Don’t Pussyfoot Around:

Cat Woman Finds Homes For Feline Friends –

Urges Responsible Approach to Pet Neutering

 

story by Lynn Norris

pictures by Carol Strouth (RoosterPeggy SueTailKitten)

 

(published in the Westmoreland News, Sept 5, 2001:1,13)

 

Big cats, little cats, cats of every hue.

Older cats, fluffy kits, eyes green, gold and blue.

Bold ones, bobtails, cats who won’t say mewwwwww.

Rascal, China, Mabel, Jiffy, Autumn, Murphy, Rooster, Dixie,

Chester, Rocky, Grayson, Onyx, Diamond, Peggy Sue

 

Although the Cat in the Hat may not be in residence, just about any other sort of feline presence can be discerned at Wendy Erskine’s home.

 

And she’d love to send one of the 69 who presently live with her, home with you.

 

Surf by on the web at http://westmoreland.petfinder.org

 

Folks from as far away as New Jersey and North Carolina have fallen in love long distance and journeyed here to meet their feline soul mates.

 

Or call Wendy at 224-1079.

 

Heck, she’s a great counselor and helped smooth out a little dispute between me and my boy cat Harry without having met either one of us.

 

Or drop by 1248 Holly Vista in Westmoreland Shores.

 

Be warned, however.

 

“If I get somebody through that door, I’ll get ‘em a cat,” Wendy says.  “If you can’t find what you want here, you can’t find it anywhere!”

 

This woman means business.  As of August 23, she had found homes for 627 cats in the course of the past four and a half years, an average of almost three cats a week.

 

How does she do it?

 

She’ll introduce you to everybody at her house — a house which is utterly immaculate despite the fact that cats can be found in most nooks and crannies, inside and out.

 

Then she’ll elicit a profile of your household.

 

Matchmaking

 

After finding out whether there are young kids, allergies, lots of traffic, other pets, and scheduling issues, she’ll go into matchmaking mode based on her cats’ characters. Then she’ll leave you to bond with one or more potential feline members of your family.

 

If at first you don’t succeed — and some cats do change their stripes when they leave Erskine’s house for that of others — bring the kitty back and try again for that special loving relationship.

 

Hey.  When change rears its head, cats just like people don’t always just grin and bear it.

 

One peeved puss named Pudgie who was perfectly happy at Wendy’s house and didn’t even utter a single syllable there from the time she bottle-raised him as an itsy tiny baby, raised his voice in piteous and incessant yowls when he was adopted out.

 

Not once, but three times.

 

“Let the poor thing come home and stay here.  He doesn’t want to leave,” said Wendy’s fiancé Carl Short.

 

Playfulness encouraged

 

That’s understandable, considering the kind of treatment the flotsam and jetsam of the feline community receive from this kind-hearted lady.

 

Not only are their litter boxes cleaned twice a day and the food bowls full, there’s always somebody to play with.

 

Including Wendy’s daughter Sammy, 14, a W&L student, and just about every other kid in the neighborhood.

 

Wendy has always loved cats.  When she moved here four years ago, she brought eight of her own with her.

 

“One by one, more kept coming, till I had, well… way too many.

 

“Then I started adopting them out.  But every time I’d find a home for two, three more would come.”

 

Wendy emphasizes that her goal is to find homes for the cats she has already given shelter to, not take in other folks’ unwanted pets.

 

She does make exceptions for older people who must go into nursing homes and are desperate to find a home for their beloved children.

 

Sadly, these tend to be age 6 and up, which makes them less winsome than kittens and thus harder to place.  Cats can live 15-plus years if happy and well-nurtured.

 

Does Sammy love cats?

 

“Does she have a choice?” Wendy snorts rhetorically.  “Luckily, she’s really good with them.”

 

Whereupon she rhapsodizes on how Sammy can lure even the skeeriest pussycat back from unauthorized wanderings in the direction of the street.

 

Whether a cat’s the strut-around sort like Rooster, a charmer like Razzle Dazzle, or meek like wee Mouse, all of them yearn for somebody to love, Wendy points out.

 

And don’t worry about whether they’ve been christened by her or not — a visit to a vet mandates a moniker, but feel free to rename your cat when you get him home.

 

“Everybody knows ‘Kitty, kitty, kitty’ really means ‘The food’s ready.’”

 

What do the neighbors say?

 

Wendy was very conscious of the need for neighborly relations and talked with prospective neighbors before she moved here.

 

“I came here from Baltimore, where the neighbors were climbing the walls over eight cats.  They didn’t even want the cats walking through their yards!  One put in a whole back yard full of mulch landscaping, created a giant cat box, and… you guessed it.”

 

Folks here were glad to learn of her plans to re-roof, re-side and generally re-furbish a home that had fallen into disrepair some years ago, thereby removing an eyesore.

 

Only four of her cats are streetwise enough to be allowed off the property, considering the amount of traffic in the neighborhood.

 

The rest interact with nature in a large cat yard behind the house, where a network of nets and tubing keep them from climbing the trees and jumping the fence.  The chainlink fence is also topped with a cat-fence-in netting system that leans in and prevents them from swarming up and over.

 

The four wanderers are, Wendy sums it up, “fairly well-behaved.  They catch the snakes out of the ditch and take care of the mouse population.  They’re fixed.  They’re friendly.  And they’re clean.”

 

Warning

 

When you visit Wendy, whether to adopt a cat or just to meet her feline friends, you’re bound to learn a little bit about human irresponsibility, which is what has created an excess of unwanted pets.

 

“People have to take responsibility for spaying and neutering their cats,” Wendy points out gently.  She’s always ready to hand out a list of vets whose price for the job is affordable. 

 

See list below, low-cost spaying and neutering

 

That means folks won’t have to pick between getting their human children the shoes, food and clothes they need or taking proper care of their animal friends.

 

If you don’t want a cat, perhaps you’d like to help.

 

Things that come in handy include kitty litter (the clumping kind), IAMS catfood (just that kind, please) and money (Wendy has very high vet bills).

 

Or empty aluminum cans — they don’t have to be washed or crushed, just bagged.  You can drop the bags at Wendy’s and Carl’s house, or if you have a lot, he’ll swing by in his truck and pick them up.

 

Low-cost neutering

 

If you need help spaying or neutering your cat, call one or more of the following numbers.  A slot will probably open up within a month of your initial call.

 

PAWS — 804-333-6393

Colonial Beach Humane Society — 224-2122

Lucky Ones — 540-775-7387

Well-Pet Clinic — 301-866-0303

Kincheloe Clinic –  540-834-0080