TNR is awesome and I wish more people would help with that in their areas. I did TNT. Trap, Neuter, Tame with a family of 46 feral cats. I found 85% of them new homes after they were tamed, some met untimely ends, and 7 of them I ended up keeping as part of my family. It wasn't easy and I could have bought a new car with all the money I spent on the cats but even if I could rewind time I would do it all again. - Heidi
God bless you and people like you. I pray someday people will wake up and spay and neuter their animals. It would save so much heartache and pain for us and the animals. If everybody took care of their own animals we would never have this problem. And my heart aches for the animals that have no home, are scared hungry and in pain. Never give up. keep doing what you’re doing. I do what I can do and I donate to the TNR programs because they do work. It’s the people that don’t work when they keep dropping off their unspayed and un neutered cats. ❤❤❤❤
You deserve a lot of credit. Thanks. I wish we could get more help from community shelters to help citizens tnr ferels. However, it seems no one wants to help.
Thank you for doing that for the 46 cats! That's a big accomplishment. There's a large group of us around the Hilton Head, South Carolina area that feed the community cats & I do most of the trapping. I've trapped at least 400 cats & kittens and work with the local shelter that takes the kittens trapped, socializes & places them. It does get to be exhausting because it's a never-ending problem and more people need to get involved..❤
This past summer, with the help of my local Animal Services, we trapped, neutered/spayed, and released 23 ferals and strays in my neighborhood. No more litters for me to worry about and I still get to meet and greet all my feral/stray kitties every day when I feed them!
all of us in our neighborhood tried this with success but other cats got dropped off in our neighborhood and here we go again. It doesnt work... one year later and we have at least 6 new litters of kittens. That and the fact that we have 3 cat ladies in our neighborhood that feed them all and put collars on them and we now have counted over 60 feral cats on one street.
That doesnt mean it doesnt work. Your neighborhood just have people who are making the problem worse. If anything it would have become a bigger issue since the ladies you talke about would still feed the ferals.
I live in Sunbury Pennsylvania. and we have some very dishonest cat trappers (TNRS) here,, they steal everyones pets,, they dont release the cats back to where they trapped them ,and they rehome peoples pets, and even kill them,, ,they even take cats that have tipped ears and collars,,,this cat trapping needs to be made illegal,,,,just leave the cats alone !!!!
Great video on TNR. I help feed a colony of feral cats near where I live in London, UK. I'm constantly checking on them, looking out for new cats that don't have their ears tipped. A rescue centre called Celia Hammond Animal Trust comes out to TNR all over London and the South East. I spotted my recent rescue cat Ally just sitting on a brick wall and they spayed her for me. I have lots of respect for the all the humans out there who work tirelessly for these cats. I've seen firsthand what a difference you guys are making. Well done and thanks to Cole and Marmalade and their humans for highlighting this issue. xxx
I like your recent rescue cats name, Ally. It reminded me that we almost named our daughter Allie Catherine, Allie Cat for short. (Allie was grandmas name).
Thank you so much!! Just watched this yesterday. Set the trap for a practice run last night to see if the feral kitty would take the bait. It did and I've trapped it tonight. Right now it's got 200sq. ft. of my house to get used to being inside. From the time it showed up I planned to keep it but there were complications, plus I was intimidated by the whole act. Also, I was getting vague to no information from some local the Local Humane Society let me borrow the trap. I couldn't have done it without this video! Thank you Chris and Jackson, and special thanks to Cole and Marmalade😻p.s. Kitty will be neutered when of age and have the perfect indoor/outdoor lifestyle that will be the envy of all cats.
Thank you for this video. It gives me confidence that I can get involved with TNR in my community. I took in a stray a five and a half years ago that was ear tipped (not knowing what that meant until the vet told us!). He is our friendliest, most loving cat. We also rescued a semi-feral and her 5 kittens, but we socialized them and didn't have to go the live trap route.
Please note that you have to return the cat to the place that you trapped them. Bad things happen when they get released into unfamiliar territory. and, Wow. I did not know that TNR has been a thing for so long. Your comment is 6 yrs back, and you adopted an ear-tipped stray five years prior to that! We also adopted a friendly, beat up, ear-tipped cat. It seems that sometimes previous house cats get dumped, or just plain lost, and miss their home environment. I cant imagine how many more cats would be out on the streets without this program.
Where I live most of the time if the strays are not trapped and fixed their life expectancy is not long, either coyotes, hawks, owls, cars or poison is their demise. In the town next to me there is a program in which trap, spay/neuter and release back to the location where they were trapped. There is no such program in my town. I find it a benefit to my home. Even though they are not adoptable they are great with me, each other and any rescue I bring in. One of my feral, Ivan, helped me out tremendously with an abandoned Lab that was sick. Ivan stayed with him from the minute they met until the moment Tommy died. Tommy seemed more at ease with Ivan near. Everything happens for a reason and for what it's worth, I'm sure there are many more reasons I was intended to keep these babies.
@cyndy can you suggest any tips to do if you intend to try and keep the feral cat as a domestic pet ? At least as an outdoor cat that likes to come inside once inawhile. This cat in question is nearly 2 year old male ... been hanging out in my back yard that long anyways ... saw him when he looked 6 months old I guess. (New Orleans) Last summer he started looking rather scraggly skinny ... so I started putting out kibble for him , then he started looking better ... But it has brought around other cats and racoons. I want to stop that but keep him. Any suggestions after I trap him and get his balls chopped ? By the way ... he never gets closer than about 15ft so far ... but he does know the routine to let me know he wants to be fed.
Mk101T ,if you can find a vet that will neuter this feral guy then trap him, take in and have it done, bring him home and keep him in a small room so he does not have many options to hide and not be found. make sure he has all the necessary stuff, litter box, food and water and just go in and be in his space everyday. offer tuna by hand, he will come around. but if you don't get him neutered your chances of taming him will decrease greatly. can't let him out after this though
I did it a little differently. I got a feral cat to trust me over about a month, feeding her and encouraging her to sleep inside. Then I adopted her. No trap necessary, and now we're best buds.
I borrowed a cat trap from my local APL to catch a cat I was feeding outside for awhile to try and gain its trust (didn't work). I put the food in, it went in, ate the food and walked out... I took it inside, left it open on accident, I left and when I came home my cat was trapped in it and there wasn't even food in it LOL. I tried for months to catch this cat but gave up and just made him an insulated shelter out of a storage bin. He was a very smart cat.
Yeah in this case you should try a drop trap that you make yourself. These traps are far less obvious than a cage trap. However you need to know how to transfer a drop trapped cat into a cage afterwards.
I actually adopted my first cat through a TNR program...basically the older cats were fixed and released, while the kittens were fixed and adopted, and the adoption fees kept the program running. In the area she came from, there are a lot of summer-only residents, and there are quite a few people who will adopt a cat for the summer, and before they leave to go home will release the cat into the woods to fend for itself. The majority of these cats haven't been spayed or neutered, which just adds to the local feral cat population. TNR really has been the best possible option for that small community, and 6 years later I'm still thrilled that my baby girl Molly came to me through that program (plus I'd like to think that she's still happy to have found a safe place where she has humans to boss around!)
Hello, i had given this idea to Cole and Marmalade. The idea was to make a all in one pyjamas like Cole and one looking like Marmalade plus slippers one foot like Cole and one foot like Marmalade. I hope they will make it. It will be the Puurfect Cosy kit for the evening and cold night.
When I was little, we found a stray cat- an orange tabby- and we named him Tiger. We fed him for a while and then took him to our non-profit, no-kill animal shelter- and found that he had been adopted within the next few days! I'm so glad he got a nice home, and hopefully he got neutered as well. :)
Chris, your family of four are the greatest. When ever I feel a little in the dump I tune into Marmalade and Cole. They make me smile, laugh, and tear, (tears of joy) smile. The work you do along with others that have beautiful, loving spirits to help other being that can't help themselves is remarkable. Thanks to people like you give me hope in humanity. Marmalade and Cole are prime examples of how all animals should live on this earth, HAPPY! and Chris I know if you had it like that, that's the way it would be. I love you Chris and all the other great humanitarian that work along with you. Thank you and may GOD continue to bless you all. Nov. 9 2016
I put a little food at the back, in a way that they can't stick their paws through and drag it out. But I also put a few pieces of treats just outside the opening, and a few pieces leading them ever inwards towards the back. And I add catnip: a little hint just outside the opening, a tiny bit just inside the opening with a trail towards the back where the food is, and a small pile at the back, the jackpot pile.
I trapped one stray/feral, he is quite healthy, we have a shelter for him and feed him 3 times a day, we have named him Stanley ! I absolutely love him x
Hey there Chris and Jackson, my neighbors just called to ask for help with a stray cat that just showed up in their backyard. I borrowed the Have-a-heart trap from another neighbor and went over to check out the situation. Turns out she is very obviously pregnant. She's not feral because she let me touch her went i offered her some food. Set up the trap per your instructions and within 5 minutes we had her in the trap. She is now on her way to the Animal Rescue League to get checked out and some more food and indoor shut eye. Hopefully her kittens will all be healthy and all will get adopted. Thanks for your advice about using this type of trap.
I have TNR 9 cats. I have a small bathroom that I kept them in. I put a litter box in the bathroom and food and water. I found that if I kept the trap covered I could leave one side open. I knocked before entering the bathroom and they always hide in the trap. I was able to keep them this way so they had longer to recover. I had two feral cats get out of the first trap demonstrated in the video. We had to reinforce the frame of the door, that swings shut, with metal bracing. The trap would twist letting the cats escape. I wish this video had been up when I first started TNR. Great information. Thanks.
I really hope that these cages are only used by good people in order to help cats. I hate to think that some people might misuse tutorials like that to catch cats and to abuse them for their sick fun. I look forward to the day when no animal is being hurt anymore.
I used to ditch school a lot in high school. I didn't do drugs, I just didn't want to be there. I ended up in a lot of residential areas with outdoor cats who were clearly well groomed and well fed, and....cats who'd been straight-up abandoned. Mangey fur, scuffle marks here and there. Fleas galore. Ticks, possibly. But they were so friendly and so sweet. I ended up using my black sweatshirt to cover them (So they wouldn't be worried about seeing themselves leave their familiar area) as I took them home to take them to an animal shelter. I fed them, I put them in the kitty carrier, gave them water, kept them away from my ABSOLUTELY FURIOUS home cat (Which yes, cats are territorial, this is expected). The way I figured, even if they were euthanized for being so skinny and mangey, that's a better death than starving, or being mauled by a dog, or being hit by a car. I still hope those cats found loving owners. They were good cats. I wish I could be the same way with stray dogs that I see, but I feel like the potential to be mauled outweighs the possible benefit of helping them out in some way. Cats don't maul unless cornered, at least, when treated properly.
Wow, you took a feral to an animal shelter?!?!? That's certain death right there. What an angel of death. Better to take them to a feral rescue organization for treatment. They're far more capable of dealing with ferals than the death chamber animal shelters.
Oh I've seen this fella before. Long while ago some video about training a cat not to meow all night. Well you and Cole and Marmalade did a fabulous job. Posting this on my Facebook to spread the word. We must help spay and neuter!
cat 1: DUDE! I haven't seen you in two days!!! cat 2: dude, this human put me in a cage, brought me to a building, and guess what??? cat1: WHAT?!?!!?!? cat 2: THEY CUT MY BALLS OFF!!! cat 1: MEE-WOW!!! did it hurt??? cat 2: eh, they put this stuff on me that make me not feel it. it still feels blubberey. cat 1: cat 2: cat1: cat 2: so wanna steal some Starbucks cat 1: YOU BETCHA!
Thanks for the tips! I used them to catch a feral cat in my backyard who I leave food out for. There is a service in my city that will spay/neuter and vaccinate, then house them while they recover, then return cats for you for free, but you have to trap the kitty yourself and bring it to their vet office. If anyone is in a similar situation as I was, you should google to see if this type of service is offered in your city. Beats paying $$$ to get it done and keeping them in your home yourself while they recover. So I brought her to the place, signed some paperwork which asked where I found her and a few days later, the service dropped her off! They left a notice on my door so that's how I knew. The cat looks so much healthier now than ever before!
All of my babies are from shelters, but two of my babies are special. My littlest girl Korra was a feral cat, she has a chipped ear but she was friendly enough to be adopted out. She was spayed and brought out of the cat population. My other girl Seven, was a mommy. She had her babies and was then spayed taking her out of the cat population. Everyone should be a responsible pet owner and this has been said a million times but it dares repeating. SPAY AND NEUTER YOUR PETS, DONT SHOP, ADOPT! Thanks Cole and Mar!
In tears. This is so amazing. I'm lucky I've been living in small cities with very controlled stray populations -even volunteering at the SPCA and seeing it "from the inside". But this is amazing for when the time comes!
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I just got a trap for Christmas so I can TNR the neighborhood ferals and I have been a bit nervous on where to begin and how long they need to be kept in the trap. This is the best video I have seen and I will be sharing it. Again, thank you so much!
This is a great informative video --- thank you for making it! Right now, I'm doing TNR where I live but I need to get a drop trap because I have a pregnant mama who will NOT go in the trap and eats at other people's homes. Never used one before. Big sigh. I won't give up, though. TNR WORKS!!! No doubt about it!
Awesome video, and I'm so glad to finally see this team-up! An even better option than puppy pads are the bed pads meant for humans. They're quite a bit bigger and much cheaper per unit. You can get a pack of almost twice as many for the same price, and the much larger area means you have to put far fewer down. Around here a pack of 10 2'x2' puppy pads costs $7, or I can get 18 2'x3' bed pads for $5.80 ($5 when they're on sale!). I use them under litter boxes all the time. You can also pick them up in grocery stores, so no waiting for pet stores to open if you run out: just go to your local 24-hour.
It was interesting to note that some of the cats had their right ear clipped. I live in Bakersfield, CA and here they clip the ears as well. I always hoped animal control knows that. I'd hate to loose my 2 feral cats because one is grandmother and the other an uncle to one of the 3 inside domesticated cats we have.
This is going to help immensely! I feed two female ferals and I've really wanted to trap and spay them for a while now. I don't believe I would have had trouble trapping them as they come up to me for food, but I didn't know how to help them recover or how long to keep them after spaying. Thanks!
I never do that food trail near the door. Some skittish cats make try to back out and get their head caught in the door. I do my food trail with door clearance in mind or use the juice from the food as an enticement that area.
I was waiting for the part where Cole & Marm trick, cajole, and outsmart you and you end up with the trap stuck on your head, your pants at your ankles, and them stealing your pizza!
I had a 9 week old kitten abandoned at my apartment. We put food out to make sure she had food and build up trust to bring her inside, but before we could get her inside, she was pregnant so we had to wait. Then when the last kitten was about 7 weeks we noticed she was pregnant again and knew we had to get her inside before she had the new kittens. My roommate had started getting her to eat treats from his hands. I got her to come into the apartment for the treat and my roommate shut the door. A week later she had 5 kittens and I was working on bringing her oldest kitten who was still outside inside. I had already set up a puppy apartment on my patio so my dog and roommates cat could sit outside. I shut the entrance from the inside so our pets couldn't go in it. Then went outside and opened the outside door so Oreo could go in. I also put a heat blanket in there for him with food and water and sat next to the entrance. He loved being pet. It was weird but I loved it. Then after about a week while he was a sleep I went outside and closed the entrance and went inside and opened the entrance to my room. Oreo came in but stayed under my bed for a couple days. He then started coming on the bed and laying on me but wouldn't let me pet him. Slowly I was able to pet him and he started playing with his 5 younger siblings. I was able to get them all new homes but I did keep Oreo and his younger brother Mittens who he had the strongest connection with. A nonprofit organization spayed and Neutered my roommates cat and Mittens but I have not been able to catch Oreo who I believe was traumatized the first time my roommate tried to catch him. He has become stand offish only letting me pet him. Then a couple weeks ago I got my nails done and now he won't let me even pet him. My problem is that the organization only takes the cats in on Fridays and Saturdays, so setting up the trap on those two days makes it hard. Plus he's really smart and won't go in the trap. The other pets have but not him. He did once when I was out of town and this trap didn't have a second door so no way to put food or anything in there so my roommate had to let him out. How can I catch him?
THANK YOU! We have a colony that I want to help with, but all the rescues I've contacted are too full. I will do it more on my own (best I can) now that I know.
I have a large cage outside for their recuperation, so there is no need to rig up my house for temporary guests. I keep it up off the ground by 3 feet or so, and include a litter box, food, water and blanket in the cage. I cover it at night to discourage other cats and wildlife from getting nosey. I don't trap in the winter, so being outside isn't uncomfortable for them at all. When it's time to go, I open the door, and they run out.
One of my rescues was a TNR cat [and a pure bred Siamese someone had dumped]. Anyway, he got a really happy ending because he not only survived but walked into his furever home [literally walked in - we were working on moving and he just walked right in and raided the trash, luckily he doesn't do that anymore].
Reading the comments has made me realise that Sampson, a neighbourhood cat I'm friends with (I don't know which neighbour is his regular cat servant; I live in the UK we have very few ferals and he's definitely not feral he's used to humans), has had his ear notched deliberately. That's so cruel and I'm really upset now. Up till now I thought it happened in a fight (since I've seen him fighting other toms). Vets say it's painless but how the hell do they know?! It's not their ears being tipped or notched. My poor kitty friend! :'(
I have a feral female cat I've made friends with. I couldn't save her first litter, but she got pregnant again and only one baby seemed to have lived, which I rescued and just found a home for. I picked up a have a heart trap but needed an extra bit of info on trying to trap her in it. She's VERY street wise but I'm hoping to have her spayed and keep her inside. Thank you for this video and WISH ME LUCK!😃
About a month ago, I started feeding a timid, young, scrawny feral kitty that had survived by eating whatever edible garbage he found in dumpsters. I now deliver food on a daily basis to four timid, young, not-so-scrawny feral kitties, but only one has showed any signs of wanting to engage in physical contact with me - and it isn't the kitty with whom I begun this relationship. Anyway, I've been trying to figure out how to trap these little ones, in order to get them spayed or neutered and returned to the place they call home. Thanks to Cole, Marmalade and the humans who followed Cole and Marmalade's instructions, I now think I have a plan for my four little fur-babies.
That looks a lot easier than what I did. I coaxed ferrel cats into my apartment and got them used to it for a while. Then, I chased them around, caught them, and put them in a regular cat carrier. I got clawed and bit a bunch, but that's life. You have to leave a $50 deposit to get the official cat traps and I didn't have that much. I ended up falling in love with them during the recovery period and now all the cats I rescued live with me, although a couple of them spend most of their time outside. Another thing I'd like to note is that you can refill the food and water dishes without opening the cage using a funnel. I didn't have wet food, so I put the dry food through the funnel and into the cage. The cats I caught were too fast to do it any other way and I had them in a dog kennel to recover so you couldn't open the door only a little bit like with those cat traps. I put the water in a bottle with a long neck so I could stick it between the bars and pour water. Then, I actually made a funnel out of paper to get the dry food into the cage with the cats. I spent a lot of time with them while they were in that cage and they got used to me that way too. I would have adopted them out, but I ended up loving them so much that I kept them.
Love this so much. I actually trapped in took in 2 cats that were living on the streets --- appeared feral, but after many many months became somewhat domesticated. I borrowed a cat trap from local cat rescue group and put sardines in it. Worked both times. SO easy and saved my 2 babies. Great video guys!
Sadly I don't think there is anywhere that does TNR in Australia. I trapped a lovely little girl that was living off the good will of commuters at a train station and got her fixed (not for free, dollars out of my own pocket) after she'd had a couple broods of kittens that I'd also managed to rescue and rehome. Sadly there were other cats that were dumped soon after in the same area and the council came through and caught/killed them all.
Renlish TNR is not supported by most local councils unfortunately. The best way to do TNR, is to ally with one of the cat rescues, they will be able to help you find discounted services. Also the RSPCA. However, when you do such you'll need to chip them, because feral cats will get sent to the pound and get killed if they don't have an owner. Unfortunately in my area (Melbourne) a vet must send the cat to the pound it is lost or feral. So those of us who rescue, "own" the cats.
Renlish I'm happy that there are lovely people like you in this world. I just googled TNR Australia and on the Animal Liberation website there's a newsletter about a bill that may have been introduced for the first time on TNR in Australia. Like Jackson said, post on social media about it, talk to friends and colleagues and spread the word. :-)
Renlish unfortunately in both NZ and Australia we have to balance the welfare of feral cats against our native animals, so TNR is not viable except in highly urban settings (I live in a small city and there are too many native birds in gardens to allow TNR). I love cats and donor to a charity to subsidise low cost or free neutering to people with low incomes. This way we are stopping more kittens who might get dumped. I also foster for the SPCA with my Mum so kittens of feral mamas are able to be rehomed.
actually tnr is more effective at reducing pressure on wildlife cause it keeps the established colony meaning no new cats can come in the area and it keeps the established colony from becoming bigger.also the spayed and neuter cats can also waste the time of a fertile cat reducing the chances of them finding a mate that will actually produce offspring. shooting isn't really that effective cause you are only killing off a few cats allowing more to move into the area and more to breed.you can't kill every cat or spay or neuter every cat so you need to choose the solution that has the greatest effect.
Anyway that you help is appreciated. I have never had any problem trapping cats, because I know that their lives will greatly improve once they are fixed.
Once you've trapped the cat, and before you transport it to the clinic, it might be a good idea to check if it has already been spayed or neutered. Not an easy thing to do with an frightened animal, I know, but it could save you unnecessary work. Not to mention save the cat from repeating part of a stressful experience.
I have a friend that live down the road that does a similar thing to this what she does is gives the feral cats food and water in a place that is protected from rain and eventually the cats will be used to her then she gets them spayed/neutered
That's great; just keep in mind some never warm up to people. We all can do whatever we can; I take in an occasional abandoned cat or a kitten from an unmanaged barn. I'm at my limit of six cats now, but it felt good to give them a home when I was able to.
We are trying to catch a beautiful tabby who is a feral cat. We caught him previously and took him into a shelter to be neutered. They assured us that they would get him adopted. Less than a week later they drop him back on our street without notifying us. Now we are back to feeding him. Last week we found him a home, but now we are having trouble catching him. Which we totally understand. How do we regain his trust? And get him into a beautiful home?
"Scary that he had flies, not fleas but flies." Best translation I could come up with. He was criticizing the spelling of the above poster despite having miserable grammar.
I am trying to trap my own indoor cat that escaped a week ago. He's hiding in my neighbor's backyard (junkyard). I made a hole in the fence so he can come into my yard. He's never been outdoors his entire life and he is still scared to death and is not eating the food I left out for him. I saw him twice for a few seconds in my backyard before he disappears. He is a very skittish cat that would run away from everyone, including me. I feel that if he isn't trapped soon, he is going to die of cold and starvation. :(
Important! Using a clip to secure the back door on the Tomahawk trap is good advice. Once a cat escapes a trap, good luck getting them to go into it again. The back door on my Tomahawk trap came open as I lifted it to take into the house and she got out. I've secured the back door on the trap with a snap clip, but she won't go back into it anymore. I wish I'd seen this video before I set the trap the first time.
I do TNR and it truly is one of the most rewarding things I've ever done. I have a little tortie former feral, The Beautiful Princess Jeanie Bellini, sleeping by my side. She's been a challenge but so worth it... what an angel she is now.
I took a community cat in after he was neutered on 9/36/23. He is in my master bathroom. He had diarrhea but is now using a litter box. He is much stronger. Will allow petting but is hypervigilant. I have the trap in with him but he won't go in nor allow me to put food in it. Using Feliway spray, calming treats and a calming collar. Need to return him to his community.
If it's a neighbor's cat, or an indoor/outdoor cat who decided to live in your territory, you can easily trap a neutered cat and not know the status because they will not have a tipped ear. I live in a rural area where there are a lot of cats who are fixed but have a range larger than their farm (I include a few of my own in this group). You can have the vet check for a microchip as well, in case the cat is missing.
Cole and Marmalade are the best models. great job with stunt double. while watching the post trap in the house I imagined a sitcom scene where a family traps a cat but releases it before their ready in the house. imagine the furniture Carnage! lol. 😂🛋
TNR is awesome and I wish more people would help with that in their areas. I did TNT. Trap, Neuter, Tame with a family of 46 feral cats. I found 85% of them new homes after they were tamed, some met untimely ends, and 7 of them I ended up keeping as part of my family. It wasn't easy and I could have bought a new car with all the money I spent on the cats but even if I could rewind time I would do it all again. - Heidi
God bless you and people like you. I pray someday people will wake up and spay and neuter their animals. It would save so much heartache and pain for us and the animals. If everybody took care of their own animals we would never have this problem. And my heart aches for the animals that have no home, are scared hungry and in pain. Never give up. keep doing what you’re doing. I do what I can do and I donate to the TNR programs because they do work. It’s the people that don’t work when they keep dropping off their unspayed and un neutered cats.
❤❤❤❤
Not gonna lie I thought it was trap near her terminate, and I thought it was messed up but was confused why do the neutering in that case. Oof
SUPER DUPER SUPER THANK U BEAUTIFUL EYES HEIDI
You deserve a lot of credit. Thanks. I wish we could get more help from community shelters to help citizens tnr ferels. However, it seems no one wants to help.
Thank you for doing that for the 46 cats! That's a big accomplishment. There's a large group of us around the Hilton Head, South Carolina area that feed the community cats & I do most of the trapping. I've trapped at least 400 cats & kittens and work with the local shelter that takes the kittens trapped, socializes & places them. It does get to be exhausting because it's a never-ending problem and more people need to get involved..❤
This past summer, with the help of my local Animal Services, we trapped, neutered/spayed, and released 23 ferals and strays in my neighborhood. No more litters for me to worry about and I still get to meet and greet all my feral/stray kitties every day when I feed them!
Anna Harlow how did you do it?
all of us in our neighborhood tried this with success but other cats got dropped off in our neighborhood and here we go again. It doesnt work... one year later and we have at least 6 new litters of kittens. That and the fact that we have 3 cat ladies in our neighborhood that feed them all and put collars on them and we now have counted over 60 feral cats on one street.
That doesnt mean it doesnt work. Your neighborhood just have people who are making the problem worse. If anything it would have become a bigger issue since the ladies you talke about would still feed the ferals.
I'm going out tonight to pick up my first baby and if I get an older cat I will get them fixed right away cancel and I feel bad not feeding tonight
I live in Sunbury Pennsylvania. and we have some very dishonest cat trappers (TNRS) here,, they steal everyones pets,, they dont release the cats back to where they trapped them ,and they rehome peoples pets, and even kill them,, ,they even take cats that have tipped ears and collars,,,this cat trapping needs to be made illegal,,,,just leave the cats alone !!!!
Great video on TNR. I help feed a colony of feral cats near where I live in London, UK. I'm constantly checking on them, looking out for new cats that don't have their ears tipped. A rescue centre called Celia Hammond Animal Trust comes out to TNR all over London and the South East. I spotted my recent rescue cat Ally just sitting on a brick wall and they spayed her for me. I have lots of respect for the all the humans out there who work tirelessly for these cats. I've seen firsthand what a difference you guys are making. Well done and thanks to Cole and Marmalade and their humans for highlighting this issue. xxx
I like your recent rescue cats name, Ally. It reminded me that we almost named our daughter Allie Catherine, Allie Cat for short. (Allie was grandmas name).
Thank you so much!! Just watched this yesterday. Set the trap for a practice run last night to see if the feral kitty would take the bait. It did and I've trapped it tonight. Right now it's got 200sq. ft. of my house to get used to being inside. From the time it showed up I planned to keep it but there were complications, plus I was intimidated by the whole act. Also, I was getting vague to no information from some local the Local Humane Society let me borrow the trap. I couldn't have done it without this video! Thank you Chris and Jackson, and special thanks to Cole and Marmalade😻p.s. Kitty will be neutered when of age and have the perfect indoor/outdoor lifestyle that will be the envy of all cats.
THIS IS THE COLLAB IVE BEEN WAITING FOR
Katrina It Be IKRRR
Hii Katrina
Thank you for this video. It gives me confidence that I can get involved with TNR in my community. I took in a stray a five and a half years ago that was ear tipped (not knowing what that meant until the vet told us!). He is our friendliest, most loving cat. We also rescued a semi-feral and her 5 kittens, but we socialized them and didn't have to go the live trap route.
Please note that you have to return the cat to the place that you trapped them. Bad things happen when they get released into unfamiliar territory.
and, Wow. I did not know that TNR has been a thing for so long. Your comment is 6 yrs back, and you adopted an ear-tipped stray five years prior to that!
We also adopted a friendly, beat up, ear-tipped cat. It seems that sometimes previous house cats get dumped, or just plain lost, and miss their home environment.
I cant imagine how many more cats would be out on the streets without this program.
I'm a sucker, I trap, neuter, spay, but then keep! damn it anyway!
cyndy loguercio that's better tbh, this way is still a bit cruel since cats sometimes don't survive outside
Where I live most of the time if the strays are not trapped and fixed their life expectancy is not long, either coyotes, hawks, owls, cars or poison is their demise. In the town next to me there is a program in which trap, spay/neuter and release back to the location where they were trapped. There is no such program in my town. I find it a benefit to my home. Even though they are not adoptable they are great with me, each other and any rescue I bring in. One of my feral, Ivan, helped me out tremendously with an abandoned Lab that was sick. Ivan stayed with him from the minute they met until the moment Tommy died. Tommy seemed more at ease with Ivan near. Everything happens for a reason and for what it's worth, I'm sure there are many more reasons I was intended to keep these babies.
cyndy loguercio
@cyndy can you suggest any tips to do if you intend to try and keep the feral cat as a domestic pet ? At least as an outdoor cat that likes to come inside once inawhile.
This cat in question is nearly 2 year old male ... been hanging out in my back yard that long anyways ... saw him when he looked 6 months old I guess. (New Orleans)
Last summer he started looking rather scraggly skinny ... so I started putting out kibble for him , then he started looking better ... But it has brought around other cats and racoons. I want to stop that but keep him.
Any suggestions after I trap him and get his balls chopped ?
By the way ... he never gets closer than about 15ft so far ... but he does know the routine to let me know he wants to be fed.
Mk101T ,if you can find a vet that will neuter this feral guy then trap him, take in and have it done, bring him home and keep him in a small room so he does not have many options to hide and not be found. make sure he has all the necessary stuff, litter box, food and water and just go in and be in his space everyday. offer tuna by hand, he will come around. but if you don't get him neutered your chances of taming him will decrease greatly. can't let him out after this though
I did it a little differently. I got a feral cat to trust me over about a month, feeding her and encouraging her to sleep inside. Then I adopted her. No trap necessary, and now we're best buds.
Did you get her fixed?
@@TheKaidynB - Of ocurse I got her fixed. Nice of you to ask, after 6 years. lol
I’ve watched about 20 instructional videos about TNR, and this one is by far the most informative and helpful. Thank you for sharing.
I borrowed a cat trap from my local APL to catch a cat I was feeding outside for awhile to try and gain its trust (didn't work). I put the food in, it went in, ate the food and walked out... I took it inside, left it open on accident, I left and when I came home my cat was trapped in it and there wasn't even food in it LOL. I tried for months to catch this cat but gave up and just made him an insulated shelter out of a storage bin. He was a very smart cat.
Yeah in this case you should try a drop trap that you make yourself. These traps are far less obvious than a cage trap. However you need to know how to transfer a drop trapped cat into a cage afterwards.
I actually adopted my first cat through a TNR program...basically the older cats were fixed and released, while the kittens were fixed and adopted, and the adoption fees kept the program running. In the area she came from, there are a lot of summer-only residents, and there are quite a few people who will adopt a cat for the summer, and before they leave to go home will release the cat into the woods to fend for itself. The majority of these cats haven't been spayed or neutered, which just adds to the local feral cat population. TNR really has been the best possible option for that small community, and 6 years later I'm still thrilled that my baby girl Molly came to me through that program (plus I'd like to think that she's still happy to have found a safe place where she has humans to boss around!)
I tried this and it worked! but um....I caught a raccoon. ...
pandabear 1776 I'd end up catching a fox XD
+Bev1946 lol
I'm dressing up as Cole for Halloween
pandabear 1776 that's funny 😂
Hello, i had given this idea to Cole and Marmalade. The idea was to make a all in one pyjamas like Cole and one looking like Marmalade plus slippers one foot like Cole and one foot like Marmalade. I hope they will make it. It will be the Puurfect Cosy kit for the evening and cold night.
When I was little, we found a stray cat- an orange tabby- and we named him Tiger. We fed him for a while and then took him to our non-profit, no-kill animal shelter- and found that he had been adopted within the next few days! I'm so glad he got a nice home, and hopefully he got neutered as well. :)
Chris, your family of four are the greatest. When ever I feel a little in the dump I tune into Marmalade and Cole. They make me smile, laugh, and tear, (tears of joy) smile. The work you do along with others that have beautiful, loving spirits to help other being that can't help themselves is remarkable. Thanks to people like you give me hope in humanity. Marmalade and Cole are prime examples of how all animals should live on this earth, HAPPY! and Chris I know if you had it like that, that's the way it would be. I love you Chris and all the other great humanitarian that work along with you. Thank you and may GOD continue to bless you all. Nov. 9 2016
I put a little food at the back, in a way that they can't stick their paws through and drag it out. But I also put a few pieces of treats just outside the opening, and a few pieces leading them ever inwards towards the back. And I add catnip: a little hint just outside the opening, a tiny bit just inside the opening with a trail towards the back where the food is, and a small pile at the back, the jackpot pile.
I trapped one stray/feral, he is quite healthy, we have a shelter for him and feed him 3 times a day, we have named him Stanley ! I absolutely love him x
Hey there Chris and Jackson, my neighbors just called to ask for help with a stray cat that just showed up in their backyard. I borrowed the Have-a-heart trap from another neighbor and went over to check out the situation. Turns out she is very obviously pregnant. She's not feral because she let me touch her went i offered her some food. Set up the trap per your instructions and within 5 minutes we had her in the trap. She is now on her way to the Animal Rescue League to get checked out and some more food and indoor shut eye. Hopefully her kittens will all be healthy and all will get adopted. Thanks for your advice about using this type of trap.
I have TNR 9 cats. I have a small bathroom that I kept them in. I put a litter box in the bathroom and food and water. I found that if I kept the trap covered I could leave one side open. I knocked before entering the bathroom and they always hide in the trap. I was able to keep them this way so they had longer to recover.
I had two feral cats get out of the first trap demonstrated in the video. We had to reinforce the frame of the door, that swings shut, with metal bracing. The trap would twist letting the cats escape.
I wish this video had been up when I first started TNR. Great information. Thanks.
I really hope that these cages are only used by good people in order to help cats. I hate to think that some people might misuse tutorials like that to catch cats and to abuse them for their sick fun. I look forward to the day when no animal is being hurt anymore.
I used to ditch school a lot in high school. I didn't do drugs, I just didn't want to be there.
I ended up in a lot of residential areas with outdoor cats who were clearly well groomed and well fed, and....cats who'd been straight-up abandoned. Mangey fur, scuffle marks here and there. Fleas galore. Ticks, possibly. But they were so friendly and so sweet. I ended up using my black sweatshirt to cover them (So they wouldn't be worried about seeing themselves leave their familiar area) as I took them home to take them to an animal shelter. I fed them, I put them in the kitty carrier, gave them water, kept them away from my ABSOLUTELY FURIOUS home cat (Which yes, cats are territorial, this is expected).
The way I figured, even if they were euthanized for being so skinny and mangey, that's a better death than starving, or being mauled by a dog, or being hit by a car. I still hope those cats found loving owners. They were good cats.
I wish I could be the same way with stray dogs that I see, but I feel like the potential to be mauled outweighs the possible benefit of helping them out in some way. Cats don't maul unless cornered, at least, when treated properly.
Wow, you took a feral to an animal shelter?!?!? That's certain death right there. What an angel of death. Better to take them to a feral rescue organization for treatment. They're far more capable of dealing with ferals than the death chamber animal shelters.
Cats: the human walks us through the whole process, and the cats get all the credit. Lol
Oh I've seen this fella before. Long while ago some video about training a cat not to meow all night. Well you and Cole and Marmalade did a fabulous job. Posting this on my Facebook to spread the word. We must help spay and neuter!
cat 1: DUDE! I haven't seen you in two days!!!
cat 2: dude, this human put me in a cage, brought me to a building, and guess what???
cat1: WHAT?!?!!?!?
cat 2: THEY CUT MY BALLS OFF!!!
cat 1: MEE-WOW!!! did it hurt???
cat 2: eh, they put this stuff on me that make me not feel it. it still feels blubberey.
cat 1:
cat 2:
cat1:
cat 2: so wanna steal some Starbucks
cat 1: YOU BETCHA!
Beautiful
Missed you guys ! One week without videos of yours is such tough.. keep up, you purr-ule !
Every country needs a TNR campaign and especially resources where cats can easily be taken for neutering/ spaying.
Excellent summary of TNR techniques and best practices. I learned largely by trial and error and am watching this video a couple of years too late!
Thanks for the tips! I used them to catch a feral cat in my backyard who I leave food out for.
There is a service in my city that will spay/neuter and vaccinate, then house them while they recover, then return cats for you for free, but you have to trap the kitty yourself and bring it to their vet office. If anyone is in a similar situation as I was, you should google to see if this type of service is offered in your city. Beats paying $$$ to get it done and keeping them in your home yourself while they recover.
So I brought her to the place, signed some paperwork which asked where I found her and a few days later, the service dropped her off! They left a notice on my door so that's how I knew. The cat looks so much healthier now than ever before!
All of my babies are from shelters, but two of my babies are special. My littlest girl Korra was a feral cat, she has a chipped ear but she was friendly enough to be adopted out. She was spayed and brought out of the cat population. My other girl Seven, was a mommy. She had her babies and was then spayed taking her out of the cat population. Everyone should be a responsible pet owner and this has been said a million times but it dares repeating. SPAY AND NEUTER YOUR PETS, DONT SHOP, ADOPT! Thanks Cole and Mar!
In tears. This is so amazing. I'm lucky I've been living in small cities with very controlled stray populations -even volunteering at the SPCA and seeing it "from the inside". But this is amazing for when the time comes!
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I just got a trap for Christmas so I can TNR the neighborhood ferals and I have been a bit nervous on where to begin and how long they need to be kept in the trap. This is the best video I have seen and I will be sharing it. Again, thank you so much!
I husband has also been nervous too. Maybe this video will help calm his fears as well.
Thank you and likewise :-)
I remember when Israel used to do this to African immigrants.
Kitten Lady's video on TNR is also very good to watch!
You shouldn't get that for Christmas you're literally making an animal not able to breed so I don't think that's right for Christmas
This is a great informative video --- thank you for making it! Right now, I'm doing TNR where I live but I need to get a drop trap because I have a pregnant mama who will NOT go in the trap and eats at other people's homes. Never used one before. Big sigh. I won't give up, though. TNR WORKS!!! No doubt about it!
awesome job!!! we all need to do this, we would save so many cats and prevent so many more that could starve and die out there . bless you guys!
Cole and Marmalade are such big helpers 😆
Awesome video, and I'm so glad to finally see this team-up!
An even better option than puppy pads are the bed pads meant for humans. They're quite a bit bigger and much cheaper per unit. You can get a pack of almost twice as many for the same price, and the much larger area means you have to put far fewer down. Around here a pack of 10 2'x2' puppy pads costs $7, or I can get 18 2'x3' bed pads for $5.80 ($5 when they're on sale!). I use them under litter boxes all the time. You can also pick them up in grocery stores, so no waiting for pet stores to open if you run out: just go to your local 24-hour.
After 10 years of begging to adopt a cat, my dream came true. I love Dewey💖
One of the BEST videos I've ever seen regarding TNR. WELL DONE.
My two FAVORITE cat men!!! I really admire the work you and Jackson do for cats. Snuggles and kisses for Cole and Marmalade.
It was interesting to note that some of the cats had their right ear clipped. I live in Bakersfield, CA and here they clip the ears as well. I always hoped animal control knows that. I'd hate to loose my 2 feral cats because one is grandmother and the other an uncle to one of the 3 inside domesticated cats we have.
This is going to help immensely! I feed two female ferals and I've really wanted to trap and spay them for a while now. I don't believe I would have had trouble trapping them as they come up to me for food, but I didn't know how to help them recover or how long to keep them after spaying. Thanks!
Those second traps look much better- i find the other ones are far too sensitive and i struggle setting up
So HAppy to See Cole and Marm together with Jackson FInally!! this is a true Dream team!!
Thank you Jackson, Chris, Cole, and Marmalade!
Trapping my first feral tomorrow night and I’m nervous but this video really helped me feel more confident!
Cats are the best, I have five, and I'm considering taking another one I found today:)
LoVeMusiC35 Awww! how kind....👍👍
I have 3, and 3 is enoughhh loll but good looks
No matter how many cats you have, there's always room for one more.
stan broniszewski this is my life quote now
LoVeMusiC35 my family has 3 cats
Kudos to your two lovely assistants Chris! Charming as always
OMG JAKSON GAXY YOU ARE THE BEST CAT TRAINER!!
Holy fuck I did NOT expect to be looking at Jackson Galaxy when clicking on a Cole and Marmalade video! :V
I never do that food trail near the door. Some skittish cats make try to back out and get their head caught in the door. I do my food trail with door clearance in mind or use the juice from the food as an enticement that area.
Chris's out here saving lives!
I was waiting for the part where Cole & Marm trick, cajole, and outsmart you and you end up with the trap stuck on your head, your pants at your ankles, and them stealing your pizza!
I had a 9 week old kitten abandoned at my apartment. We put food out to make sure she had food and build up trust to bring her inside, but before we could get her inside, she was pregnant so we had to wait. Then when the last kitten was about 7 weeks we noticed she was pregnant again and knew we had to get her inside before she had the new kittens. My roommate had started getting her to eat treats from his hands. I got her to come into the apartment for the treat and my roommate shut the door. A week later she had 5 kittens and I was working on bringing her oldest kitten who was still outside inside.
I had already set up a puppy apartment on my patio so my dog and roommates cat could sit outside. I shut the entrance from the inside so our pets couldn't go in it. Then went outside and opened the outside door so Oreo could go in. I also put a heat blanket in there for him with food and water and sat next to the entrance. He loved being pet. It was weird but I loved it. Then after about a week while he was a sleep I went outside and closed the entrance and went inside and opened the entrance to my room. Oreo came in but stayed under my bed for a couple days.
He then started coming on the bed and laying on me but wouldn't let me pet him. Slowly I was able to pet him and he started playing with his 5 younger siblings.
I was able to get them all new homes but I did keep Oreo and his younger brother Mittens who he had the strongest connection with. A nonprofit organization spayed and Neutered my roommates cat and Mittens but I have not been able to catch Oreo who I believe was traumatized the first time my roommate tried to catch him. He has become stand offish only letting me pet him. Then a couple weeks ago I got my nails done and now he won't let me even pet him.
My problem is that the organization only takes the cats in on Fridays and Saturdays, so setting up the trap on those two days makes it hard. Plus he's really smart and won't go in the trap. The other pets have but not him. He did once when I was out of town and this trap didn't have a second door so no way to put food or anything in there so my roommate had to let him out. How can I catch him?
Thanks for all what you share with us, Chris! I love your channel. Greetings from Peru!
THANK YOU! We have a colony that I want to help with, but all the rescues I've contacted are too full. I will do it more on my own (best I can) now that I know.
I have a large cage outside for their recuperation, so there is no need to rig up my house for temporary guests. I keep it up off the ground by 3 feet or so, and include a litter box, food, water and blanket in the cage. I cover it at night to discourage other cats and wildlife from getting nosey. I don't trap in the winter, so being outside isn't uncomfortable for them at all. When it's time to go, I open the door, and they run out.
Jackson Galaxy always hits me right in the feels 💞💞💞
One of my rescues was a TNR cat [and a pure bred Siamese someone had dumped]. Anyway, he got a really happy ending because he not only survived but walked into his furever home [literally walked in - we were working on moving and he just walked right in and raided the trash, luckily he doesn't do that anymore].
I love your cats and your channel! You are so amazing at teaching others how to care for our furry friends :)
Reading the comments has made me realise that Sampson, a neighbourhood cat I'm friends with (I don't know which neighbour is his regular cat servant; I live in the UK we have very few ferals and he's definitely not feral he's used to humans), has had his ear notched deliberately. That's so cruel and I'm really upset now. Up till now I thought it happened in a fight (since I've seen him fighting other toms). Vets say it's painless but how the hell do they know?! It's not their ears being tipped or notched. My poor kitty friend! :'(
It is pretty much painless, kinda like getting a ear pierced.
Thanks, this is a very informative place to start with some clever tips!
I have a feral female cat I've made friends with. I couldn't save her first litter, but she got pregnant again and only one baby seemed to have lived, which I rescued and just found a home for. I picked up a have a heart trap but needed an extra bit of info on trying to trap her in it. She's VERY street wise but I'm hoping to have her spayed and keep her inside. Thank you for this video and WISH ME LUCK!😃
About a month ago, I started feeding a timid, young, scrawny feral kitty that had survived by eating whatever edible garbage he found in dumpsters.
I now deliver food on a daily basis to four timid, young, not-so-scrawny feral kitties, but only one has showed any signs of wanting to engage in physical contact with me - and it isn't the kitty with whom I begun this relationship.
Anyway, I've been trying to figure out how to trap these little ones, in order to get them spayed or neutered and returned to the place they call home.
Thanks to Cole, Marmalade and the humans who followed Cole and Marmalade's instructions, I now think I have a plan for my four little fur-babies.
This video made me cry. How could anyone dump a cat? Pets are your babies!
That looks a lot easier than what I did. I coaxed ferrel cats into my apartment and got them used to it for a while. Then, I chased them around, caught them, and put them in a regular cat carrier. I got clawed and bit a bunch, but that's life. You have to leave a $50 deposit to get the official cat traps and I didn't have that much. I ended up falling in love with them during the recovery period and now all the cats I rescued live with me, although a couple of them spend most of their time outside.
Another thing I'd like to note is that you can refill the food and water dishes without opening the cage using a funnel. I didn't have wet food, so I put the dry food through the funnel and into the cage. The cats I caught were too fast to do it any other way and I had them in a dog kennel to recover so you couldn't open the door only a little bit like with those cat traps. I put the water in a bottle with a long neck so I could stick it between the bars and pour water. Then, I actually made a funnel out of paper to get the dry food into the cage with the cats. I spent a lot of time with them while they were in that cage and they got used to me that way too. I would have adopted them out, but I ended up loving them so much that I kept them.
I Can Do This! Thank you so much for this informative video :)
Love this so much. I actually trapped in took in 2 cats that were living on the streets --- appeared feral, but after many many months became somewhat domesticated. I borrowed a cat trap from local cat rescue group and put sardines in it. Worked both times. SO easy and saved my 2 babies. Great video guys!
Sadly I don't think there is anywhere that does TNR in Australia. I trapped a lovely little girl that was living off the good will of commuters at a train station and got her fixed (not for free, dollars out of my own pocket) after she'd had a couple broods of kittens that I'd also managed to rescue and rehome. Sadly there were other cats that were dumped soon after in the same area and the council came through and caught/killed them all.
Renlish TNR is not supported by most local councils unfortunately. The best way to do TNR, is to ally with one of the cat rescues, they will be able to help you find discounted services. Also the RSPCA. However, when you do such you'll need to chip them, because feral cats will get sent to the pound and get killed if they don't have an owner. Unfortunately in my area (Melbourne) a vet must send the cat to the pound it is lost or feral. So those of us who rescue, "own" the cats.
Renlish I'm happy that there are lovely people like you in this world. I just googled TNR Australia and on the Animal Liberation website there's a newsletter about a bill that may have been introduced for the first time on TNR in Australia. Like Jackson said, post on social media about it, talk to friends and colleagues and spread the word. :-)
Renlish unfortunately in both NZ and Australia we have to balance the welfare of feral cats against our native animals, so TNR is not viable except in highly urban settings (I live in a small city and there are too many native birds in gardens to allow TNR).
I love cats and donor to a charity to subsidise low cost or free neutering to people with low incomes. This way we are stopping more kittens who might get dumped. I also foster for the SPCA with my Mum so kittens of feral mamas are able to be rehomed.
actually tnr is more effective at reducing pressure on wildlife cause it keeps the established colony meaning no new cats can come in the area and it keeps the established colony from becoming bigger.also the spayed and neuter cats can also waste the time of a fertile cat reducing the chances of them finding a mate that will actually produce offspring.
shooting isn't really that effective cause you are only killing off a few cats allowing more to move into the area and more to breed.you can't kill every cat or spay or neuter every cat so you need to choose the solution that has the greatest effect.
Doesn't work that way in Australia, star and fox .
I used to trap but I hated it because I felt just awful doing it. Now I help out be driving them back and forth from the clinic to the caretakers.
Anyway that you help is appreciated. I have never had any problem trapping cats, because I know that their lives will greatly improve once they are fixed.
Jackson when are you coming back on TV? I miss you sooo much.
Once you've trapped the cat, and before you transport it to the clinic, it might be a good idea to check if it has already been spayed or neutered. Not an easy thing to do with an frightened animal, I know, but it could save you unnecessary work. Not to mention save the cat from repeating part of a stressful experience.
I have a friend that live down the road that does a similar thing to this what she does is gives the feral cats food and water in a place that is protected from rain and eventually the cats will be used to her then she gets them spayed/neutered
That's great; just keep in mind some never warm up to people. We all can do whatever we can; I take in an occasional abandoned cat or a kitten from an unmanaged barn. I'm at my limit of six cats now, but it felt good to give them a home when I was able to.
SBlackmare yeah she says some only go to the spot where she keeps the food if she isn't there but some have so used to her that she became her pets
in a Ames
We are trying to catch a beautiful tabby who is a feral cat. We caught him previously and took him into a shelter to be neutered. They assured us that they would get him adopted. Less than a week later they drop him back on our street without notifying us. Now we are back to feeding him. Last week we found him a home, but now we are having trouble catching him. Which we totally understand. How do we regain his trust? And get him into a beautiful home?
Yeah the TNR people dumped a feral cat in my backyard. nice
I see your "production assistants" were a great help. :-)
Thank you for this video. I use it to train new trappers. Very well done.
We are doing this now, I'm glad you have this video, thank you
Marmalade is turning into Garfield
I once captured a cat, it's called muffin and lives at a farm, ( An actual farm) He had flies.
Scary he had flies did he, no fleas flies
Leoni Dowling
Wtf are you saying?
"Scary that he had flies, not fleas but flies."
Best translation I could come up with. He was criticizing the spelling of the above poster despite having miserable grammar.
marm trying to get into the tarp hehehe, he is hilarious
Marm climbing into the tarp was the best!!!
I am trying to trap my own indoor cat that escaped a week ago. He's hiding in my neighbor's backyard (junkyard). I made a hole in the fence so he can come into my yard. He's never been outdoors his entire life and he is still scared to death and is not eating the food I left out for him. I saw him twice for a few seconds in my backyard before he disappears. He is a very skittish cat that would run away from everyone, including me. I feel that if he isn't trapped soon, he is going to die of cold and starvation. :(
Did you ever catch him?
Thanks fellas...bless you for caring
05:53 That is one terrifying feral cat!
Important! Using a clip to secure the back door on the Tomahawk trap is good advice. Once a cat escapes a trap, good luck getting them to go into it again. The back door on my Tomahawk trap came open as I lifted it to take into the house and she got out. I've secured the back door on the trap with a snap clip, but she won't go back into it anymore. I wish I'd seen this video before I set the trap the first time.
Keep up the good work and wonderful channel!
I work on a cat association. and I'm allways aware on street for abandoned cats 😊
"Marmalade's stunt double" - I can dig it!
who else is subscribed to Jackson Galaxy's Channel?
Kaylynn Hawks me
Yes and I was a little confused for a second because I thought I had clicked on a Cole & Marmalade video but then Jackson Galaxy was there. :p
Kaylynn Hawks qq
Animated GalaxyBate me
Animated GalaxyBate me
I do TNR and it truly is one of the most rewarding things I've ever done. I have a little tortie former feral, The Beautiful Princess Jeanie Bellini, sleeping by my side. She's been a challenge but so worth it... what an angel she is now.
Cats are pawsome i have three of my own and they were all rescues i will try my best to do TNR one day
I always donate to the Isabella County Animal Shelter in Michigan.
Thanks for all the great info from everyone in the video!!!
Cory
I took a community cat in after he was neutered on 9/36/23. He is in my master bathroom. He had diarrhea but is now using a litter box. He is much stronger. Will allow petting but is hypervigilant. I have the trap in with him but he won't go in nor allow me to put food in it. Using Feliway spray, calming treats and a calming collar. Need to return him to his community.
I managed to trap a cat yesterday here in 🇬🇧 luckily he was friendly and trusted me to follow some dreamies into a regular cat carrier.
I love you cole and marmalade
steven berry hy
steven berry I beat u on comments
Thank you Cole and Marmalade and for the love of cats. If I trapped one of those beauties, I would keep them.
Is there a way to know that the cat you've captured has already been neutered?
twsx either check their ears or look for a tattoo on their belly.
If it's a neighbor's cat, or an indoor/outdoor cat who decided to live in your territory, you can easily trap a neutered cat and not know the status because they will not have a tipped ear. I live in a rural area where there are a lot of cats who are fixed but have a range larger than their farm (I include a few of my own in this group). You can have the vet check for a microchip as well, in case the cat is missing.
I let my cat outside and he found a way to take off his collar so it might not be the best way to go about identifying
Yeah, that would be better
twsx Where I come from, they lightly snipped the left ear of neutered cats.
Make sure your clinic checks for a microchip, in case the cat is lost, so it can get back home. Think lost, not stray!
Cole and Marmalade are the best models. great job with stunt double. while watching the post trap in the house I imagined a sitcom scene where a family traps a cat but releases it before their ready in the house. imagine the furniture Carnage! lol. 😂🛋
I picked my traps up at home depot. you can check amazon or ebay. also Craigslist sometimes people are giving away for free
There's a stray living under my house and I fed it the other day now it just sits at the cat door and watches me through the window