Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Adoption Event!



Where:  Pet Health, on 81st and Amsterdam
When:  12 p.m. to 4 p.m.

***

We need volunteers for the following shifts:
11:30 to 1:30
1:30 to 4:30

***

TO ALL OUR FOSTERS 
Please make arrangements to get your cats to the event!  This is the best way to get them adopted and they deserve a purrmanent home!

Drop off your cats at 11:45 a.m. at Pet Health.
If this does not work contact info@atailatatime.org and we can figure something out.
Thank you!

***

Opt to Adopt!

Monday, March 29, 2010

Featured Adoptable


You may recognize Karina from last week's featured adoptable.  She's being featured again this week because she really is an awesome cat who deserves a little extra love.  Karina's a fighter.  She was hit by car when she was a kitten and instead of sitting around feeling sorry for herself she taught herself to walk on two legs.  She moves so well you won't even notice she's not using her hind legs.  She's also a lover -- she wants to be petted and stroked, she wants a warm lap to curl up in, and she wants someone to play with.  She's a good girl and she deserves a great home.

If you or someone you know might be interested in meeting Karina, visit our website www.atailatatime.org or email us at info@atailatatime.org for more information.

Opt to Adopt!

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Kitten Palooza!

The New York City Feral Cat Initiative, a program of the Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals, presents Kitten Palooza!, a series of workshops sponsored by PetSmart Charities:






Bottle Feeding & Care of Orphaned Kittens
Tuesday, April 6, or Thursday, May 6, 2010 (choose one)
6:30-9:30 p.m.
ASPCA, 424 East 92nd Street (between 1st and York Avenues), 5th Floor, Manhattan

Kitten Palooza! is a series of workshops on working with kittens as part of Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) projects. In this workshop, learn the skills needed to successfully bottle-feed and care for orphaned kittens. This workshop will cover which equipment and formula get the best results, bottle-feeding techniques, and all stages of kitten care.

Instructors: Dr. Tina Waltke, Manhattan Cat Specialists; Valerie Sicignano, NYC Feral Cat Initiative; and Iris Lugo, Animal Care & Control of NYC

Socializing Feral Kittens
Sunday, April 11, or Saturday, May 8, 2010 (choose one)
1:00-4:00 p.m.
ASPCA, 424 East 92nd Street (between 1st and York Avenues), 5th Floor, Manhattan

Kitten Palooza! is a series of workshops on working with kittens as part of Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) projects. In this workshop, learn the process of socializing (taming) young feral kittens into adoptable pets. Features a screening of the Urban Cat League DVD, Tough Love: Socializing Feral Kittens, and kitten trapping techniques.

Instructors: Mike Phillips, Urban Cat League; Valerie Sicignano, NYC Feral Cat Initiative; and Nancy Alusik, KittyKind

RegistrationThere is no fee to attend the Kitten Palooza! workshops, but advance registration is required. To request a spot, send an e-mail with the name and date of the workshop(s) you wish to attend, your first and last name, organization (if applicable), phone number, and borough, with the name/date of the workshop in the subject line to events@NYCFeralCat.org. Only those who are awarded a spot will receive a reply. If you do not receive a reply, it means we could not fit you in. A limited number of spots are available. Spots are non-transferable -- if you need to cancel, you can not give your spot away; it will go to the next person on the list.

More Information
E-mail: events@NYCFeralCat.org
Web: www.NYCFeralCat.org/kittenpalooza
Facebook: Become a Fan!

Spread the Word!
Want to spread the word about Kitten Palooza! to other feral cat caretakers? Click here, scroll down and click the 'forward this email' button!

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Monday, March 22, 2010

Looking for Foster Families


Welcome to Spring - a.k.a Kitten Season.  This is the time of year when unaltered cats give birth to litters of kittens and the kill list at the local shelters explode.  This means that many rescuers begin only pulling kittens from the shelters, leaving the adult cats to die.  A Tail At A Time pulled two adult cats this weekend and they need foster homes!


This is Frisky.  He looks terrified in the photo because he is.  He'd just been relinquished by a family who could no longer afford the regular costs of owning a cat.  Frisky loves all people of all shapes, sizes and ages.  He's 9.9 pounds and only 11 months old. He's never been around other animals, so he'll probably do best in a home where he's the only animal.



This beauty is Roz, a gray tiger/Maine Coon who was found as a stray.  She's two years old, 7.4 pounds, and looking forward to having a safe, warm place to sleep.  She's not feral -- she was most likely abandoned.  

If you have room in your heart and your home to take in either of these cats as a foster, or a foster-to-adopt, or if you know someone who might be interested in lending these kitty's a little love, please email us at info@atailatatime.org or you can visit our website, www.atailatatime.org, for more information.

Opt to Adopt!

P.S. We're now official members of the Mayor's Alliance of NYC!  Congratulations to A Tail At A Time!

Nanan, beautiful black lab



"Nanan" a gorgeous, deaf, 10 year old lab is at the Ashtabula County Animal Protective League in Ashtabula, OH.  She's been sitting in the shelter since June 2009 -- that's more than eight months!

She is a very sweet dog and she deserves to be in a home living out her final years in comfort, with a family who loves her!  Because she is deaf, she needs to be somewhere where her people know not to startle her or sneak up from behind -- probably best that she not be around small children for this reason.

If you would like to help Nanan or know of someone who might, please contact Tina Hayes at addedtouch@roadrunner.com.  Transport is available anywhere in the U.S.

Opt to Adopt!

Friday, March 19, 2010

A reminder from ASPCA:

Dear New York Advocates,

There is still time to save low-income spay/neuter! Last week, we contacted you about New York’s proposed 2010-2011 Executive Budget, which seeks to eliminate a statewide program called the Animal Population Control Program (APCP) but includes no plan to replace it. We need to ask you to contact your legislators once more—even if you already emailed them last week, please do so again.

We’ve set up our online letter-sending system to fax your senator and assemblyperson, since their staffs have informed us that for this issue, this is the best way to get your opinions heard. We also hope you can take a minute to call Governor Paterson at (518) 474-8390 to urge amendment of the proposed Executive Budget to save the statewide spay/neuter program for low-income New Yorkers' animals.

As you know, animal control resources are already stretched to their limits—and without a pet sterilization program to meet the needs of low-income New Yorkers, the number of unwanted dog and cat births in our state will skyrocket, leading to further overcrowding in shelters and increased euthanasia.

What You Can Do
Visit the ASPCA Advocacy Center to fax your state legislators about saving the state’s low-cost spay/neuter program.

Thank you, New York, for caring about our state’s neediest animals.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Adoption Event This Saturday

Click the image for a larger view

If you're interested in volunteering for the event, if you feel like spending an afternoon cuddling kittens, if you're thinking about adopting or fostering, please email us at info@atailatatime.org or visit our website at www.atailatatime.org.

Opt to Adopt!

A free pet event and you can win prizes!



What:  A gallery show featuring Pet Photographer Jim Dratfield
Where:  Taj -- 48 West 21st Street between 5th and 6th Avenue
When:  Friday, March 26 from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.


Jim Dratfield's Petography® specializes in fine art photography of pets and people with their pets.  Jim has done photo commissions for the likes of Jennifer Aniston, Charlize Theron, Bebe Neuwirth, Henry Kissinger, Billy Joel and Elton John.  Jim is the author of nine books and his tenth book Pugnation: The Bark is Back!, comes out in October.  His work has been featured on ABC's 20/20, The View, Oprah's O. Magazine, Instyle and Town & Country.



In addition, we will use this opportunity to raise money for a worthy cause, Animal Care & Control of New York City.

Animal Care & Control rescues over 43,000 animals each year, making the organization the largest pet rescue and adoption agency in the North East.  Since 1995, the not-for-profit organization has been responsible for New York City's municipal shelter system, caring for rescued animals and finding loving homes for homeless, injured, neglected, abused and abandoned animals in all five boroughs of New York City.




Admission for this event will be free.  Helping with our fund raising efforts will be the elegant and glamorous ladies of TOW (Tall Outstanding Women) who will be present all night long selling raffle tickets.  Minimum height requirement for group members is six feet!


Prizes include: 



*A 3 day/2 night all-inclusive stay at Cove Haven Entertainment Resorts Value: $1,031!

covepoconoresorts.com



*A gift certificate to Henri Bendel, New York's legendary Fifth Avenue boutique Value: $300!


*Two tickets to LOVE, LOSS AND WHAT I WORE, on Broadway courtesy of Bernadette Peters, renowned Broadway star and animal advocate. Value: $250!



*A book autographed by Jim Dratfield, (Not sure what it's worth but it's a great book!)




*Time spent with other group members...PRICELESS!




For further details on this very special event, email


 AndyfTroy@aol.com or call 917-754-4329. 




See you there!

Monday, March 15, 2010

Featured Adoptable

Meet Karina:


A beautiful two-year old brown tabby who was hit by a car when she was a kitten.  As a result, her back legs are completely paralyzed.  But Karina is an inspiration -- in the face of adversity she has prevailed.  She taught herself to walk using only her front legs and if you could see how well she moves, you'd never guess she was different than any other cat.




Karina is loving and affectionate, playful and full of personality.  She uses the litter box same as any other cat and loves attention.  The only extra care she requires is your love and devotion.  Is that too much to ask?  I didn't think so.

If you'd like to know more about Karina, or if you're interested in adopting or fostering, please email us at info@atailatatime.org or visit our website at www.atailatatime.org.

Opt to adopt!

Thursday, March 11, 2010

A Message from ASPCA

Dear New York Advocates, 

Since 1996, a statewide program called the Animal Population Control Program (APCP) has helped fund spay/neuter surgery for adopted pets and the pets of low-income residents. However, New York’s proposed 2010-2011 Executive Budget seeks to eliminate this life-saving program and includes no plan to replace it.

The APCP is funded by a $3 surcharge on licenses for unaltered dogs. If the budget passes as written, this income stream will no longer be reserved for exclusive use by a spay/neuter program, allowing local governments to use the money for whatever they wish—or to stop collecting it at all.

Without some kind of pet sterilization program to meet the needs of low-income New Yorkers, we will likely experience a large increase in the number of unwanted dog and cat births in our state—leading to further overcrowding in shelters and increased euthanasia. The ASPCA proposes that the $3 surcharge remain in effect and be used to fund a new statewide program similar to the APCP.

What You Can Do
Animal control resources are already stretched to their limits—don’t let Albany make matters worse for countless New Yorkers by taking away the only access they have to spay/neuter for their beloved pets. Visit the ASPCA Advocacy Center to learn more and to send an email to your state representatives and Governor Paterson, asking them to amend the state budget to preserve low-cost spay/neuter.

Thank you, New York, for caring about our state’s neediest animals. 

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Maybe she always wanted to be a mama

The following was sent to me by a friend, one of those chain emails I hate and never read.  But for some reason I read this one and am I ever glad.  The story breaks my heart and that glues it all back together again in a matter of minutes.  I hope you enjoy it.

***

In 2003, police in Warwickshire, England opened a garden shed and found a whimpering, cowering dog.  The dog had been locked in the shed and abandoned.  It was dirty and malnourished and had quite clearly been abused.
In an act of kindness, the police took the dog, which was a female greyhound, to the Nuneaton Warwickshire Wildlife Sanctuary, which is run by a man named Geoff Grewcock, and known as a haven for animals abandoned, orphaned, or otherwise in need.
Geoff and the other sanctuary staff went to work with two aims: to restore the dog to full health, and to win her trust.  It took several weeks, but eventually both goals were achieved.  They named her Jasmine, and they started to think about finding her an adoptive home.
Jasmine, however, had other ideas.  No one quite remembers how it came about, but Jasmine started welcoming all animal arrivals at the sanctuary.  It would not matter if it were a puppy, a fox cub, a rabbit or, any other lost or hurting animal.  Jasmine would just peer into the box or cage and, when and where possible, deliver a welcoming lick.




Geoff relates one of the early incidents.  "We had two puppies that had been abandoned by a nearby railway line.  One was a Lakeland Terrier cross and another was a Jack Russell Doberman cross.  They were tiny when they arrived at the centre, and Jasmine approached them and grabbed one by the scruff of the neck in her mouth and put him on the settee.  Then she fetched the other one and sat down with them, cuddling them."




"But she is like that with all of our animals, even the rabbits.  She takes all the stress out of them, and it helps them to not only feel close to her, but to settle into their new surroundings.  She has done the same with the fox and badger cubs, she licks the rabbits and guinea pigs, and even lets the birds perch on the bridge of her nose."

Jasmine, the timid, abused, deserted waif, became the animal sanctuary's resident surrogate mother, a role for which she might have been born.  The list of orphaned and abandoned youngsters she has cared for comprises five fox cubs, four badger cubs, fifteen chicks, eight guinea pigs, two stray puppies and fifteen rabbits - and one roe deer fawn.  Tiny Bramble, eleven weeks old, was found semi-conscious in a field.  Upon arrival at the sanctuary, Jasmine cuddled up to her to keep her warm, and then went into the full foster-mum role.  Jasmine the greyhound showers Bramble the roe deer with affection, and makes sure nothing is matted.





"They are inseparable," says Geoff.  "Bramble walks between her legs, and they keep kissing each other.  They walk together round the sanctuary.  It's a real treat to see them."




Jasmine will continue to care for Bramble until she is old enough to be returned to woodland life.  When that happens, Jasmine will not be lonely.  She will be too busy showering love and affection on the next orphan or victim of abuse.




Pictured from the left are: "Toby", a stray Lakeland dog; "Bramble", orphaned roe deer; "Buster", a stray Jack Russell; a dumped rabbit; "Sky", an injured barn owl; and "Jasmine, with a mother's heart doing best what a caring mother would do...and such is the order of God's Creation.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Just another Moby Monday

This week's featured adoptable is our beloved Moby:


Moby is a three-year-old Russian Blue mix who was given up by his family because of a new baby's allergies.  He's a big beautiful boy, neutered, fully vetted.  He is a little bit of an escape artist and because of that, is down to eight of his nine lives.  When we first got a hold of him he slipped out of his foster home and fell or was thrown off a seven story building.  We're not exactly sure what happened but you can read about his hospital stay here and here.  The story isn't a happy one, but the ending is good.  Moby is all healed and looking for a home.

If you're thinking about adopting a cat, Moby will surely steal your heart.  For more information, email us at info@atailatatime.org or visit our website at www.atailatatime.org.

Opt to Adopt! 


Friday, March 5, 2010

Tomorrow you might fall in love

Just a reminder that we're having another adoption event tomorrow, Saturday, March 6 from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. at Pet Health Store, 440 Amsterdam Ave. at 81st St.  Hope to see you there!

Click image for larger view


Opt to Adopt!

Thursday, March 4, 2010

ACC still needs your help!




Here is how you can help right now.

Bill Moran of C+K Distributors has generously agreed to help us help the animals! C+K is a huge distributor of pet food and supplies for the NYC metro area. In response to this unprecedented emergency, C+K will sell to the public at 5% below wholesale! That is less than what they charge pet stores! As orders come in they will be brought to the care centers. All major credit cards are accepted.

Please, go to your phones right now.
Call C+K at 718-894-4302 and say:


"I would like to place an order for the Animal Care & Control Food Drive."

Purchase 1, or as many cases as you can afford, of the following:

24/14oz Pedigree - $17.76 For Dogs
24/13oz Friskies-$19.20 For Cats


The shelter is also out of Kitty Litter.
Please purchase 40lb bags of Tidy Cat - $7.75

C+K Hours of Operation:
Monday-Friday 9am-6pm
Saturday 9am – 3pm
718-894-4302

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Hungry Hungry Animals



Animal Care & Control is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization that rescues over 43,000 animals every year; that's approximately 350 animals a month.  ACC relies heavily on funding from the City of New York but because of the recession, support from the City has been drastically reduced.  ACC is running out of food.

There are several ways you can help.  ACC is accepting donations of canned dog food, canned cat food, gently used towels and blankets, washable rubber toys and cat litter.  If you'd like to donate, here are some of your options:

1.  Contact Petropolis, 91 Washington St., NYC, NY (212) 608-2234 if you'd like to purchase food to be donated to ACC.  They will take your order over the phone or in person and make sure your purchase gets to ACC.

2.  Contact A Tail At A Time at info@atailatatime.org.

3.  Visit the website www.NYCACC.org to find the shelter nearest you so you can make a delivery of food, blankets, or toys yourself.

4.  Bill Moran of C+K Distributors has generously agreed to help us help the animals! C+K is a huge distributor of pet food and supplies for the NYC metro area. In response to this unprecedented emergency, C+K will sell to the public at 5% below wholesale! That is less than what they charge pet stores! As orders come in they will be brought to the care centers. All major credit cards are accepted.



Please, go to your phones right now.
Call C+K at 
718-894-4302 and say:

"I would like to place an order for the Animal Care & Control Food Drive."

Purchase 1, or as many cases as you can afford, of the following:
24/14oz Pedigree - $17.76 For Dogs
24/13oz Friskies-$19.20 For Cats


The shelter is also out of Kitty Litter.
Please purchase 40lb bags of Tidy Cat - $7.75

C+K Hours of Operation:
Monday-Friday 9am-6pm
Saturday 9am – 3pm
718-894-4302

Any item donated will help prolong the life of a homeless animal.


Click image for larger view

Opt to Adopt!

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

An important message from Animal Alliance


-----Original Message-----
From: Animal Alliance (Mayor's Alliance for NYC's Animals) <info@animalalliancenyc.org>
Subject: A disaster in the making in the NYS Budget!

Your help with a serious issue facing dogs and cats in the State of New York is urgently needed.

On page 171 of a 585 page document entitled "Executive Budget Agency Presentations" there is a seemingly innocuous heading "Dog license reform".  The suggestion from the Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets and accepted by governor Patterson is to eliminate the State's role in dog licensing and have each city, town and village (over 1,000 across the state) do their own licensing.   Hmmm, sounds like it wouldn't make much difference, you'll still get a dog license and show proof of rabies vaccination at your town clerk.  Might not sound much different.  There are many issues around decentralizing dog licensing, but that's not the biggest concern.

The problem is what this summary does not say.  What the governor left out (wisely) is that with the elimination of the central dog license database, the governor is also planning to eliminate the State's Animal Population Control Fund (APCF).  The APCF gets money from a $3 surcharge on every dog license sold in the state for dogs that are not spayed or neutered.  The fund then pays for spay/neuter surgeries for low income people and animals adopted from shelters that were not already altered.  This fund has subsidized surgeries for over 90,000 animals.  That means millions of animals were never born that would have ended up in shelters and added strain and expense to an unfunded non-profit system.

This is a system that worked, helped animals, helped people and was paid for. In 2008, the governor stole $1 million from the fund and put it in the general fund, who knows where that money went, but it did not go to help animals. It’s time we stand up and tell our government to stop taking away service we care about for our companion animals.

We should not allow this important service to disappear in our state.  Other states have seen the value and success of similar programs and understand that spaying and neutering animals saves money because the puppies and kittens don't have to go to shelters.

We have recommended to legislators that they create a statewide non-profit entity that will collect funds from the $3 surcharge and give grants to veterinarians and organizations that wish to help low income people spay or neuter their pets.  The administration costs for the non-profit would be significantly lower than what the government has spent on the fund and would create a sustainable statewide spay/neuter system, but we need your help now!

YOU CAN DO SOMETHING.

Act now:

Contact your local Senators and Assembly members:

To find out who your senator is click here.  Enter your address and you will be told who your senator is.  Then call, write and e-mail and let them know you want the State's Spay and Neuter fund to be preserved.

To find out who your assembly member is click here.  You can enter your zip code and find out who your assembly members is, again, let them know you want the state spay/neuter fund to be saved.

Contact the governor:

David A. Paterson
State Capitol
Albany, NY 12224
518-474-8390

Let him know that he was wrong to suggest eliminating the fund and he withdraw his recommendation.

Thank you for your support and please speak out for the animals, they have no voices of their own.

Blue in the City

Mark your calendar!  We're having another adoption event.


Click image for a larger view

Time:  12:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Place:  Pet Health Store, 440 Amsterdam Ave., at 81st St.
Why:  To meet the love of your life


If you've been thinking about adding to your family, if you're looking for a new best friend, or if you're interested in volunteering, visit our website at www.atailatatime.org or email info@atailatatime.org to get more information.

Opt to Adopt!