Daily Archives: April 14, 2016

You’ve Heard Of Police Dogs? Well, Now There Are … Police Cats!

Range Cat nurses her newborn kittens at the Alexandria Police Department’s shooting range. (Source: KALB)

ALEXANDRIA, LOUISIANA — There is absolutely no doubt that you have heard of police dogs. Hmmm, but, have you ever heard of police kittens?

Just last year, the director of the Alexandria, Louisiana Police Department’s range rescued a young cat who had been hit by a car. Now, that cat is expanding her own family and bringing APD officers along for the ride.

“People have come by just to see the kittens,” said Sgt. Chris Wolf, who is director of the range, and the police officer who rescued the mother cat last year.

Tucked deep inside the building at the police department’s range, buried beneath old shooting targets where they also store boxes of bullets, are four tiny, new additions to the APD family - kittens.

“A few days ago, we noticed she was putting on a little bit of weight,” states Sgt. Wolf. “Low and behold, I came into the office and opened up the office and we have four, very small, pretty healthy looking range kittens.”

But, before you meet the babies, you have to be introduced to their mama. She’s a bit of a celebrity there on the range. Her name is fittingly, Range Cat.

“Absolutely a celebrity,” said Sgt. Wolf. “People come by just to see Range Cat.”


It’s a face, be it one with four legs, police officers and cadets have gotten quite used to seeing.

“Range kitty? It was strange,” said Lacy Fields, an Alexandria Police Department cadet. “But, everyone kind of took to her quick.”

Sgt. Wolf found Range Cat when she was still a kitten a year ago, after she had been hit by a car.

“The cat, for all intents and purposes, had died,” he said. “The cat came back, and she had been out here ever since.”

She seems to follow Sgt. Wolf around wherever he goes, and is making new friends along the way.

“It’s insanely sweet,” said Fields. “He’s really great with her.”

“Last week, four new range cats showed up, in the form of “range kittens.” They think they know who the dad is.

“He’s a local guy,” said Sgt. Wolf. “And, hopefully he’ll come back and see the children and maybe help out here and there.”

After the kittens are weened successfully, they’ll go home for good with some police officers. As for Range Cat, she’ll remain at the place she calls home, with her extended police family.

The officers tell us they are looking to get Range Cat spayed so there are no more surprise “range kittens” in the future.

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“Miracle Tuxedo Kitty” Recovering After Being Shot 30 TIMES With Pellet Gun!


An X-ray of Puss-Puss’s body reveals the extent of the pellets which hit her

ESSEX, UK - A cat has “miraculously” survived a shotgun attack which left her entire body riddled with about 30 separate wounds, according to an animal charity.

The RSPCA said three-year-old Puss-Puss will need her eye removed after she was shot near her home in Ardleigh, Colchester, Essex.

She had pellet wounds all over her body and also her head and the charity described her survival as “miraculous”.

Her injuries were only discovered when she returned home on Friday from being outside.

Her owner, Doug Taw, remembers hearing some gun shots in the area before the black-and-white cat went missing for a week.

Mr Taw stated: “I just can’t think what sort of person could have done this to her.

“We heard some gunshots but didn’t imagine at first it could have anything to do with Puss-Puss.

The owner of Puss says he was heartbroken to see her in such a distressed state

“Then we found her crouched under a car, frightened and injured. She ran off and we couldn’t find her for a week.

“I was beside myself with worry. Then she eventually dragged herself back in a terrible state and we rushed her straight to the vet.
“It is heartbreaking seeing her in such a distressed state, and I am so upset that she will now lose her eye.

“It is a miracle she survived but it’s going to take a lot for her to get back to her normal self, and she will obviously always bear the scars now.”

RSPCA inspector Adam Jones stated: “We were shocked to find that Puss-Puss was peppered with such an extraordinary number of pellet wounds all over her body and head.

“One was in her paw, making it hard for her to walk, and another in the middle of her eye - causing a detached retina.

The vet said two had just missed her spinal cord and it is a miracle she survived.”

We here at The Best Cat Page wish this poor kitty a speedy recovery!

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Pet Cat, Truman, Saved by New, Cutting Edge Rescue Equipment Following Fire

GREENEVILLE, TENNESSEE - When it comes to rescues, firefighters aren’t only there for us humans.

After being called to a house fire which happened at Alderman Drive early Wednesday, crews from the Greeneville Fire Department were fast to pull Truman the cat from the smoke-filled home, extinguish the flames and work to revive him.

With Truman unconscious with labored, firefighters relied on some of the newest equipment added to their trucks: oxygen masks designed specifically for cats and dogs.

Back in 2015, Rocky Top Veterinary Clinic and Knoxville-based Invisible Fence company provided pet oxygen masks to all four of the Greeneville fire stations as part of an initiative called “Project Breathe.”

The masks differ from those which are commonly used on humans.

A special valve forces oxygen into a pet’s air passages. Human masks, with a continuous oxygen flow, aren’t very helpful to animals unless they’re already breathing.

Firefighters completed special training on using the masks and performing pet-specific cardio-pulmonary resuscitation back in 2015.

However, Wednesday marked the first time they’ve need to rely on the gear in an actual emergency.

When firefighters emerged from the home with Truman cradled in their arms, Greeneville police called on officials from the Greeneville-Greene County Humane Society to help.

After receiving oxygen for approximately 30 minutes, Truman began to regain consciousness and Human Society Manager Amy Bowman as then able to transport him to Duckworth Animal Hospital, where he continues his recovery.

“Dr. Stacia Cook updated us on the cat’s condition this afternoon,” Bowman said Wednesday, describing Truman as “resting, but traumatized.”

“It will be at least a week before the full extent of the damage from smoke inhalation will be known,” she said.

Greeneville Fire Chief Alan Shipley checked on Truman late Wednesday evening, and noted that he was breathing on his own and responding to humans.

“Hopefully this will have a good outcome,” Shipley said.

The chief added that firefighters are often questioned about pet rescues.

“When we go to schools, we tell kids and they know not to go back inside a burning building. But, they always ask, ‘What about my pet?'” he said. “We do go back and get them, too.”

Bowman said she was struck by the compassion all of the firefighters demonstrated as Truman was suffering from smoke inhalation.

“I was so impressed with the firefighters and police officers when I arrived on the scene,” she said. “The fire appeared to have been extinguished and the firefighters and police officers were in the front yard, surrounding the cat and tending to his injuries. All showed great sympathy and concern for this little cat.”

In addition to the Greeneville Fire Department, “Project Breathe” has also provided the Tusculum Volunteer Fire Department with some pet-specific oxygen masks.

Local fire departments not already equipped with the masks can learn more about the “Project Breathe” donation program and even fill out a request form at www.invisiblefence.com/why-invisible-fence/project-breathe.

A Lost Grandmother, Her Dog and Her Cat Survive 9 Days in the Arizona Wilderness …

ARIZONA - Ann Rodgers, 72, spelled out the word, “HELP” on the floor of a canyon. She included a handwritten note under one of the rocks, which explained her precarious situation.

Rodgers, who was reported missing back on March 31, wandered in the wilderness for nine days before helicopters spotted her clear-headed message, says the Huffington Post.

The grandma was driving from Tucson to Phoenix to see her grandchildren her car ran out of gas. She had also used up the charge in her hybrid vehicle. She tried to call for help, but couldn’t catch a signal.

She stayed inside the car the first night, where she was reasonably warm and had food and water. She had her dog, Queenie, and her cat, Nike, in the car with her.

The next day, she wandered off the road, climbing several ridges just trying to get a connection. She took Queenie with her, and left Nike in the car with some food and water.

After spending the night on the ridge, she realized she was in serious trouble.

“I realized I was in a situation that had to change very quickly.”

She and her dog risked being attacked by bears and possibly mountain lions, not to mention stumbling upon rattlesnake.

She said that she had a pair of binoculars with her, so she was able to spot the river, and so she hiked down to it.

She was carrying a lighter with her, so she was able to build signal fires and keep herself and her fur-babies warm at night.

Her dog, Queenie, was eating clover, and also scavenged the carcass of an elk. Rodgers said that Queenie was her “pathfinder,” showing her the best routes through even the thickest brush.

Rodgers herself has been doing survival training for many years.

Rodger’s car was discovered on the side of a remote road on April 3, thus beginning a multi-agency search. Among them were the Arizona department of public safety air rescue unit, White River Indian Reservation officials, and also the Tonto Rim search and rescue.

Besides multiple ground searches, two separate aerial searches were also involved.

During the first few days, officials weren’t able to find any tracks.

Gila County Sheriff’s Detective Johnny Holmes told The Guardian that around the sixth day, they were losing all hope of finding Rodgers alive.

“We were expecting the worst but hoping for the best at that point.”

On April 9, a group of hikers found tracks by the bed of a creek. They called for an aerial search, saying they thought Rodgers might have been close. The helicopters flew over the canyon and spotted the “HELP” sign she had created.

Holmes said that rescuers also found the note Rodgers had left under one of the rocks.

“The note said she had been without food for three days and that she was going to continue looking for a ranch and going down stream.”

Ground searchers found Rogers’ dog after that, and about 15 minutes later, the lost grandma was spotted from a helicopter.

Holmes called the rescue an absolute miracle.


“It’s a miracle on its own that she’s still here given she was out there that many days. The probabilities of finding her alive were really low.”
An NBC 12 reporter asked Rodgers if she felt like a miracle.
“No, what I feel like is a survivor.”

Rodgers handled her nine days very well, everything considered.

After rescue workers air lifted her to a hospital in Payson, she was released within mere hours. She is now back in her home in Tucson.

Nike the cat is doing just fine. Queenie the dog is doing just fine too, and finally “getting some meat back on her bones,” Rodgers said.

Holmes expressed his admiration for Rodgers’ resourcefulness. He has not met her, but he said that he hopes he will.

“She’s an amazing person just from what I know from me dealing with the search on this end of it. I’d love to shake her hand one day.”

Rodgers said that her whole family was waiting in Payson when she was released from the hospital. She told Fox News she was looking forward to taking a shower.

Photo credit: Randy Andy, Shutterstock

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Pregnant Cat Arrives at Health Clinic in Turkey Meowing for Some Help …


Photo courtesy of local news website Bitlis 13 Haber

Animals are much more intelligent than many people give them credit for, and this cat is no exception.

A pregnant cat in southeastern Bitlis province of Turkey meowed for help in front of the local family health center as her contractions started to become too hard to endure.

According to local news website Bitlis 13 Haber, the heartwarming and astounding incident happened on Wednesday as a cat in labor started to meow at the door of the No.2 health center in Tatvan district when she realized she was having some complications in giving birth to her kittens.

The nurses let her in but they didn’t know just what was wrong with the pregnant kitty.

They soon realized that despite moments of intense labor the cat wasn’t able to deliver a kitten so, they called the municipality vet.

After being taken to the Tatvan Municipality Stray Animal Neutering and Rehabilitation Center, vet Sefer Durmuş saw that the cat was having a lot of difficulty with natural birth so he took her in for a caesarean section (more commonly known as c-section).

The cat gave birth to a total of four healthy kittens and Durmuş said that the mother was in good condition after the operation.

The cat realized she couldn’t do it on her own, so what better place to go than a Health Clinic? What a smart kitty!

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10 Most Expensive Breeds of Cats, From 10 to 1 …

Most of us cat lovers are fully aware of the different breeds of cats that are available for a hefty price! But how many of us are aware of just how much they cost to buy?

This list must be seen to be believed!

10.Ragdoll ($800-$1.100)

9.American Curl ($800-$1.200)

8.Sphynx ($900-$1.200)

7.Scotish Fold Cat ($800-$1.500)

6.Russian Blue Cat ($1.000-$1.700)

5.The Peterbald ($1.700-$3.000)

4.Persian (around $3.000)

3.The Bengal ($3.000-$5.000)

2.The Savannah (around $25.000)

And last but certainly not least …

1.Ashera ($75.000-$125.000)

Or better yet, just go to your local shelter … and give a deserving kitty the chance of a lifetime!

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Cat Stuck Inside Car Fender Takes Ride From Mexico to Oceanside - VIDEO

A cat that became trapped in the front fender of a car took an epic trip from Mexico to Oceanside in Southern California.

The Oceanside Fire Department posted video on its Facebook page showing firefighters rescuing the cat back on March 21.

The person who alerted firefighters said he drove from Mexico to his home in Oceanside — about 54 miles from the U.S.-Mexico border — having no idea that cat was even there!

A firefighter wearing gloves can be seen in the video pulling the cat free from beneath the front fender of the car. The cat then loudly meows and tries to run away.

Fire officials said that the animal was taken to the humane society.

No one is able to explain how the cat got beneath the bumper.

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Meet Rory! Adorable “Dashboard Kitty” Loving and Enjoying Life! - VIDEO

Rory is the best dashboard ornament a driver could hope for!

A photo posted by Rory Da Roarier (@its_rorrry) on

Known by his followers as “the dashboard cat,” the pictures you see here aren’t just a one time thing. Apparently Rory LOVES to relax and kick back on his human’s dashboard!

We’ve all heard of the dreaded “backseat driver.” Rory has his own cute approach!

Rory is a rescue cat. He was rescued back in 2015 and sadly, he suffers from feline leukemia virus. but that doesn’t seem to slow him down at all from enjoying life!

Rory’s social medias are dedicate to raising awareness for shelter animals.

VIDEO HERE:

A video posted by Rory Da Roarier (@its_rorrry) on

What an adorable cat!

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Kitten Rescued from Streets Getting Ready to Eat a Good Hearty Meal - VIDEO

The charity of a rescuer by the name of Ayesha Mohan changed the life of this beautiful kitten forever. He was found on the streets of Goa, India and she took him to her hotel. The kind-hearted woman realized the wee one had probably never had a proper mean. This kitty meowed so much it was if he was trying to communicate just how happy and grateful he was for the food he was about to receive.

Best part of all, the kitten WAS adopted.

Moral of the story? Cats are grateful for everything we humans do for them and each has his or her own unique way of letting us know it!

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