Auckland City Kitties

Auckland City Kitties ACK is a tiny but mighty kitten rescue and rehoming organisation, devoted to giving orphaned and abandoned kittens a second chance at life.

Powered by adoption fees and the kindness of donors, we are all about saving lives, one tiny meow at a time.

Once again, this extraordinary little guy had a birthday party and instead of presents for himself, he asked his friends...
07/06/2026

Once again, this extraordinary little guy had a birthday party and instead of presents for himself, he asked his friends to buy presents for the kittens at Auckland City Kitties.

Check out this amazing haul!

I am so grateful to have his mum and dad (Sophie and Michael) as wonderful people in my life, raising such a kind and generous little man.

Have you HERDD the news?! 🐾You can help us turn litter into LOVE 💛 Your chance to do good, while you scoop!For every bag...
02/06/2026

Have you HERDD the news?! 🐾

You can help us turn litter into LOVE 💛 Your chance to do good, while you scoop!

For every bag of HERDD pet care litter purchased at a participating New World or Petstock during June, $1 is donated to Auckland City Kitties 🐱

Clean home. Happy cats. Saving lives.

Now that’s something worth making a fuss about.

An excellent and timely article from the team at Paw Justice
30/05/2026

An excellent and timely article from the team at Paw Justice

Cat curfews, fines, and registration let's talk about what's actually going on.

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/whanganui-chronicle/news/pest-control-expert-calls-for-nighttime-cat-curfew-in-whanganui/RY7CX55YYRFSDBPDXHQFQ647WI/

New Zealand has a real biodiversity problem. Nobody serious is disputing that. But when a pest control consultant calls for nighttime cat curfews in Whanganui, it's worth asking whether the proposed solution matches the actual problem or whether it's taking the path of least political resistance.

Because here's the thing. We have housing pressure, infrastructure strain, declining waterways, disappearing native habitat, illegal dumping, pollution, and urban sprawl chewing through what's left of our green spaces. These are complex, expensive, politically uncomfortable problems to fix.

But Mr Whiskers sleeping on the neighbour's deck at 11pm? That one apparently needs urgent regulatory attention.

The honest picture is more complicated than the headlines suggest. Feral cats truly wild, unsocialised animals with no human connection do cause genuine harm to native species in vulnerable areas. That's real, and it matters. But feral cats exist because of irresponsible human behaviour: dumping and abandonment. The animals at the end of that chain are symptoms, not the cause.

Stray cats are a different category entirely. These are animals still connected to people fed by neighbours, managed by community carers, capable of being desexed and rehomed. Lumping them in with feral cats to inflate the problem number is misleading, and it happens constantly in this debate.

And the proposed tools follow a predictable path. First come curfews. Then nuisance bylaws. Then cat fines. And following close behind registration for New Zealand's 1.2 million cats, generating tens of millions of dollars in council revenue. None of it touches a single feral animal. By definition, feral cats are outside any registration system. These measures land entirely on responsible owners and community carers. Compliant people comply. The actual problem doesn't.

What genuinely reduces feral populations is less politically exciting: accessible desexing, addressing abandonment at its source, and proper habitat restoration. These are harder and more expensive than a bylaw, which may explain why they consistently get less attention than registration schemes that happen to generate revenue.

There's also a cultural cost worth naming. Years of "cats are pests" messaging has real-world consequences. Poisonings, shootings, and deliberate cruelty toward owned pets are increasing. Public language shapes public behaviour and when you spend long enough telling people an animal is a pest, some people start acting on it.

That matters beyond the animals themselves. Normalising the harming and killing of harmless creatures changes the social fabric of a community. There is well-established research linking cruelty to animals with broader erosion of empathy in society. How we treat the vulnerable including animals reflects and shapes who we are as people.

Cats are also one of the greatest tools we have for teaching children empathy and kindness. The responsibility of caring for an animal, the bond that forms, the lesson that another living creature's comfort and safety mattersthese are not small things. They are foundational. A culture that frames cats as targets undermines that, and we should be honest about what we are trading away when we go down that path.

Nobody is saying wildlife protection doesn't matter. It absolutely does. But serious environmental policy should be proportionate, evidence-based, and targeted at the actual drivers of the problem not the easiest thing to put a fine on

8 beautiful kittens adopted into 6 amazing homes today - thank you everyone who came along to Pet.kiwiTamzin & Hazel are...
29/05/2026

8 beautiful kittens adopted into 6 amazing homes today - thank you everyone who came along to Pet.kiwi

Tamzin & Hazel are the last two kittens available for adoption at the moment.
Both female - approx 16 weeks.

The girls could be adopted together or separately (they are good mates but not bonded)

Tamzin is exceptionally friendly and adventurous and good with kids. Tamzin may be best suited to being an only cat or with an older male cat.

Hazel is quieter and very cuddly and loving. Hazel would suit a home with a dog or another cat as she absolutely loves mine.

I have another 30 kittens in care of various ages coming up for adoption soon. They’re all sorts of colours and there are LOTS of fluffy little cuties.

Once again thanks to the Pet.Kiwi team for their ongoing support.

Sleepy pile of kittens getting ready for the adoption day tomorrow!
29/05/2026

Sleepy pile of kittens getting ready for the adoption day tomorrow!

HUGE THANK YOU to Monique Van Bellen for this massive donation of Raw Essentials food for the kittens. With 41 mouths to...
23/05/2026

HUGE THANK YOU to Monique Van Bellen for this massive donation of Raw Essentials food for the kittens. With 41 mouths to feed, this will help so much over the next couple of weeks! 🐾 🐈‍⬛

Slightly cowardly to comment on my post and then block me - so I’m just sharing this here for anyone that knows the love...
21/05/2026

Slightly cowardly to comment on my post and then block me - so I’m just sharing this here for anyone that knows the lovely Tina 😊

Please share your wisdom with me Tina since you seem to know all there is about running a kitten rescue!

36 kittens in care - THIRTY SIX!At a time when kitten season SHOULD be slowing… it’s not. If anything, it feels like it’...
19/05/2026

36 kittens in care - THIRTY SIX!

At a time when kitten season SHOULD be slowing… it’s not. If anything, it feels like it’s getting harder.

I’m completely at capacity and beyond. As much as I wish I could help every cat and kitten that needs it, I simply can’t.

This week I was messaged by someone asking me to take in two adult cats because they were moving and couldn’t take them. When I explained I couldn’t, I was told (among a few more harsh words) “it’s your job.”

It isn’t.

My actual job is EA to a very busy (and very understanding!) CFO and Global CEO of a global company.

This rescue is something I run from my home, in my own time, alongside that full-time role funded by kindness, donations, and a lot of sleepless nights.

Adoption fees help cover some of the vet essentials, but they don’t cover my time, my fuel, endless cleaning supplies, or even the simple day-to-day reality of running this rescue.

I always step in where I can but I am not a catch-all solution for situations that could have been planned for.

Right now, the greatest need is support for the kittens already here.
If you’d like to help, the most needed items are:

🧺 Cat litter - I use the wood pellets from Bunnings or Mitre10
🍼 Pet milk - the Vitapet one from the supermarket :)
🍽️ Kitten and cat food - while exclusively raw feed from Raw Essentials, donations of any cat/kitten food - wet or dry are always appreciated.

Every single donation makes a difference and helps me continue saying “yes” where I can.

Thank you, as always, for supporting these little lives 💛

As requested via private message I have included details below to my Give-A-Little page and my 'wishlist' at Pet.kiwi. The "donate a vaccine" item is my most used!!

https://givealittle.co.nz/cause/auckland-city-kitties

https://www.pet.kiwi/product/cat-rescue---donate-a-vaccine/pkcatvax.aspx

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Ponsonby
1011

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