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Eight o’clock on a beautiful
June morning in southern Wisconsin. The sun was shining.
The birds were singing. And I was on my way to the stable
where I boarded my two horses. Little did I know that in
just a few minutes I would become a “momma kitty.”
As I slid open the barn
door I saw the calico cat. The previous evening she had
been plump with kittens, but now she was suspiciously
thin, so I knew she had given birth during the night.
“After I feed the horses,
you’ll have to show me where you hid your babies,” I
said to her, scooping dry cat food into the dish.
The calico settled down for
a snack and I began measuring out grain. There were six
horses pastured together with stalls in this barn. I was
going to let my horses in, so I figured I might as well
feed all of them.
As I walked to the other
end of the barn so I could open the door, the calico sat
on the floor near one of the stalls to watch the horses
come in — just like she did most mornings.
One by one, the horses
clip-clopped to their stalls. I followed behind, closing
their doors. But before I could close one door, the horse
inside lunged at another who was just passing by. The mare
jumped sideways to avoid being bitten — and trampled the
calico cat.
Almost before I could draw
breath to scream, the calico cat was dead. I knelt beside
her, stroking the soft fur. “Your kittens,” I
whispered. “What am I going to do about your kittens? I
don’t even know where they are.”
I had grown up on a dairy
farm in west central Wisconsin with many barn cats. I knew
cats liked to keep their kittens hidden until they’re
old enough to move around. And I knew young kittens
depended upon their mothers for survival until they were
about eight weeks old.
I also knew the stable cats
usually made nests for their kittens in the haymow above
me. But because it was summer and new hay was being put in
the mow every day, I didn’t know where to begin to look
for those kittens. The thought of orphaned kittens waiting
for a mother who would never return brought tears to my
eyes. How could I ever find them? Unless. . .
Every morning for the past
week when I let the horses inside, I had seen the calico
cat coming out of an unused dog kennel near the end of the
barn. Was it possible she'd made a nest in the dog house?
I went out to the kennel,
peered into the dog house — and sure enough, there were
the kittens. A black, a gray and a tabby, curled up
together for warmth.
I got hold of the kittens.
All three fit in the palm of my hand.
After putting the kittens
in a box, I went to the stable office so I could call my
veterinarian for advice. The year before I had adopted
four two-week old kittens who had been orphaned at this
same stable (which leads me to believe stables are
exceptionally dangerous places for mother cats). But
two-week old kittens were very different from the kittens
I had just settled into a box. I wasn't sure the newborns
had even had a chance to nurse their mother. And they were
so incredibly, impossibly tiny.
Because it was a weekend,
my regular vet turned out not to be on call at the clinic.
I really wanted to talk to him because he was so
knowledgeable and helpful, but this was an emergency and I
knew I couldn't wait until Monday morning. The on-call vet
I reached, however, was not at all helpful. “Don’t
even bother,” he said. “They’ll never make it.”
When I hung up the phone, I
had a hollow feeling in the pit of my stomach. Don't
bother? How could I not bother? I simply couldn't accept
just sitting back and doing nothing. If I did everything I
could and the kittens died, that would be one thing. But
just leaving them to starve to death, their little bodies
growing weak and cold — especially after I had witnessed
their mother's death and felt, somehow, sort of
responsible because I hadn't gotten that door shut quickly
enough — no, I just couldn't do it. I knew if I didn't
try, I would have trouble sleeping at night for weeks to
come. So, I searched the yellow pages for another vet
clinic.
The next veterinarian I
called was much more optimistic about the situation.
“Bring them into the office,” he said. “We’ll
weigh them and I’ll tell you what you need to do.”
The kittens only weighed
three ounces each and at first, they consumed a half an
eyedropper of canned milk replacer three times a day. The
vet told me their mother would normally feed them every
two hours but that I shouldn't try feeding them that
often. "They won't be really hungry, and then you'll
get frustrated and they’ll get frustrated. Feed them
three times a day," he explained.
In a few days the kittens
started to put on weight. At ten days old they opened
their eyes. At four weeks old they began to use a litter
box. Not a regular one, but an aluminum pie plate that was
just their size. . .
All these years later (12
to be exact!), I’m happy to say the kittens grew up to
be healthy, lively cats. Two of them, a 7-pound black
female, Nightshade, and a 13-pound tabby male, Sebastian,
became as much a part of the family as my other four cats.
The gray kitten was adopted by a woman who desperately
wanted another cat. Her faithful companion of many years
had died recently and when she heard about the orphaned
kittens I was raising, well — she just knew she had to
adopt one of them. As far as I can tell, Nightshade and
Sebastian are not suffering any problems from being
orphaned as newborns. Except, perhaps, for the fact that
Sebastian becomes uneasy when the kitty food dishes are
empty. He'll come to find me, "talking,"
chirping and purring non-stop while running a few feet
ahead to lead me to the dishes. All I have to do is put
out a handful of dry food and he's satisfied. Most of the
time he's not even hungry — just worried, I think,
because the dishes are empty.
As for Nightshade, she has
turned my six-foot-two-inch tall husband from a man who
swore he didn't like cats into a person who holds her,
cuddles her and tells her she has "itty-bitty kitty
fitties (feet)" — which he will deny vehemently if
anyone mentions it to him. "I do NOT," he says,
drawing himself up to his full height, "talk to my
cat that way."
Although I now live 250
miles from the veterinarian who told me "not to
bother" I have been tempted to send him pictures of
Nightshade and Sebastian. They are living proof of what
can happen when you ignore the advice of experts and
follow your heart, adding just a little bit of
"bother" and a whole lot of love.
*****************
© LeAnn R. Ralph 2004
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About
The Author
LeAnn
R. Ralph is the author of the books:
*Christmas in Dairyland (True Stories from
a Wisconsin Farm)* (trade paperback) and
*Preserve Your Family History (A
Step-by-Step Guide for Writing Oral
Histories)* (e-book; 66 pages). To read
sample chapters and to sign up for the
FREE! monthly newsletter, Rural Route 2
News & Updates, visit — http://ruralroute2.com
bigpines@ruralroute2.com |
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