
Momcat
Momcat could be a poster girl for the Cats Indoors campaign. We’ll never know who her caregiver was when she was a kitten, but whoever they were, they should never have had a pet. Poor Momcat! Barely a kitten herself, she was allowed to roam the neighbourhood, and as her caregiver had failed to have her spade, it wasn’t long before she was pregnant. Although this event was a result of her caregiver’s negligence, it was Momcat who paid the price. After her kittens were born, her caregiver bundled her and her new family into a cardboard box and drove them out to a country road. The little family was dumped unceremoniously by the roadside. You can read Momcat’s story here.
Momcat has lived inside with us now for a year. All winter she was content to laze away the days, sleeping in the sun, happily gazing out the window, watching the world go by. I thought that when the spring came, a touch of wanderlust might overcome her and make her restless, but such was not the case. She has continued to contentedly while away her days inside. Although she never allows us to approach within a few yards of her, and has in no way grown to appreciate human attention, Momcat is no fool. She has led a hard life and she knows when she has a good thing going. No more outdoors for her! No way! Momcat has come inside to stay.
When Momcat’s son, Arthur, managed to slip out one evening through a hole he discovered in a screen, his curiosity quickly turned to terror. Poor Arthur! He was so frightened, he wouldn’t respond to our calls. He hid himself away and we couldn’t find him anywhere. However, that night, after the house was still and dark, he tried his best to return home. We jumped up repeatedly on the windows, trying to find his way back into the house. In the morning, we found the screens ripped to bits. But no Arthur. With the light of day, he returned to his hiding place. Finally, the next evening, he crept in a window we left open for him in a closed-off room. Although he enjoys sitting on the screened porch, he has never left the house again.

Holden
The Canadian Federation of Humane Societies has promoted keeping cats indoors for more than a decade now. Indoor cats live longer, healthier lives, free of injury and disease. They don’t get run over by cars, carried away by coyotes, or pick up fleas and worms. They don’t dig in the neighbour’s garden or haunt the bird feeder. If you don’t want a cat living indoors with you, 24/7, for the next 15 years, don’t get a kitten.

Cheddar
Contrary to signs you see that read FREE KITTENS!, kittens are definitely not free. They come with a responsibility to have the kitten spade or neutered and vaccinated. If you can’t afford the several hundred dollars it will cost, you can’t afford a free kitten.

Diamond
All across North America, shelters are full of cats and kittens like Holden and the other cats featured here. Holden and friends were seeking homes at the Toronto Cat Rescue. Toronto Cat Rescue is a “no kill” shelter, but perfectly healthy cats and kittens, unwanted and unloved, are euthanized by the thousands across North America every year. Thousands and thousands more live short, hard lives as feral cats.

Austin
The cats and kittens that are euthanized, the cats and kittens that live hungry, tough outdoor lives, are the result of irresponsible pet owners. Don’t let your pet become a statistic. Keep your cat inside where it will be safe and can get on with its job: being a much-loved pet.

Arthur and Tonka, safe inside.
I’m a big time cat lover and have one presently. She is spade and content to stay inside most of the time. When she does escape she contently lies on the front porch or back deck.
Beautiful cat photos. Thanks for sharing.
Oh by the way did you know Prime Minister Harper and his family are huge cat lovers and look after rescue cats until homes can be found. They have been doing that for many years.
Steve
Actually there’s a parliamentary tradition of cat care (though not federally financially supported).
http://www.parliamenthill.gc.ca/histoire-history/terrains-grounds/snctr-snctry-eng.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Parliamentary_Cats
That’s interesting, Fiddlegirl. I wasn’t aware of that.
Steve, thanks for being a good cat owner. I mainly became passionate about this issue because of the homeless cats that arrived at my doorstep.
That’s nice that the Harpers care about cats. He seems like a nice person. I just wish he had a better vision for Canada’s future than more of the same old same old in a quickly shifting world.
Holden is just about the cutest kitten I’ve seen!!!! Is he part of your horde?
Isn’t Holden adorable? He’s one of the kittens that was looking for a home when I visited the Toronto Cat Rescue site mentioned. I would have loved to adopt him, but I’m full up here. I hope he and his buddies all find good homes.
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