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Blog EntryThe All-Giving OceanFeb 13, '08 11:00 AM
for everyone
This is Ocean.

She is a siamese cross who is about a year old. She has the most angelic blue eyes.

She’s from a coffeeshop across my street. She is a stray cat who does not know she is a stray. Every person or passerby is her friend and she shows them her eagerness to be loved. She is full of love for everything around, even her fellow coffeeshop cats with whom she shares the scraps on the dirty coffeeshop floor. 

Ocean is so tired. She has been pregnant 2 times in 6 months. Her first litter of 3 kittens were lucky - the kind people in my neighbourhood took them in and gave them lovely warm homes.  She loved her kittens but knew she let them go to good hands. These kind people planned to sterilise her, but she was pregnant again before her sterilisation was due.

She gave birth to 4 beautiful kittens underneath a filthy, oily coffeeshop fridge. She was so afraid for their safety in the dirty, hectic coffeeshop but she had nowhere else to go. The outside is a busy carpark, there was nowhere to hide. She was alone and afraid.

I had been monitoring Ocean’s movements and I knew she had given birth when she went missing for 2 days. I found Ocean and her kittens 3 days after they were born. I could not bear to see them in the filth and grime of the coffeeshop floor, so I decided to bring all of them back to a cage at the back of my house. I was amazed at what a deeply sweet and trusting nature she had - she was a stray who hardly knew me but she let me carry not just her but all her kittens too. She never struggled. She looked into my eyes for a long time before she let me touch her babies, and then, just trusted that I was trying to help her.

Mother and kittens struggled to survive for a few days…she was very weak, dehydrated and undernourished. I prepared Ocean the best meals possible, a hand-mix of holistic cat kibble and wet food, made into a warm porridge. I fed her a few times a day, for she did not seem to be able to eat or drink much at one go. Even in her weak state, she nursed and cared for her kittens non-stop. She fed, groomed, hugged and keep them warm without interval.

Within a week,  Ocean’s health improved - she got more active, had more energy in her movements and began to interact with us in the sweetest ways, always waiting patiently at the backdoor for a stroke or a caress. 2 weeks later, the kittens eye’s fully opened and they started to show signs of shiny coats, alert senses and responsiveness to human energy.

Its been 3 and a half weeks since I brought Ocean and her babies back from the coffeeshop, and she is restored to health, and happy. But I fear that Ocean and her babies may not be able to stay for long - the 15 cats in our compound have displayed hostility to her and the babies, and my own cats have already begun to express their unfriendliness and anger. If only they could understand peace and love.

The kind an ocean does.


moavellous wrote on Feb 28
I have a pregnant mom with me since 19/Jan and given birth to 4 kittens on 24/Jan. Mom and kittens in a cage and now with kitties growing fast, mom seems to be getting lesser and lesser of her own space.

My lot is already on solid food and still sucking from mom and it's important to feed Ocean with kitten food as long as she is nursing. Sterilization also cannot happen when her tits still look pinkish and swell with milk. I plan to "market" her on the 6th-8th weeks and the kittens ideally 12th weeks or maybe earlier if they seems sturdy and healthy.

Btw, not sure if it's possible to separate Ocean and kittens from the rest. It's too stressful for a nursing mom too besides your cats.

Any how, let's work towards getting all of them a good home! All the best!!
devastato76 wrote on Mar 14
hi! i was on my way to the carpark at 9 am when i chanced upon 3 kitties that are less than 2 weeks old. They were at the lift lobby beside the dustbin. I really doubt the mother cat would have deposited them there. It was raining very heavily and the 3 kitties were shivering. I was hoping that the mother would pick them up later. 3 hrs later, i asked my wife to check the area... the town council was just about to take them away when my wife intervene and brought them up. Any advice on how to handle them? We already have 2 felines... 1 very feral and spoilt while the other is very good nature.
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