26/05/2026
Scrolling through social media, posts about animal neglect and the horrible ways cats are treated by humans have become far too common on our newsfeeds. Post after post of confronting proof of just how cruel and careless people can be. Begging people to be more careful when “rehoming.” People justifying dumping animals because rescues are full. We hadn't planned on making one ourselves.
Typically, our rescue only deals with strays and colonies, but today was different.
We often work closely with Help 4 felines in need. Different specialties, same goal: helping cats. Today had us collecting a surrendered cat and transporting him for urgent medical attention.
A cat who, in the last 6 months, has had 3 different owners.
A cat who spent the last 4 weeks with someone who knew he needed medical treatment and still did nothing.
4 weeks of medical neglect.
4 weeks of suffering.
4 weeks of pain.
This is what “give away” and “rehoming” pages create. This is the ugly reality hidden behind the “we were only trying to help” excuses.
This is what people don’t think about when they look for “free” cats.
People in these groups justify situations like this all the time:
“Well, at least we got him off the street and somewhere safe.”
But is it really “safe” to leave an animal suffering for weeks without medication, pain relief, or basic veterinary care?
If you are not willing or able to provide urgent medical treatment when it’s needed, DO NOT rescue an animal.
Being indoors does not automatically mean an animal is safe. A cat suffering in pain without treatment is still suffering.
Please support legitimate rescues.
Adopt from rescues.
Donate to rescues.
Volunteer if you can.
When rescues say, “Sorry, we’re full,” it is not because we do not care. It is because we are operating beyond capacity and resources.
Tonight, we are left feeling horror, anger, disgust, and heartbreak. Mostly sadness. Sadness for him.
Tomorrow, he will be going into the care of Help 4 Felines in Need. We are simply the transport team in this situation, but some things need to be shared.
Staying silent sometimes feels too much like complacency.