive. She moved into Mew-Mew House on Halloween of 2020.
Her aggression remained a challenge for almost two months, but then one day… she was fine. When once she was inclined to hiss and bite, today her only aggressive tendency is to head butt so hard that it hurts!
Redford, Red-red
Big Red was caught last summer as part of a TNR effort in Yates County, NY. When he was vetted, he was found to be FIV+. The Yates County Humane Society saught a good home for him, but he struggled in the shelter. Volunteers realized he was shutting down, and that he had a tumor on his neck. The human society reached out to Mew-Mew House and the rest is history. Big Red's tumor was found to be benign, and today he's a happy cat with the run of the house!
Tough-a-wattomus
Toughie was a street cat in Rochester. A loving neighborhood group took him to a vet for neutering and vaccines and he was found to be FIV+
He has a tendency to administer “love bites” which actually can hurt quite a bit. However, despite his name, Toughie is actually a softie.
Post-Toasties, Toaster Strudel, Toaster Oven, Toasters
Toast is one of a litter of kittens that belong to several family members of friends of Mew-Mew House.
There aren’t many more chill cats than Toast. He’s also clever. He knows how to manipulate to dogs into opening the dog door for him.