Feral Cat Solutions

Feral Cat Solutions Assistance with management of feral cat colonies for homeowners, property managers, and other caring Individuals in the community. TNR.

We provide spay and neuter for outdoor cats in Kent County MI. Mission Statement of Feral Cat Solutions
The mission of Feral Cat Solutions is to work with compassionate individuals, local government, and other volunteers/community members to achieve population decline of unaltered, free roaming, feral, and or abandoned domesticated cats in our area thru education and the use of a humane technique

known as trap neuter return. Feral Cat Solutions will place friendly cats found not to be thriving outdoors in adoption programs when appropriate to minimize suffering.

Two more little ladies trapped this evening need socialized. This is a commitment of several weeks. We provide all the s...
06/18/2026

Two more little ladies trapped this evening need socialized. This is a commitment of several weeks. We provide all the supplies. The wee girls need a small space separate from your pets and frequent kind handling:)
Text if you are able to help with this
(951) 852-7063.

06/17/2026

I know all of you can relate lol!

Single lil house panther needs to be socialized. He is not fractious just scared. We provide all the supplies you bring ...
06/17/2026

Single lil house panther needs to be socialized. He is not fractious just scared. We provide all the supplies you bring the love. This is a commitment of several weeks. You need to have a place separate from your pets preferably a bathroom or a cage or a room without a bed for the kitten so that you can put your hands on him and handle him frequently, he should come around nicely in a few weeks. You can make a comment here or text me at 951-852-7063 if you’re able to help with this little baby.

We call this making a train. I prefer to use a tru catch catch cage behind the trap and as I collect the family they are...
06/17/2026

We call this making a train. I prefer to use a tru catch catch cage behind the trap and as I collect the family they are added to the catch cage. Using those transfer doors instead of a carrier assure no loss of anyone you worked so hard to contain. With a super dooper large family you can use two traps in line using one just for “storage”.

If you have found and rescued kittens, you may be wondering how to catch the mom cat. 🤔 It is so important to make that effort!

Please don't just scoop up the kittens and move on. 🚫 Leaving the mother cat behind often means she will face the exact same situation again in just a few short months, producing another litter and continuing the cycle.

If kittens are around, there's a very good chance mom is nearby, even if you haven't seen her. It is actually uncommon for an entire litter of kittens to be abandoned.

So how do you find her❓

Place the kittens in a carrier or trap at the location where they were found. Then set a baited trap in front of the carrier and cover both with a sheet or blanket to create a little "tunnel" leading straight to her babies.

And here's the important part—go away. 😂

Mama cat is much less likely to return if a scary human is standing nearby watching. Let the kittens and the trap do the work for you. If possible, go inside and monitor from a window. If you're in a public location, park nearby where you can still keep an eye on the trap from your vehicle.

Good luck and happy trapping! 🐾

Edit for clarification: Going away does not mean leaving the trap unattended. Never leave a trap unattended. It simply means not standing right next to it expecting mom to walk in while you're watching. Monitor from a window, your vehicle, or another location where you can observe the trap without being seen.

Well hello. Thank you for your patronage….. next time don’t give birth when you are here for spay and neuter. Please. Th...
06/14/2026

Well hello. Thank you for your patronage….. next time don’t give birth when you are here for spay and neuter. Please. This is a feral mom so moving her out of the litter box to a clean cage was a significant challenge. We overcame.

06/11/2026

How to use a TruCatch trap for TNR.

Two fosters needed. One is a single kitten. Semi feral. Needs socialization. The other is a group of six lil babies. Sca...
06/11/2026

Two fosters needed. One is a single kitten. Semi feral. Needs socialization.
The other is a group of six lil babies. Scared. Not feral. Look five to six weeks old.
We provide all the supplies you need to have a space dedicated to socializing Kittens. The young Kittens would have to be held until they are 2 pounds which will be probably three weeks. The single Kitten is probably very close to 2 pounds. It just needs to be held for a week or two to be handled. Reach out to me by text at 951-852-7063 if you’re able to help.

Why would we not help you? We get it. What people forget is that we are a TNR organization. Our mission is to reduce suf...
06/05/2026

Why would we not help you?
We get it. What people forget is that we are a TNR organization. Our mission is to reduce suffering in outdoor cats thru spay and neuter. If you contact us with kittens you are looking for help for we do not let you give the kittens away to your friends or people on the internet. We get it…. Kittens are cute but we don’t really want them. We just don’t want you giving them away. Most of them will not be spayed or neutered. Many will be let outdoors to make more cats. Most kittens born outdoors do not make it to their first birthday. We do not have an adoption program but we still want to pull as many as we can to place in adoption programs with rescue and shelter partners. They are the low hanging fruit of the work we do. First, we remove all the Kittens and then we start fixing all of the adults.
We are also very mean in making people attempt to get the mom so we can fix her. I know. It is a stinker. It’s all part of living in a community. Working together to solve problems. Mom will grind out another litter in September if we don’t fix her now! We provide all the care for hundreds of kittens we have in foster with other wonderful people who volunteer to hold and socialize kittens, assuring them of responsible indoor homes. All of our services are always free. We are steadfast in our belief that having and following policies that protect and promote what is best for outdoor cats and following best practice in the work that we do will help us reduce suffering in a meaningful way. We do pass on helping people who want to give away kittens for free. If you tell us you have a litter of six and show up with two and you gave some away to be barn cats we will send you off. You are working against every effort that we are sacrificing having normal serene lives to achieve. Not to mention the old absorbing the cost of things we don’t have donations to cover. We put everything we have to offer out there in order to help. We need people to understand and buy in. Buy in to protecting vulnerable kittens. Buy in to preventing kittens from being born. Buy in to making kittens rare so people don’t give them away outside tractor supply. They deserve better.
Cooper the chicken coop kitten photo for tax:)

06/04/2026

How to hold a feral mom who is nursing kittens safely. Reducing stress saves kittens lives.

A great post from an organization in San Diego. Having to spay abort is a tough decision. We have to always remember tha...
06/04/2026

A great post from an organization in San Diego. Having to spay abort is a tough decision. We have to always remember that reducing suffering thru spay and neutering is the big picture. At this point I am scared at the sheer volume of kittens coming in day after day. What will July and August look like? Will we even be able to find homes in September? October? Please do not allow pregnant cats to give birth and please for the love of all things holy do not give kittens away! No more free kittens. Please…

I debated whether this post was worth the energy to write. I am angry. So angry.
This story does not have a happy ending. Although this cat is no longer suffering, perhaps that is at least a comforting ending.
No names or rescues will be mentioned in this post.
Today, two people from Riverside brought in multiple cats. Several were thin, lactating females. One of them was an incredibly sweet girl who clearly didn't feel well. She looked exhausted and weak. It breaks my heart that I didn't get a photo of her before anesthesia.
While she was asleep, we discovered she had severe dental disease and would need nearly all of her teeth removed. Because she was lactating, we were concerned that kittens might still be relying on her and that she would need to be returned quickly. I called the trapper, who informed me that she was part of their rescue groups TNR program and was currently in foster after raising a litter of kittens.
The trapper explained that they had encountered many pregnant cats and brought them all indoors to give birth. They planned to keep all the kittens and return all the mothers back outside.
At that point, I had to remind myself that we are not the police. We cannot tell a rescue what they can or cannot do. What we can do is point out how cruel it is to allow so many kittens to come into the world while kittens are dying on the streets every day.
Still, I tried to see the positive. This was a rescue, after all. Surely they could keep this mother cat, raise funds for her dental care, treat her medical needs, and eventually place her for adoption.
Instead, the rescuer told me to euthanize her because they did not have the resources to care for her.
To them, this sweet mother cat was merely a vessel. As long as her kittens were cared for, her life no longer mattered.
After expressing how disappointing that was to hear, I told them we would try to find another option. Our friends at Smittens agreed that if we could find a foster, they would take her. We proceeded with our standard protocol and tested her for FeLV.
The positive result broke our hearts.
Suddenly, everything made sense. The weakness. The exhaustion. Her body was shutting down.
After discussions with our veterinarian and rescue partners, we all came to the same conclusion: the kindest thing we could do for her was humane euthanasia.
We let her go peacefully, surrounded by people who cared.
She is gone now.
This rescue must now care for her kittens and follow FeLV protocols for months before those kittens can even be considered for adoption. All we can do is hope they live long, healthy lives.
Their mother sacrificed everything for them.
As if that weren't enough, this mother cat was not the only concern. Several of the other lactating females brought in today have ringworm. That means they have now exposed not only their own kittens, but every cat and kitten they have come into contact with. What started as a decision to allow pregnancies to continue has now created a much larger welfare and medical crisis for countless animals. The consequences extend far beyond a single litter.
Please terminate every feline pregnancy. There is no such thing as "too far along." If your veterinarian says no, find one who understands the reality of the overpopulation crisis.
We recognize that spay and neuter services are not equally accessible everywhere. But in Southern California—where many of our followers live—there are clinics willing to make the necessary choice.
Every litter born is competing for homes that already do not exist. Every preventable pregnancy matters.
There is no more room and we are actively returning kittens back to the street after spay/neuter.
-Audrey

Address

Grand Rapids, MI
49501, 49502, 49503, 49504, 49505, 49506, 49507, 49508, 49510, 49514, 49515, 495

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