Good news! Of the three kittens that were trapped at Halcyon and Grand Avenue, the little boy went off to a good home this past weekend. The two little girls are still with their foster mom Jamie and will be going to the adopt-a-pet soon. More kittens have been trapped in Nipomo and are headed off to a foster home here in Pismo (not mine, however, my seven guys really object to the patter of little kitten feet around the house!)
I still have not been able to trap mom over at Halcyon/Grand, although many attempts have been made. Nothing more disappointing than showing up to check my traps at 6 a.m. and finding neither of them sprung, the bait food swarming with ants. So the next plan is to fasten a trap open, using grocery ties, and let the homeowner put mom's food inside the trap for a week or two until she gets used to going in. Then we set it for real and, hopefully, put an end to her kitten-producing career.
A gentleman from up on the Mesa emailed Feline Network to ask for help with a female cat he has been trying, unsuccessfully, to trap for some time now. I'm going to give it a shot and start trapping for her next week.
And I was able to help out a kind man who's been feeding a neighborhood stray, a male cat he's named Jack. Jack got neutered on Friday and went to his new home to lead a safer, more settled, and probably longer life now that he won't be out fighting with the other Toms.
Finally, my own Little Dude got his bloodwork back the other day. From having virtually NO calcium at all in his little body and having bones so brittle they fractured for no reason at all, he now has calcium levels in the HIGH normal range! This is a miracle and Dr. Conn at Cat and Exotic Care gets credit for finding the magic formula that made it happen.



