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Helping Stray Cat and Kittens?

The stray cat that I have been feeding gave birth to a liter of five kittens two weeks ago. The box that they were living in was too small and smelled awful so my neighbor and I decided to transfer the kittens into a bigger box. We used the same bedding as the old box and moved them rather quickly as the mom was eating.

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Now two of the five kittens are missing and mom won't go into the new box to feed the remaining three. What do we do now?

By bobby from Philadelphia, PA

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Silver Post Medal for All Time! 398 Posts
March 27, 20100 found this helpful
Best Answer

She is stressed and will keep on moving them. I would take the kittens that are not getting fed and bottle feed them and put them in the bathtub on some blankets or rags that keep them from getting on the cold porcelain and put a heater in the bathroom, using caution about fires, and also put a sock filled with rice knotted and microwaved about a minute or more and cover that with a rag or a hot water bottle. I like to keep it warm in there but not hot..each time you go in there, change any soiled areas, and wash bed blankets frequently. I like this because I can assure myself they are having bowel movements and are not dehydrated. I would bottle feed them all if she is going to abandon them which strays often do. Here is my favorite homemade formula, better than store bought.

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Baby Kitten Formula

1/2 cup evaporated milk
enough homemade pedialyte to make it liquefy
Spoonful of Mayo, real mayo.
Three small drops infant vitamin drops from the store

I had about nine kittens to feed so I would mix t his up and feed them with an eyedropper or bottle you really have to cut the hole in the nipple pretty bi or they cant get it out if you buy a bottle from the vet.

After I would put it in a eyedropper and later little tiny bowls for them to lap it up. I would clean their faces and paws with aloe baby wipes and go over their pee pee area with a piece of toilet tissue, wet, and hold their butts over the trash can and see if they pee. The really young ones will just leave a wet mark on the tissue and the older ones will have a stream.

They will die without this. Also go over their butts and pee pee areas each time they eat. Tell them they are so good when they are peeing, it scares them. always lovingly talk to them.

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Love them all through this whole thing, this is scary. Use aloe baby wipes to bathe them and it repels fleas in young kittens.

Have fun loving these babies and when they are about seven weeks or six weeks, put them on freecycle.org, choose towns nearby, and offer to deliver or meet halfway at a grocery store parking lot, and specify a good home only and don't give them to the first one who replies, go over each email and screen them by looking at what kind of environment they will be going to.

Excect for freecycle, if you put an and in the paper, charge an amount so there will be no bunchers, fighters or otherwise undesirable people collecting them. If you have the time write the local humane society or call and ask if they have vouchers for neutering or spaying and don't do the surgery before they are mature..it stunts their urethral growth.

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Blessings, Racer

 
 

Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 205 Posts
March 26, 20100 found this helpful

You should move the other three back to where the mother has moved the 2. Use gloves tho so as little of your scent as possible gets on them. She felt safe in the original box. With strays like that, you should leave them where they are. If the smell is offensive to you, just grin and bear it till this litter is grown out of it, then you can clean it up and replace it if that's what you want to do.

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If the mother still won't feed the other three, you'll have to become a step-mom to them and bottle feed them yourself. You can buy kitten milk at pet stores, and sometimes Wal Mart has it too. Good luck!

 

Silver Post Medal for All Time! 398 Posts
March 27, 20100 found this helpful

I always kept mine in the tub until someone had to bathe and then they would go to a large plastic tub, the kind you store things in, with blankets in there and when the person was through they would go back in the bathtub.

I have kept litters in tubs, the plastic ones, but I like the bathroom bathtub better. It would be great to find an old bathtub and use it for them. It is so nice! Blessings, Robyn

 
March 27, 20100 found this helpful

Now there are two kittens in the box and three missing. Mom is back in the box and nursing the two of them, but where are the others.

 

Gold Post Medal for All Time! 846 Posts
March 30, 20100 found this helpful

There was most likely something wrong with the three kittens that are no longer there. I know it sounds awful but it's animal instinct to take the weak or sick ones away to die :-( It's also possible that mama has her own nutrition deficiency. In that case she would definitely choose the strongest babies that she knows will survive with her own limited resources to feed them.

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Please just leave them alone and let nature take it's course unless she completely abandons the remaining babies. Once they are completely weaned you can take them in and find homes for them.

 

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