In the three weeks Pimento has lived with us, he's settled into a predictable pattern. Most of the day he shelters under the daybed cover in the office. When Tony and I go to bed, the cat has moved to stage himself behind the trundle bed mattress (probably so he can get a fast start on eating and using the litter box after we turn out the lights).
Given that Pimento is already somewhat secured under the cover I figured it would be relatively easy to get him into a carrier for the trip. The plan was to close the office door and have Tony to sit on one end of the bed to lift up the cover so I could grab him. However, in the morning we discovered Pimento had mixed his routine up and was hunkered down behind the bed.
Putting him into the carrier turned into a five-minute slapstick of pulling out the bed frame, Pimento sliding underneath the trundle, and scampering around the room in an effort to elude us. He even jumped into an open window and tried to climb up the screen in the gap between the glass and the screen before I was able to extricate his claws from the screen mesh and grab him.
The animal hospital the shelter uses was a thirty minute drive from the condo.
The arrangement is for the vet to do shelter work during breaks or any free
time, so we dropped Pimento off at 8 am. The receptionist said to expect a
notification sometime between 12 and 2 pm letting us know to come pick him up,
but to call if we hadn't heard anything by 3 pm.
After leaving the clinic, the next stop was at his previous foster's house to
return a sweat shirt she had left in his cage when we made the transfer. We
chatted with her for a few minutes and learned some interesting tidbits that
explained a lot. She told us that Pimento has a small tip of his right ear
gone, which indicated he had gone through a Trap, Neuter, Return (TNR)
process. Along the way someone recognized he had the possibility to be
someone's pet and contacted the shelter. She had done her part to help
socialize Pimento, but when her work schedule changed she realized he would
benefit from someone who was around the house more and turned him over to
us.
The pickup went smoothly. In addition to his shots Pimento had his nails clipped. After his rough day he fell asleep in the carrier on the ride home. Tony set the carrier down in the office and opened the door. Pimento was thrilled to be back home.
At bedtime we couldn't find Pimento in any of his usual spots. Tony discovered
him under our bed, scrunched up against the headboard wall and as close to the
middle of the queen sized mattress as he could get. I'm sure he felt safer
there, but I was excited to see he knew enough about other parts of the house
to choose a new place.
That's so nice he is settling in.
ReplyDeleteYou're good cat people! I like the pimento updates, also that you know he's already neutered, no wasted vet visit.
ReplyDeleteThe shelter's policy is to neuter every cat they send out for fostering or adoption.
DeletePimento's a lovely name. He also looks lovely in the photo.
ReplyDeleteHe has a sweet face, and from what I've seen of his body the markings are equally lovely.
DeletePimento did indeed have a big day. It's nice he was excited to be back home again in a familiar place. That must have been reassuring for him.
ReplyDeleteI hope that after three weeks this condo feels like home.
DeleteAre you going to keep him ! I notice you still refer to him a your foster cat.
ReplyDeleteAt this point our plan is to foster only. As our cats tend to live long lives we aren't ready for an extended commitment.
DeleteHot cat with a name like that.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
HA! I shall pass your compliment on to him.
DeleteI would be putting that boy in the middle of things, the tough love route. It took Slinko here a full year to come out as tame. He was a "lost boy" living in a feral colony. By lost boy I mean a formerly owned tame male who was never neutered and roamed off looking for love or a home and at least found a feral colony to hang with. There are entire colonies composed of lost boys, never neutered by owners who either left them on their own or the cat roamed off during mating season.
ReplyDeleteIf we take his bedspread safe space away he will just find another one, won't he? I find the idea of a "lost boy" cat horribly sad.
DeleteI think maybe he is beginning to trust you, since he chose to be under your bed.
ReplyDeleteThat was my (optimistic) thought, too.
DeleteI think you chasing the cat around the bedroom would have been a fun video!
ReplyDeleteI'm sure it would have been.
DeleteHow lovely to know he's starting to feel comfortable with you.
ReplyDeleteIs there any chances of you guys keeping him for good?
ReplyDeleteAt this point we're sticking with our original plan to foster only. Given our travel schedule we're not ready for a extended commitment.
DeleteIt is a trick taking in such cats. Good work.
ReplyDeleteI have done that dance, trying to get them into a carrier! Silly cats.