Hello, All:
This is my first post here, and I'm sad because it concerns my lost
cat, Albert.
I have been doing a LOT of reading online about lost cat behavior, and
judging from what I've read, I do NOT think that Albert is a "typical"
lost cat...but I would like to know if I'm wrong about that!!!!!
About 1 p.m. on Saturday, July 16, Albert our neutered, indoor-only cat
was accidentally let out of our house by our 3-year-old. He did not
tell us he had let Albert out, and we went to dinner and a movie with
friends.
So basically, Albert had approximately a 6-hour headstart before we
even knew he was gone!
Albert was born in our house and it is the only home he has ever known.
HERE THE REASONS WHY I THINK ALBERT IS NOT A TYPICAL INDOOR-ONLY CAT:
1) First of all, for the past 6 months, Albert has REALLY been trying
to get out of the house. There is a worn spot on our front door where
Albert constantly scratched to get out. For the past couple of months,
you had to watch your feet when you went out of the house because
Albert would dash outside. When Albert wasn't scratching at the door,
he would sit by the door and moan.
2) In the days after Albert escaped, I went door-to-door asking
neighbors about him. Based on what people have told me and what I saw
for myself, the timeline of Albert's actions on July 16 and the early
morning hours of July 17 goes like this:
1 p.m.: Albert escapes our house.
6 p.m.: Albert is seen in the back yard of a house that is FIVE houses
away from mine. He lies in this back yard until after dark.
11:30 p.m.: I see Albert in the back yard of my next-door neighbor. I
call to him and begin climbing our backyard fence to enter the
neighbor's yard, but Albert disappears into the shadows. THIS IS THE
LAST TIME I EVER SAW HIM.
5:00 a.m., July 17: A neighbor that is TWELVE houses away from me sees
Albert next to his house as he returns from his night shift job. He is
fairly certain that it was Albert when he sees a photo of Albert. THIS
IS THE LAST POSITIVE SIGHTING OF ALBERT.
3) If the cat in all of the sightings in the timeline is indeed
Albert...then I have to assume that ALBERT IS TRAVELING, AND HE IS
TRAVELING QUITE A BIT. One of the things that is SO worrying about
Albert is that it seems like he had MADE UP HIS MIND about getting out
and getting away. He seems to have escaped and is making tracks with NO
thought of returning!
I want to think that he is simply being a "Classic Cover" cat and is
somewhere very close by, but judging from the extreme distance that he
covered IN JUST THE FIRST 18 HOURS -- plus the fact that he seems to
have dropped COMPLETELY off the face of the earth -- makes me think
that he is gone for good. :(
I HAVE SOME BURNING QUESTIONS! PLEASE ANSWER WITH ANY INFORMATION YOU
THINK IS RELEVANT!
1) Do cats have a "homing instinct"? Do they often head out in a
straight line for great distances and then turn around and come back?
2) I know that it is possible that someone might have adopted Albert.
But would it be possible that Albert is sitting in another house and
NOT wanting to go outside anymore? I would think that Albert would not
want to stay full-time in ANYONE'S house.
3) How can I shake the feeling that Albert is no longer anywhere in my
area? Why should I believe that he is staying close to home like a
"typical" indoor-only cat? Should I pay attention to my gut feeling
that Albert is nowhere near me, or should I ignore it?
4) I have heard a frightening thing: Indoor-only cats, because they
have not marked their territory, cannot recognize their home territory
and therefore their sense of smell is useless for finding their way
home. IS THIS TRUE?
5) Do indoor-only cats usually try to come back home, or has Albert
decided that he doesn't want to be our cat anymore?
HERE IS WHAT I HAVE DONE TO GET ALBERT BACK: I have put a flyer with a
clear photo on it in every mailbox in a 2-block radius. I have put
neon-yellow signs up on every light pole in a 5-block radius. (I have
gotten several calls but when I check up on them, the cat is never
Albert.) I have managed to rent a trap from a local pet agency and have
caught a couple of cats, but of course, NO ALBERT. :( I have been
putting food out in the front and back of my house, and I have also
hung some of my T-shirts on the back fence.
I keep hearing and reading about all of these cats that come back to
their owner's houses, sometimes after long absences, but given all of
the facts in this case, I just don't see it happening with Albert.
TOMORROW WILL BE EXACTLY 2 WEEKS SINCE ALBERT LEFT US. MY HOPES ARE
FADING. PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE...CAN SOMEONE HELP ME KEEP MY HOPES UP?
I don't want to give up on Albert, but it really doesn't look like he
is anywhere around. :-(
EADGBE - 30 Jul 2005 05:00 GMT
(Whoops...this wasn't really my first post here. Sorry for the
mistake. I also posted this on rec.pets.cats.rescue, and it WAS my
first post over there.)
Barrnabas Collins - 30 Jul 2005 16:11 GMT
>This is my first post here, and I'm sad because it concerns my lost
>cat, Albert.
Have you checked with Admiral Halsey?
I would point out i've heard of cats who disappeared for six months
or more but suddenly returned. (Maybe was a stow away in
a car/package/RV/etc.)
Around here a family came home from vacation to find a cat
in their garage. (It was apprently there for a month.). It has a
tag, (the phone number and address were not in this state.)
Also it should be pointed out cat law is different from dog
law, a cat can have several owners none of whom know
about the others.
So yes your cat may return someday. Your cat may also
have a half dozen people who think they own him.
Did the cat have a collar with full name, address, phone #?
Was the cat chipped?
I hope you do find your cat.
------------------------------------------
http://www.barnabascollins.blogspot.com
Kalyahna - 30 Jul 2005 17:09 GMT
> HERE IS WHAT I HAVE DONE TO GET ALBERT BACK: I have put a flyer with a
> clear photo on it in every mailbox in a 2-block radius. I have put
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> putting food out in the front and back of my house, and I have also
> hung some of my T-shirts on the back fence.
Put out new flyers, letting people know he still hasn't returned. If people
aren't updated, they may assume you've found him. If you DO find him (he may
very well still just saunter on home one night), please let people know - at
least the people in whose mailboxes you've been putting the flyers. If you
can afford it, put "REWARD" on the light pole flyers. Some people, sadly,
may not care if it's just a good samaritan thing on their end. Put the light
pole flyers further away, as well.
Get copies of that photo to put on the flyers, and distribute them to ALL
vets in your area, ALL shelters and animal control agencies. Note any
unusual markings he might have (is he declawed, is he neutered, does he have
a white spot above his left eye, things like that) ON the flyers. Anything
that will help people look at it and go, 'hey, I might have seen that cat.'
If you have shelters in your area, take your photo with you and go in and
look around for yourself at all the public areas. Ask to see the unavailable
areas to look for your cat. Ask if they partner with anyone else - if he was
turned in and his health checked out and he was made available for adoption,
is there a pet store he might have been sent to, or a rescue? Check and see
if you have a county shelter - if the cat was picked up or turned it, it
might be a significant drive, but it's possible he WAS turned in (I work for
a county shelter - we do literally get in stray animals from the entire
county). Check your local papers! My hometown is 20,000 people w/ only
animal control, but if someone turns in a stray, it shows up in the paper.
Go see for yourself! Their descriptions are rarely spot-on! Your papers
might offer a free report on Albert, too, that they'll run for a few days.
It's worth checking. Especially if you're willing to pay a little bit and
maybe put in a classified ad w/ a black and white photo of Albert. Find out
where the animal control in your area takes their pick-ups.
Please don't give up hope. Animals HAVE been returned to their owners after
longer than two weeks (a very sweet cat was brought in a few days ago - we
found a match for her in our books from late May, and it WAS the right cat).