If You Lose or Find a Pet 2010

If You Lose or Find a Pet

From LONG ISLAND – by Ann Parry (ann-parry.com)
July 16, 2010

What do you do when you’ve Lost or Found a Pet?  How do you Safely check for news, spread the news, and more?

⇒ NOTE: Though links to outside sites appear below for reference, I’m not endorsing them.  – Ann Parry Photography Inc.

CAT FOUND

Well, a friendly white and black female cat, green eyes, about 1 year old, strolled up to our front stoop to visit our cat Hillary, who was in a cat stroller, earlier this week. Unfortunately, this kitty found near the Merrick-Bellmore border doesn’t have a collar and ID tag, so we don’t know her name or address.

  • UPDATE: ‘Cat Found in Merrick’ is back with family!  More info at the end of this post.

If this white and black cat is a member of your family, please contact us by email at [edit: contact info removed after owner found]. We will release her only to her proven owner, so emailing a photo you took of her would be a good way to help show she is your cat.

She is very affectionate, so she is, or was, part of a loving family that she must miss.

Check for News – Spread the News

Sad, but Important:  If you lose a pet, immediately tell your neighbors, & contact all public/town animal shelters in a wide area around you.  (For ex, I’d contact all L.I. public shelters, starting with close ones.)  Because of serious overcrowding, many shelters do NOT have a No-Kill policy, so time is very important! When we found kitty, one of the first things we did was post “Found Cat” flyers, which include her photo and basic description, in the area. These are free ways to spread the news, and check for news  – whether it’s online posts, flyers, email, or phone calls – about a lost or found pet:

  • Petfinder
  • Public Animal Shelters, such as Town of Hempstead Animal Shelter
  • Private Animal Shelters
  • Veterinarians and Animal Hospitals
  • News Bulletin Boards at Community Social and Sports Centers, Places of Worship
  • News Boards at Stores that sell Pet Supplies and more
  • Websites of your Community and groups you belong to (North and Central Merrick Civic Association posted a notice on its site.)
  • Online Newspaper in your area might run a free Lost Pet or Found Pet notice (Merrick Patch ran my Found Cat notice with photo)

To get your flyers as widespread as possible, contact shelters, vets, pet supply store, and ask if they’ll let you email them a flyer, so they can print it out and hang it where visitors see it.

Your Safety

Whether you’ve lost or found a pet, protect your safety and guard against scams meant to get your money. If you create a separate email account to use on flyer and online ad, you can avoid posting any personal information. Make an email address that is easy for someone to remember or copy down correctly. Do not agree to pay to have your pet shipped back to you. In fact, if you lost your pet, do NOT send money in any form for any reason.

Some Tips from Petfinder.com on avoiding would-be scammers:

  • Anything that sounds too good to be true, probably is. (Listen to your gut feeling if something seems wrong, no matter how much you want to believe it.)
  • Stay local and avoid dealing with anyone who says pet needs to be shipped
  • Avoid playing into the cruelty of false lost pet responses. Some mean, dishonest people purposely target the sad, vulnerable owners of lost pets.
  • Do not wire funds, do not use cashier’s checks, do not use money orders, do not give out any banking or financial information.

Pet ID Tags & more

It’s very important your pet wears a collar with an ID tag and/or has a pet identification tattoo.  Pet ID microchips are good extra protection, especially in case a collar with ID tag comes off, but have something visible to the unaided eye also. Kitty wasn’t wearing an ID tag, so during her first visit to Merrick Veterinary Group, Dr. Allison Villa carefully ran the microchip scanner up and down her several times. Like 99% of cats, kitty is not microchipped, but it was definitely worth checking.

Health

If you already have pets in your family, and then find a lost pet, keep them separate until a vet tests for contagious parasites and infectious diseases (and then pet receives medical treatment, if necessary), and  finds pet safe to be in contact with other animals.

UPDATE 1:  During kitty’s second checkup at the Merrick Veterinary Group, Dr. Allison Villa gave her treatment and medicine for a problem, tested and found her negative for FIV, FeLV, de-wormed her, and gave her a Rabies shot update.

Indoor Cat VS Outdoor Cat

Wondering if your cat should be an indoor or outdoor cat? An indoor cat lives about 12 years, and sometimes up to 20, but an outdoor cat lives an average of only 5 years.  This information came from  Merrick Veterinary Group, the Humane Society of the United States, Cat World, and Catster:

Dangers for Outdoor Cats

  • Being hit by a car or other vehicle on street or in parking lot.
  • Animal Cruelty –  Please visit the  Humane Society of the United States and ASPCA if you are interested in learning about how to help stop animal cruelty. 
  • Poison –  anti-freeze and some types of fertilizer are two of the often fatal poison risks 
  • Other animals (cats, dogs, wild animals) hurting or killing them – 10 wild animals that attack house pets
  • Infectious diseases from other cats  – Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP), Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV), Feline Leukemia (FeLV), and Feline Upper Respiratory Infection (URI).
  • Parasites such as fleas, ticks, ringworm
  • Getting lost and/or getting picked up by animal control.

Adopt a Rescue Animal

♥  We heard about a wonderful family who was interested in adopting “Found Cat” if her family stayed lost. If you’re ready to open your heart and home to a shelter pet:

  • Adopt A Pet  Adopt-a-Pet helps you find animal shelters in your area

UPDATE 2:  7/25/2010 – We found kitty’s loving family! A nearby neighbor we didn’t even know had a cat, let alone one so precious, saw a sign we posted. Kitty’s name  is Patches – how cute – and she returned home today.  Patches looks young for her age – she’s around eight years old.


CONTACT ME

  • NOTE:  Above post is updated version of one from my former blog.