Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, sounds like you have a solution. My friend was in a similar one and posted on his company's job board asking for an in-home cat sitter and found a colleague happy to help. Just wanted to encourage you to reach beyond people you know.
Thank you for thinking of us. The boat has sailed on this kitten, but hopefully this idea will help some else. We’ll restart our search once the repairs are done. I imagine shelters and foster homes are full right now.
Anonymous wrote:OP, are you from the DC area? The idea of using Craigslist to find a kitty in the DC area just seems really odd to me. Every county around here has an animal shelter that matches cats (and dogs and other critters) with new homes, and there are also a number of rescues that do the same.
Most of them do charge some sort of adoption fee, usually between $100-$200 in my experience--sometimes less for adult or senior animals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn’t that we won’t be home. The issue is with our home. There’s a major repair issue that has to happen and we just learned that people or pets cannot be here during.
I can ask the foster mom, but I think she has a vacation planned once she had an empty nest.
We’d accept losing this kitten if boarding would be really bad for her.
Ask the foster mom if she can hook you up with another foster mom. I've done it before.
Ugh I'm sorry I didn't read the update. I would have taken the kitten for you too.
Is this a foster mom or is it a woman who has kittens from her own cat? It's weird she "Venmoed you back the money".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn’t that we won’t be home. The issue is with our home. There’s a major repair issue that has to happen and we just learned that people or pets cannot be here during.
I can ask the foster mom, but I think she has a vacation planned once she had an empty nest.
We’d accept losing this kitten if boarding would be really bad for her.
Ask the foster mom if she can hook you up with another foster mom. I've done it before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn’t that we won’t be home. The issue is with our home. There’s a major repair issue that has to happen and we just learned that people or pets cannot be here during.
I can ask the foster mom, but I think she has a vacation planned once she had an empty nest.
We’d accept losing this kitten if boarding would be really bad for her.
Ask the foster mom if she can hook you up with another foster mom. I've done it before.
Anonymous wrote:The problem isn’t that we won’t be home. The issue is with our home. There’s a major repair issue that has to happen and we just learned that people or pets cannot be here during.
I can ask the foster mom, but I think she has a vacation planned once she had an empty nest.
We’d accept losing this kitten if boarding would be really bad for her.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, sounds like you have a solution. My friend was in a similar one and posted on his company's job board asking for an in-home cat sitter and found a colleague happy to help. Just wanted to encourage you to reach beyond people you know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^ I mean I'll take care of the kitten in my home in Nova. Tell me how to contact you,.
Thank you. I appreciate your generosity. Sadly, it’s too late. The foster mom moved fast because she has plane tickets. She arranged for a litter mate’s family to take her as well and Venmoed back what I paid for the shot and spay fee. We’re bummed, but all in all, we have bigger issues for the next three weeks. There will be another kitten. Thank you though!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn’t that we won’t be home. The issue is with our home. There’s a major repair issue that has to happen and we just learned that people or pets cannot be here during.
I can ask the foster mom, but I think she has a vacation planned once she had an empty nest.
We’d accept losing this kitten if boarding would be really bad for her.
If I'm reading you right, the kitten would be living in someone else's home for the 10 days - not kept isolated in a kennel, right? In that case it's fine!
That was the case. Boarding not kennel, but everyone said “no, it will be traumatic”. And the foster mom emailed me back quite annoyed, but having placed the kitten with a littermate
Sorry, OP. Well at least the kitten has a home - and there are so so so so so so many cats who need homes right now that you will have zero problem finding another to adopt. I know it's not the same, when you've got your heart set on one particular animal, but you and your family definitely be able to find another furry companion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn’t that we won’t be home. The issue is with our home. There’s a major repair issue that has to happen and we just learned that people or pets cannot be here during.
I can ask the foster mom, but I think she has a vacation planned once she had an empty nest.
We’d accept losing this kitten if boarding would be really bad for her.
If I'm reading you right, the kitten would be living in someone else's home for the 10 days - not kept isolated in a kennel, right? In that case it's fine!
That was the case. Boarding not kennel, but everyone said “no, it will be traumatic”. And the foster mom emailed me back quite annoyed, but having placed the kitten with a littermate