The Daily Cat: Seasonal

‘Adopt a Cat Month’ Needs Your Help

By Kim Boatman for The Daily Cat

‘Adopt a Cat Month’ Needs Your Help

A furry and enthusiastic crowd greets Kristine Mayberry when she comes home each evening. Mayberry, the president of Second Chance Pet Adoptions in Raleigh, N.C., hopes others will also enjoy the rich rewards of pet adoption, even if they don’t take in a collection quite as large as her eight cats and elderly dog. “I get much more from them than I give to them,” she says. “There’s nothing like having someone to greet me with unconditional love when I’ve had a really bad day.”

A Great Time for Cat Adoption

This month is the perfect time to consider adopting a cat or help out with the adoption effort, says Mayberry. Shelters and organizations across the country celebrate June as Adopt a Cat Month. With the arrival of spring and summer comes a flood of kittens each year, and heightened awareness of cat adoption helps shelters deal with this influx.

Opening your heart and home to another cat is important even if your local shelter doesn’t euthanize animals, says Betsy Saul, co-founder of Petfinder.com, which maintains a database of 124,000 cats available for adoption. “Cats tend to do fairly poorly in the shelter compared to dogs,” she says. “Some shelters have cats housed across the aisle from dogs, and that can be incredibly stressful. You’ll see them sitting with really squeezed eyes, which is a sign of stress.”

Help Reduce Shelter Populations

Make sure your own cat is spayed or neutered. Supporting organizations that spay and neuter strays will also help control the cat population. Female cats as young as four months can get pregnant, and a female cat can produce up to five litters a year.

Cat owners can take a couple of other steps to reduce shelter populations. First, make sure your pal is microchipped or wears some other form of identification. Even indoor kitties occasionally escape, so it’s important that all cats can be traced to their owners. Second, make sure you and your cat are a good fit. Poor matches between cats and owners can result in cats being returned to shelters.

Find Your Match

Ready to celebrate Adopt a Cat Month? Consider these tips before you adopt:

Many shelters will attempt to match you with a cat whose personality suits your needs and lifestyle. Shelters also have already evaluated a cat’s health and can save you some money. For instance, the ASPCA Adoptions Center charges no adoption fee for cats ages 3 and older, yet each cat is spayed or neutered, microchipped and up to date on its vaccines. The center charges $75 to adopt cats that are between 1 and 3 years old, and $125 for kittens.

How to Aid the Cause
Volunteer to help socialize cats at your local shelter simply by petting them, says Buchwald. Make catnip toys or crochet washable cat beds at home, then donate to a local cat adoption organization.

You can use Petfinder’s iPhone application on Facebook to post photos of adoptable cats. Promote individual cats at your local shelter, posting notices with photos in prominent locations around your community.

Kim Boatman is a journalist and frequent contributor to The Daily Catbased in Northern California whose work has appeared in The Miami Herald, the Detroit Free Press and the San Jose Mercury News. She is a lifelong lover of animals and shares her home with three cats.