Feral Cats: The Sun Did Come Up Tomorrow on Maui
75Stray cats, feral cats, so many cats.
A few months ago, I wrote a hub entitled, "Feral Cats of Maui: Look 'Em In the Eye." There were so many cats and kittens in my midst which I felt responsible for and I didn't have the way and means to get them spayed or neutered. Prior to that, I wrote an article called Feral Cats and Strawberry Skies in which I was a little more hopeful, but I explained that I felt like a failure. You see, to get a feral cat spayed or neutered, you not only need to learn to trap the sweetie pie, but you have to make sure they fast overnight. This means no food and no water from midnight on, if, for instance, the spay/neuter appointment is at 8:00 a.m. the next day. If you don't help the cat in this way, it could choke on the operating table and die while it's under the influence of the anesthesia.
Most cat colony caretakers trap the cat, take it home and let it sit in the backyard in the trap under a towel all night. Well, I can't do that. That's way too hard. Who can sleep when a cat is out there in your backyard -- uncomfortable and scared? I don't have a problem with the feral cat fasting if it is sitting in a pretty little enclosure called a cat motel up in the rolling hills of Haiku, safe and protected, with a litter box in its midst. I can be fifteen miles away and sleep very well. And in the morning I can drive up to Haiku, pick up the cat or cats in the trap or traps, set them in the backseat of my car and glide on down to the veterinary appointment.
Until August of this year -- and during the few years here on Maui while being aware of the feral cat problem -- I've assisted others in trapping some cats. By doing merely the assisting, the other person takes the cat home to their backyard instead of me taking the cat to my backyard. There were also a couple of attempts by me. That's how I learned I lose sleep if I try to keep a cat in the backyard. Plus I was able to scruff six cats. Most of them were friendly enough that the Maui Humane Society took them and I tracked them carefully so I knew they were adopted out after their spay or neuter operation and testing negative for HIV. Two of them had their operations and I took them back to their awful home in the industrial park where they reside.
We can't take all the cats home to our own houses -- although I do know one lady who has successfully taken 34 of them to reside in her house. The cats consider their locale to be their home. Alleycat.org is an excellent website to learn more about this philosophy of dealing with feral cats across the nation.
Spay Neuter Assistance Program on Maui
It was either on my blogspot this past summer or in one of the two-abive-cited articles on here that I said I will pray for some help with this problem because I feel so inept and useless when it came to really helping these feral cats on Maui. I felt so down about it as I was writing that I said I know the sun will come up tomorrow, but I will need to pray for some hope and help so that I can become more useful in the cat efforts on Maui. I'm here to tell you that the sun did come up and I feel very blessed. I feel so happy and thankful to be able to do a little bit towards helping these beautiful, loving and helpless cats.
With prayer and more prayer, everything falls into place. Sometimes it's not the way we want it to go, but this time it was beyond what I could have hoped for.
I have a friend, Leona, who helps me trap the cats after I make an appointment with the Maui Humane Society for the surgeries. Leona is of very small stature, but very brave for her size.
I book the appointments for two cats at a time to make all the driving back and forth more worthwhile. Tim of the Cat Hotel up in Haiku funds the surgeries. He started the non-profit for the protection
and spay/neutering of feral cats when he saw the great need here on Maui. He works amicably with 9th Life, the Feline Foundation and The Maui Humane Society. The Maui Humane Society (MHS) does have a program which they call SNARPS which assists in providing low cost spay/neuter services. SNARPS is the acronym for Spay/Neuter Assistance Referral Program.
So, Leona and I trap two cats at a time. Leona helps me place the trapped cats in the backseat of my car covered in towels so they are not terrified. They don't make a sound as I drive the 20 miles as long as they are covered up. I drive the two trapped cats up to Tim's Cat Hotel where he very kindly helps me unload them from the car. He puts one cat at a time into the cat hotel reserved for him or her. If the cats are pretty good friends, they each go into the same hotel room. They have food and water and a cat box until midnight. Before midnight, Tim goes out to bid the cats goodnight. He takes out the food and water from their room.
Up in Haiku, there is a problem with unleashed pit bulls roaming the hills and killing the feral
cats. Tim has quite an operation going on to help those feral cats at one particular designation -- besides the help he gives people like me. Additionally, Tim and his wife board domestic cats while their owners go away on vacation. You can read more about Tim's Cat Hotel at his website. (See link below.)
I was reflecting upon all these things on Saturday when I was driving back from Haiku where I had left the two recuperating cats at the Cat Hotel. Before becoming reflective,
I was feeling a little disgusted at the awful smell in the car. One of
the cats had had an accident and missed the plastic bags and sheets of newspaper I had spread beneath the cages. What a mess! I had used water, paper towels and Simply Green on the stains, but somehow didn't get it all during the first attempt. For just one moment, the thought crossed my mind that this should be the last time I do this. Then I remembered the short series of events and the people that had come together to help in this effort none of which or of whom I had been able
to bring together prior to prayer.
I am thankful for prayer.
My prayers are spontaneous for each blessing I am thankful for or each concern I need to ask for help about. But still I do appreciate this prayer, an old standby, which often gives me solace if I repeat it to myself.
May God grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The Courage to change the things I can
And the Wisdom to know the difference.
Sometimes in life we can experience discouragement, fatigue, and loss of hope in reaching goals. The sun always does come up tomorrow and so we need to have fresh energy and courage for the little things that we want to do and can do. Prayer gets us there. It is as Mother Teresa said: We can do no great things, but small things with great love.
I've
been away from Hubpages for a few months -- mostly studying a course. I
am happy to be back writing. I appreciate your feedback whether or not
you agree with anything I say, so please do drop me a line. Aloha
More Maui Feral Cats
More Hubs by Pamela Kinnaird W
- I Am Hansen, a Purebred Boxer and Survivor
There I was, a Boxer, all alone in the world, lost in the suburbs of Queen Creek, Arizona. In my wanderings, I saw many stray dogs and many abandoned dogs, but I .... - Cone Shells of Hawaii: Highly Poisonous
Do you like to walk along the sandy beach at dusk just as the sun slides silently into the ocean? Do you like to sit on the sand in the early evening? Well, if you are on a Hawaiian beach, you had better watch out where you sit.... - The Joy and Importance of Family History
Title of Poem: When Ma is Sick When Ma is sick she pegs away; She's quiet, though, not much t' say. She goes right on adoin' things, An' sometimes laughs, or even sings. She says she don't feel extra well,... - Feral Cats and Strawberry Skies
Tonight before sunset I drove out to a particular commercial property which employs many dozens of men on Maui. I knew it was late enough in the day that the employees had probably left the premises. There... - Helen M. Stevens, Embroidery Artist
If I could choose only one kind of artistic endeavor in life -- and all other kinds of art were closed to me -- I would choose freestyle embroidery and I would embroider my own designs. That is the choice.... - Chicken Lady of Maui
In my area of the island of Maui, there is a lady known as The Chicken.... - Big Centipedes in Hawaii. Paradise, Anyone?
Big centipedes in Hawaii are a fact of life. That said, not many of us are born with the ability to casually pick them up. Some of us have nightmares about centipedes. Some of us have overcome our fears... - Is Your First Grandchild More Special?
Yesterday I had our three grandchildren over for the afternoon. Ellie is 5, Jesse is 4 and Kalisi is 20 months. After a fun few hours, it was time to.... - Excitatory Amino Acids Including MSG, Cysteine and Aspartate
Have you heard of Dr. Russell L. Blaylock? He is a retired neurosurgeon and author. He was an Associate Professor of Neurosurgery at the Medical University...
Tim's Cat Hotel on Maui. Have a look.
- The Cat Hotel - Maui, Hawaii
This is a non-profit company with good solid goals and resources to help the cats of Maui, both domestic and feral. Do have a look at this page and contact Tim if you have any questions.
CommentsLoading...
Hi Pamela... what a wonderful gift you have and a heart for the lost and forgotten pets all about you. It is a special gift you have. The Father sees your heart as we all do.
Welcome back to Hub Pages... good to see you here again.
Blessings and Hugs
Pamela, we need be aware of these things. Thank you for sharing your heart and information with us all. Welcome back!
Hi Pamela. I found you while reading other hubs about cats, rescuing cats and ferals. I share your love and admiration for these beautiful creatures. My friend Al and I have been capturing, spay/neutering, vaccinating ferals for a long time here in SE Kansas and formerly in Napa, California. We continue to do so; just a week ago, we took 17 kittens to a great low cost/no cost spay/neuter clinic near us. We have acreage where we have built indoor/outdoor catteries for all the kitties. Eventually, even the most shy feral cats learn, at least, to trust us and talk to us. We also have 2 Feline Aids kitties and 5 leukemia kitties...they have separate quarters where they live w/the others who share their deseases. Leukemia kitties in one area, Aids cats in another and then there is the "general population." I look forward to reading more of your hubs. Voted UP, Useful and Awesome.
The resources you provide for more information are great. Feral cats are a big problem in many places, including the rural area where I live. People like to dump unwanted pets here. I'm glad you have programs for affordable spay/neutering. I'm not so lucky here...
I hope you are safe ,was thinking of you this week end.
It is so sad to see feral cats. So much disease and death happen to them and most seem to be abandoned pets that were forced to survive on their own.
I recall a colony of feral cats living on the campus of a nearby university. A loading dock was at the end of this long tunnel so the drivers could unload and not get wet from the rain. There were 2 huge dumpsters in there and a fairly large group of cats was living under them. I rarely saw them since they would just vanish under the dumpster if anyone came on the dock or drove in. Someone was feeding them since there were a couple of pet bowls on the platform with food and water.
Actually, that place was a pretty safe place for them. They never got wet or really cold from the weather. Nobody could really get to them easily since they hid so far under the dumpsters. I am sure at night, when the dock closed, they were out and about. There were a few kittens from time to time that I saw a glimpse of, but they were completely wild. They never would budge an inch when I got over there trying to coax them out with a sardine.
I wonder what happened to them. God Bless you for caring for these poor kitties!
Thank you, Pamela. I have always had an interest in knights and the Dark/Middle ages.
The kitties I saw near the dumpsters had been there a long time from taking to some of the college folks who worked there. The lids were always open since they were really huge and very heavy. At least someone was giving them decent food and some water instead of just leaving the cats to eat garbage and who knows what! At least they were safer from the elements and other predators.
You have my utmost admiration for what you are doing to help the feral cats. I have always had cats. right now I ahve four and two of them are feral ats I rescued from the college where I work. It took a long time, but eventually they adjusted and now are sweet loving cats (spayed of course). May God bless you and your work.















Anaya M. Baker Level 4 Commenter 19 months ago
Glad I found your hub. The work you are doing is amazing. It can be so discouraging to be one of the few that seems to care for these animals. No matter how hard you try it only seems like a drop in the bucket, but have faith, and know you are doing good work! I firmly believe that one of the true measures of goodness in the world is how we treat animals.
It breaks my heart to see so many animals abandoned, starving, and uncared for. I live in a rural area, and sadly the attitude taken by many of the people around here is that its okay to let animals wander free, or just leave them somewhere if you don't want them. There are constantly dead dogs in the road. It's sickening.
I did take in a stray beagle that was left near my house- they are used for hunting here, but mine had short legs so was likely a bad hunter, and was covered in hundreds of ticks. It was the saddest thing I'd ever seen. Even his ticks had ticks. It took 12 straight hours to remove them all. He is the sweetest thing I ever could have asked for, its hard to believe that such a great dog was unwanted.
I've tried to catch two kittens in the past week, not to keep but just to get them off the street. I wasn't able to get either of them, but one showed up dead in the road the next night. So sad, but reading the story of what you are doing really makes me feel good, that there ARE people out there working to do something about all these unwanted cats and dogs.
Keep up the great work, and thank you!