Archives for 2008

Cats Protection: Cat Cabins

Cats Protection is the UK’s leading cat welfare charity. Founded in 1927 the group just celebrated its 81st anniversary and it also found some of its funding at risk due to a crisis in Icelandic banks where funds were held.

Cats Protection is a network of over 256 volunteer operated branches throughout the UK and 29 adoption centers.

One of these centers is the National Cat Centre (NCC) near Sussex, England. This facility provides cat adoption, feline education, and veterinary care.

This feline adoption center is one of the largest of its kind in the UK and has separate wings for admissions, re-homing, isolation, and maternity–featuring 202 state of the art “cat cabins” for the felines housed there.

In addition, the feline facility is open to the public seven days a week making it very friendly to potential adopters and other visitors.

All new feline arrivals are examined on site at the Veterinary Care Centre. Each feline is vaccinated, neutered, microchipped and treated for any other issues if needed.

Having the veterinary facility on site helps reduce stress encountered during transportation for veterinary medical care. Also, any issues that arise can be dealt with quickly and easily because of this.

The Training & Education Centre supports a cat friendly exhibition along with a shop and cafe. The shop provides a large selection of gifts for cat lovers and essential feline supplies for new pet parents while the café provides snacks and meals encouraging a longer excursion.

In addition, this section of the facility is available for rent to schools and community groups.

Currently the Cats Protection program rehomes and reunites an estimated 55,500 cats per year. The new “cat cabins” will help to add an additional 3,000 cats to that annual number.

You can take a look at the Cats Protection annual report for the past three years online.

If you live in the United Kingdom or just want to donate to this registered charity and sponsor a cat cabin click here.

Feeding Pets of the Homeless

Above: Homeless Man with Dog by Copyright by Kirsten Bole

I met Genevieve Frederick, the founder and director of Feeding Pets of the Homeless in Las Vegas, Nevada at a pet industry trade show.

Her cause caught my attention because I had been homeless after an accident rendered me unable to work. I was suddenly jobless when the facility let me go while I was still disabled.

Fortunately for me, my pets and I were taken in by a kind hearted person I had met at church–but others are not so lucky and every time I looked at a homeless person during that time I would think, “There but for the grace of God go I.”

Most people never really look at the homeless. It is disturbing to see but there is a large number of homeless people on the streets and it can happen to anyone in the twinkling of an eye.

I was able to move forward but the stress was incredible and the biggest cause of my stress during that time?

It was my concern over the health, welfare, and feeding of my dog and parrot.

I talked at length to a homeless man about his dog and how he managed to feed the both of them and included the story in What Animals Can Teach Us About Spirituality: Inspiring Lessons from Wild and Tame Creatures during my stint on the fringe of similar circumstances.

It would have been nice to know about programs such as Feeding Pets of the Homeless at the time. Feeding Pets of the Homeless is a nonprofit member organization that provides pet food and veterinary care to the homeless in communities across the United States and Canada.

Feeding Pets of the Homeless Mission Statement

We will do our part to help reduce hunger in pets who belong to the homeless and the less fortunate and provide medical care for those pets in communities across the country.

We believe in the healing power of companion pets and of the human/animal bond which is very important to life.

Our actions will include the following:

1. Promoting to veterinarians and pet related businesses the importance of joining the program.
2. Speaking out on the issue of pets of homeless and the disadvantaged.
3. Campaigning to food distributing organizations the importance of distributing pet food to the less fortunate.
4. Providing grants to licensed veterinarians and other nonprofit organizations that meet our objectives to administer medical care to pets of the homeless.

Currently Feeding Pets of the Homeless operates out of Carson City, Nevada. The 501(c)3 group collects cash donations and then distributes grants to veterinarians and other nonprofit organizations that meet their objectives.

Approximately 90% of cash donations goes to the Feeding Pets of the Homeless Grant Program to administer basic physicals, vaccinations, flea and tick applications to pets of the homeless while 10% of all cash donations go to help with the organization’s operational costs.

Members of Feeding Pets of the Homeless collect pet food and deliver it to food banks and soup kitchens that have agreed to distribute the food to the homeless and impoverished.

You can become a member or sponsor of Feeding Pets of the Homeless here or find a Feeding Pets of the Homeless member in your state here.

The group has also started a Cafe Press online store for goods that help promote their work.