[Felvtalk] TNR
Sally Davis
puttyrat at gmail.com
Sun Mar 11 19:07:48 CDT 2012
Did anyone else get an email from this group that says the emails are
bouncing? I am afraid to click on it in case it is a malicious link .
James I am still here.
Sally Davis
> The real problem is feeders who do not TNR. That's how these feral/hard
> stray colonies get out of control. Managing these colonies means
> responsible s/n, feeding and medical treatment when needed.
>
> JMHO
> Sharyl
>
> *From:* GRAS <gras at optonline.net>
> *To:* felvtalk at felineleukemia.org
> *Sent:* Tuesday, March 6, 2012 11:17 PM
> *Subject:* Re: [Felvtalk] caboodle ranch - other side of the story links
>
> I know many people who do TNR and have dedicated volunteers taking care of
> them, even trapping for vet visits. Personally, I don’t like some of the
> ways that TNR cats are provided or NOT provided for. Some groups spay cats
> and release them almost immediately, even in freezing weather (when it is a
> known fact that healing is seriously hindered) , and such consequences as
> infections, and even disembowelment due to ruptures.
> Yes, one should expect cats at such a ranch to be provided with medical
> care!
> I can’t even imagine how many people are required to seriously care for
> 700 cats!
> Natalie
>
>
>
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> . Fix the momma and you stop the spread of the disease in a feral
colony. I also do TNR and manage 2 feral colonies. The adult males and
females are released back after recovery from their surgeries. Males 1 day
and females 3-4 days as long as they are doing OK. The kittens I tame and
try to adopt out. The only way to combat PETA is to responsibly manage
these feral/hard stray colonies. My oldest feral is a 7+ year old male who
is only happy outside in his colony. We can't take all these feral/hard
strays in but we can give them a healthy, stress free life in their
colonies once they have been spayed/neutered. At least that way the
population is controlled.
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