Tuesday, May 27, 2008

How do I get myself into these things?

Today I heard a kitty outside the bedroom window.

Skeeter and I went out to find him, and he was sitting under the holly bushes, shaking with fear and mewling like mad. He was a cute little grey and white kitty, definitely old enough to be weaned, but not much older than that.

We checked on him several times during the day, and he was always right next to the house under the holly bushes. We set out water for him, and I went to the store for kitty food.

He disappeared for a while, but he showed up again later, during a big and unexpected storm that came up at sunset. The poor little guy was mewling again, so Skeeter and I decided to see if we could find him, just to give him some shelter from the storm. The next door neighbors heard him as well, and they came to help.

So it ended up with the six of us (Skeeter, me, and the four neighbors) crawling in the holly bushes, then through the privet hedge, for nearly an hour in the pouring rain to rescue the kitty. The neighbors finally caught him in their back yard and were able to dry him off and put him safely in the garage. A bit later I took the bag of kitty food over for him, and one of the neighbors told me that we had scared away a raccoon that had been stalking the little guy since nightfall.

The children were so disappointed that we didn't bring the kitty home with us. That was never really an option though, since we're all horribly allergic.

During the middle of the search and rescue, I had to laugh about it. Skeeter and I were out in the dark, in the rain, crawling through the holly bushes to rescue a homeless kitty that couldn't stay with us anyway.

No, it doesn't exactly sound sane to me either, but I'm still glad we did.

Noodle4

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Aw, I would have done the same thing. Good for you! Poor kitten would have been raccoon food, otherwise. :-)

Tina said...

Very fortunate kitty...Good job!! :)

Candy said...

But when you do stuff like that, you send good karma out into the world. If nothing else, you get my undying gratitude for one more safe kitty in the world.

Renna said...

Be it kitty or human, a defenseless babe brings out the nurturing instinct in all of us. I'm glad the kitty is rescued and safe. :-)

Anonymous said...

Looks like little kitty has eight lives left.....I would have done the same thing, but the hubby would have balked about it, as he watched me from the safety of the house, the entire time...

Hmmm??? My part-time cat has been MIA since Chaun fixed his entry point...maybe this little kitty is hers...