G-8GW6WNVDCH 2301875706914928 Rebecca McCathern on the Southern Cat Crisis: TNR, Bottle Babies & Community Rescue - Animal Posse

Episode 72

How One Woman Is Changing Cat Welfare in SWGA

Published on: 12th June, 2026

In this episode, Dixie talks with Rebecca McCathern from Helena’s Community Cats of SWGA about the realities of rescuing cats in rural Georgia. From nonstop kitten season to bottle‑baby emergencies, dumping, TNR challenges, and the myths that keep people from spaying and neutering, this conversation shines a light on what rescuers in the South are facing every single day.

Rebecca shares how she built her new 501(c)(3), why she named it after her mom, the difference between California and Southern states when it comes to animal welfare, and the creative ways she’s bringing education into her community. If you’ve ever wondered what it really takes to protect community cats in underserved areas, this episode is full of truth, heart, and real‑world solutions.

Learn more : https://www.helenascommunitycats.org/

About Animal Posse 🐈

Welcome to Animal Posse! We share heartwarming stories and crucial insights to make a real difference for animals in need. As a project of the Unwanted Feline Organization, we are a community of animal lovers dedicated to rescue, advocacy, and education. This podcast does not provide medical, veterinary, or professional advice.

Like, Share, and Subscribe to save lives through community, one rescue at a time!

📌 Disclaimer

This show is for entertainment and general discussion only. The experiences, opinions, and information shared by our guests are their own and are not intended as veterinary advice. This content should not be used as a substitute for professional diagnosis, treatment, or guidance. Always consult a licensed veterinarian regarding your pet’s health or any medical concerns.

#AnimalRescue #CatSanctuary #FeralCats #SpayNeuter #RescueStories #NeonatalKittens #AdoptDontShop #CatRescueLife #PodcastEpisode

Transcript
Dixie:

Welcome back everybody.

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Today, I'm joined by Rebecca from

Helena's Community Cats of SOWGA.

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We'll be talking about the important

work her organization does to help

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community cats and improve the lives

of cats throughout their region.

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Let's dive in.

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hi, Rebecca, and thank you

for coming on Animal Posse.

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Rebecca: You're welcome.

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Glad to be here.

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Dixie: I am looking forward to hear

about all the work that you do with

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Community Cats with your new 501[c][3].

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Tell us a little bit about yourself

how did you get involved with Community

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Cats, and if you can tell us- Okay

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a little bit about your nonprofit as well.

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Rebecca: Sure.

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So I have always been an animal lover,

and that's going back , since I was a kid.

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And between that and my mom's

encouragement to just give back to

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the community, I started fostering

animals years ago dogs and cats and

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found that my my dog doesn't care for

foster dogs in the house but has no

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problem having more cats in the house.

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So I switched solely to fostering cats.

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And I moved to Georgia from California a

little less than two years ago now, and

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I noticed here where I'm at in southwest

Georgia, there isn't a lot of focus on

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the cat situation that we've got here.

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We have quite a lot of animal

dumping that happens here.

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Not a lot of people are spaying and

neutering their cats or their dogs

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and so surprise litters happen and

people just get rid of the puppies.

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And so I started fostering dogs

actually again here because they

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would just be on the side of the road.

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But I found that there were plenty of

dog rescues, and when I say plenty,

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they are at their max just like our

humane societies are, but we have them

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and I wasn't seeing anyone focused

on the cat community and felt like

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that was an area of opportunity.

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So decided to take my energy and put

it into trying to figure out how to

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solve the cat problem that we've got

here, like I said, in southwest Georgia.

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So we've got many colonies of cats

and those are feral cats born into the

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colonies as well as dumped cats which

are potentially great for adoption.

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And so my original inspiration

was to be a rescue sanctuary

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TNR g- vet services, like really thought

I could jump in and solve all of the

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world's problems and have very quickly

realized I need to start somewhere.

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And the initial focus is on

TNR and and then bottle babies.

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Kittens that are either abandoned by

their mother or or taken by a human

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from the nest that the mother has

created and created a situation where

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a kitten is dependent on humans.

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That's the initial focus of the nonprofit

right now with grand plans to continue

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to evolve that over the years as we

become known and are successful in

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grant funds and things of that nature.

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When did

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Dixie: you start the nonprofit

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Rebecca: yeah.

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So we officially started October 2025,

and it is Helena's Community Cats of SWGA,

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which is what we call Southwest Georgia.

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Helena is my mom's name, and

so I did open it in her honor.

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As I mentioned, she's was

very philanthropic and gave

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to all kinds of situations.

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Wasn't necessarily a cat person,

which is everyone's first question.

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"Oh, did your mom love cats?"

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Nope.

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But she loved helping and so

decided to do it in her name.

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Dixie: So now I have to ask, since you

did come from California and you go

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to Georgia- Yeah … i'm in Louisiana,

and the kitten seasons that we have

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here , it's absolutely brutal right now.

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Every- Yes

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spring and summer it is brutal, but this

year it just seems even worse than ever.

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So we have it here because

we're so warm in the South, we

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have constant kitten season.

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We might get two months off which

is usually January, February,

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and then after that's it.

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We're back into kitten season.

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And we're lucky if we get

January and February off.

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How- Yeah … does Georgia compare to

California in terms of the number of cats

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and kitten seasons and that type of thing?

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Rebecca: So I would say Georgia

is more aligned with Louisiana, so

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definitely kitten season is always on.

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And additionally in California there, the

regulations around just animal control

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are much stricter or, and enforced maybe.

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Not totally clear on

the politics of it all.

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But I will say you are not getting

an animal in California outside of a

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breeder that isn't spayed or neutered.

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So whether it's a rescue, whether it's

a humane society, wherever that animal's

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coming from it's, you're not gonna have

an accidental litter in your backyard.

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And which is just already controlling

the pet population more than what

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we see here where there isn't a lot

of that oversight on animal control.

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And I just think about Bob Barker and

"The Price is Right," like every day now.

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I'm like, "Please help

control the pet population.

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Have your pet spayed or neutered."

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Because here I, I literally see it

driving down the road, the impact of

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not spaying and neutering your animals.

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Dixie: Yeah.

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And it's funny with the whole thing with

Bob Barker and "The Price is Right,"

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because when I was a child, that's what my

grandparents would watch every single day.

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So every summer- we were watching

"The Price is Right," and that

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message really came through.

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And I think that's why there's so

many people that's in my particular

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age bracket, I'm a Gen X-er, that-

Same … are so pro-spay and neuter.

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And I really- Yeah … wish that something

like that would come along for future

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generations because, it seems you just

don't see it like especially now, like

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with the younger people coming up, lot

of them just don't even think about it.

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They just don't understand

why they should do it.

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Rebecca: Yeah, and there's a lot of

incorrect teachings around it in terms

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of, "Oh if you spay, then your female

dog is gonna get breast cancer."

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And I've heard some real crazy

things that people have spread

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incorrectly about what will happen

if you do spay or neuter your pet.

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And it's oh my gosh, can we

gotta stop that noise as well.

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Dixie: It's just like

a never ending cycle.

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Rebecca: I will say that I have

noticed that here in Georgia,

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spaying and neutering is more

expensive than in California.

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So I don't know if there are subsidies

that happen in California for that.

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We're gonna finally have a low-cost clinic

opening here in August, but until then,

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it's very, in my opinion, expensive to

spay like a healthy young animal compared

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to what you'd pay on the West Coast.

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Dixie: Yeah.

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Now let me ask you too, when you said that

California is so much stricter I know-

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… like here all, of course, all the rescues,

all the shelters here, they are spaying

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and neutering before they go out the door.

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Unless it's going to a foster.

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If it's going to a foster, they're,

maybe they're too young for spay or

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neuter, but before they're ever adopted,

they are all spayed and neutered.

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Now, the problem that we have is people

finding kittens and picking the kittens

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up, which is a whole nother thing.

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… they'll find the kittens, they'll pick

the kittens up, they'll take on to

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social media to just give them away.

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Rebecca: Yes.

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Dixie: And that causes a huge problem

here, because even as a rescue, I have

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made the offer to help people, hey, at

least, let us help you get them spayed or

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neutered before they go to their new home.

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Or make the offer, hey, we can take

them, and a lot of the times they'll

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go with somebody else just because

it's oh that person commented first,

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and it's- … just unfortunate because

some people might have the intentions

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of spaying and neutering them, and they

don't realize that when they reach four

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months old, they can be reproducing.

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And so it's like surprise litter.

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And then other people have zero

intention of spaying and neutering.

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So how does California

combat that problem?

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Or do you see that happening as well?

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Rebecca: So there's so many

things I wanna cover in that area.

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Before California, but specifically

here, we are going to be much

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more proactive in education.

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So I'm connecting in with social groups

like the Girl Scouts of America and

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other groups around town where we can

come bring these cute little kittens

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that I constantly have in my life now,

grab the attention of folks and then

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teach them about how quickly they have

babies and just cat math these people

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to death so that they can really get it.

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Because I am one of those people.

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I was a 19-year-old, had my first

two cats, and all of a sudden had

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a pregnant cat, and I had no idea

that before one year old my cats

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could get each other pregnant.

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I had no idea.

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And ended up having three kittens

that I had to find homes for.

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And so luckily, that was enough years

ago that I've now had generations of cats

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that aren't reproducing accidentally,

but you don't know what you don't know.

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And so I do think education is a huge

responsibility of those of us who do know

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to go out and help spread the good word.

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I also have been like you on social

media trying to get my hands on those

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animals that are out there for free.

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I'm really concerned

about it for two reasons.

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One is the overpopulation, also the

potential of using those animals

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as bait animals in dog fighting.

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So I like just feel compelled

to try to get the animals into

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a safe space, spay and neuter

them, and really vet the adopters.

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So there's a lot going on here that I am

trying to get involved in , to hopefully

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Help in both of those directions.

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In California but one of the things

on social media with animals is a lot

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of pages didn't allow, and I actually

thought it was a Facebook rule the

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gifting or selling of animals on Facebook.

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And now being here and seeing it, it's

not a Facebook rule it was rules of pages

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that happen to be based out of California.

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And so that's one thing is there just

wasn't a pipeline of those animals.

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Now, California has other ways to get

a free animal, like Craigslist which

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is definitely a way that you could

you could get an animal that's not

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going through a shelter or a rescue

and therefore not spayed or neutered.

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But it's a lot harder there to just

find an just to scoop an animal up off

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the road, which here that is not hard.

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I could probably go do

it right now if I tried.

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So again, I think there's probably some

regulations and how those regulations

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are enforced is a big part of it.

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Yeah.

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And I did talk to the Georgia

Department of Ag about that.

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Not an official, but an employee

of the Department of Ag and asked

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about the lack of severity in

our pet reproduction laws here.

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And what I was told, and again, not

from an official point of view, but just

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from a person that works there, is that

because breeding of animals, whether it's

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hunting dogs or other working animals in

Georgia that is what's gonna keep those

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reproduction laws loose as they are.

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That they're not gonna have a if

you're in this category, you must

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spay and neuter, and if you're in this

category, you mustn't spay and neuter."

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And I don't know how much

truth there is to that.

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Again, haven't been here super long,

but I am getting more connected with

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the Humane Society and if I need to

help, do any kind of lobbying I'm happy

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to get active in that way as well.

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Dixie: Yeah, that's great.

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And it's great that you're

gonna be reaching out to

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all those organizations too.

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That's actually something that

I was thinking of doing myself,

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just because it is such a problem.

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And at least if you reach the kids

or the children, they go home-

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Yeah … and sometimes they can be very

adamant about things with the parents,

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Rebecca: yes.

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I've known people who have quit smoking

because their kids learned about how

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bad smoking is in school, and they come

home and, they're like, "Oh my gosh,

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you're gonna die because you smoke."

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And and parents, you hear that from

this little person that you love,

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it, changes your views on things.

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I just happen to be in a fortunate

situation where I am connected

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with people who are connected

with other people, right?

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And through whether it's through the

Rotary Club or through the Master

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Gardeners, through University of

Georgia, there's just a lot of people

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that are like-minded in terms of caring

about the community, the environment,

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education of others, and it all comes

together, , in one way, shape, or form.

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And and so it becomes applicable.

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So whether, you're talking to folks

about the importance of spaying and

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neutering cats because the impact they

could have on your bird population or

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the importance of spaying and neutering

cats because how quickly they, they

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can make kittens and how is your

family gonna care for those animals.

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There's a lot of ways to look at

how the reproduction process has

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an impact in our environment.

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Dixie: The area that you're in

Georgia, are you in a suburban area?

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Are you in a rural area?

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Rebecca: I think we're

considered a r- rural area.

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It feels like a suburb, but

there's no city, so it's like

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suburb and then country, so I

think that makes it rural, right?

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Dixie: I know in Louisiana, in the more

country-type areas, that's where we have

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the least amount of resources and the

biggest problem with people dumping pets.

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In fact- Yes … we have country property

we were planning to put our sanctuary on.

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And We're a cat rescue, but our first

three adoptions were actually dogs because

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we had puppies dumped on our property.

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Rebecca: The reason I didn't become

a sanctuary is when I went to the

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city to actually just to switch the

electric bill over to the nonprofit's

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name for the building that the cats

would be in they said "Wait a second.

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We, we can't have you doing that right

now without having somebody on-site or

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at least somebody patrolling 24 hours

on-site because of animal dumping."

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And and while a lot of people

were like, "That's not right.

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They shouldn't be getting involved with

that," I was like, "Oh, my goodness.

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No, I'm glad that they said that,"

because it didn't actually occur to

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me that people are gonna say, "Oh,

look, animal rescue," and all of

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a sudden that's a dumping ground.

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And so all of a sudden you've got these,

either cats that are running loose

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that are now either have been rehomed,

but they didn't know that they just

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got rehomed, or dogs running into the

street 'cause they just got dumped,

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and the building is on a busy road.

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And to me, that's the right thing to do.

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And until we have enough funds coming in

to be able to have 24-hour surveillance I

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can appreciate why we are not okay to have

a sanctuary in that particular location.

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I could do it outside this

city boundaries, right?

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Where you're not gonna have dogs

running into traffic if they're dumped.

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But but now I would not feel good

knowing that, we're not open on

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the weekend or something and there

could be an animal starving on the

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doorstep because nobody's there.

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And really have to think about the impact

of people knowing safe place to dump

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an animal means that somebody's gonna

have hands on that animal in a quick

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enough time that it won't be harmed.

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Dixie: Yeah, that definitely makes sense.

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I am foster-based right now.

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Our long-term goal is to build a sanctuary

up in the country and, but when I say in

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the country, we're really in the country.

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Our clos-closest neighbor

might be like a mile away.

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And but still, it's like out where that

is, you still see people dumping dogs.

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There's cats too, but like the dogs,

they dump on the side of country roads.

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Rebecca: Yeah.

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Dixie: It's so sad and, it's insane.

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And you try to look for an owner because,

you don't know what the situation is,

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but most of the time they are just

dumped, it's a accidental litter.

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They didn't want them,

so they just dump them.

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And it is very sad.

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And I've seen it too with the rescues

that we do have in the city that have

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physical locations, with the amount

of times, and even the shelters,

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they'll post videos of people

dumping animals, and it's really sad.

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Yeah.

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It really is.

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Rebecca: We have a bunch of dog

rescues here that are very active,

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but we have one specifically that

the founder is constantly the like

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almost 100% of the time, if someone

posts it's Peanuts and Friends.

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I don't know why, but that's where if

an animal's found or seen or whatever,

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It's almost always her that is going

wherever a dog has been posted, and she's

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picking that dog up, and she's picked

up just the skinniest starving dogs.

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She's picked up beat up dogs that looks

like they've been hit by cars, like

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just all kinds of terrible things.

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And she's always the one who is

rescuing them, and it's amazing.

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And she has a full dog rescue

kennels, like the whole nine yards.

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But , we don't have that for cats,

which is why I wanted to do the

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sanctuary with the cats because

it's a bit of the same thing where

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we, people are dumping them too.

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And you know when you go up to a colony,

if you could pick up a cat, that cat

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probably, lived at a house not, hasn't

been a colony cat its whole life.

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You said

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Dixie: you do the bottle babies too?

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Rebecca: Yes.

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So that's what we're focused on.

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So TNR and bottle babies is the focus.

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Until we've got more fosters,

like you said, or have the

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sanctuary in place, we just aren't

able to be, intake for animals.

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So we only take bottle

babies and then TNR.

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So I've got three right now

on me literally on my body.

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Dixie: Yeah, I could hear them.

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Rebecca: Oh, can

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you?

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They're not on a bottle anymore,

but they were when they got here.

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Dixie: Are they in the swim in cat

food phase, or are they past that?

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Rebecca: Yeah, they're about there.

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They're getting better without

all their paws needing to be

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in the food at the same time.

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That's what you meant, right?

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Dixie: That's absolutely it.

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Yeah.

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They get so messy- Yeah … when

they're learning to eat, and

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everybody thinks kittens- Oh my

gosh … are like wonderful, and

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I'm like, "Kittens are so messy.

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You have no idea how messy

little bottle kittens are."

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Rebecca: Yeah.

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It is so funny, I'm like,

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what are you doing?"

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But nope, all the paws are

gonna go right in there.

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And then also like the

whole face in the food.

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Like not just the mouth, but

just the whole entire thing.

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It's like watching when a human

child starts feeding itself and

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you're like, spaghetti's on the

forehead for a good reason I'm sure.

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But totally the same thing.

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Dixie: I imagine you have a big

problem with the people that kind

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of catnap the baby kittens too.

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Rebecca: Yes.

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So they think they're helping, bless them.

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They think that they're

doing the right thing.

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They don't realize that

the mom is coming back.

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And there's a partner organization

that is a little bit newer than

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us, but has been around the folks

have been around the town longer.

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And we've been partnering in our efforts

just 'cause, the more the merrier.

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And and they're Southwest Georgia

Fix-Fixers and, We've been trading

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off, who's taking in bottle babies and,

who's full up kind of thing so far.

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And when we are able to, between

the two of us, talk people down

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from removing the kittens, it's

"Oh my gosh, thank you so much."

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And then we try to make sure that once the

kittens are weaned, that we will be the

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ones that get those kittens because we've

got the pipeline to PetSmart for adoption

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or other places to get the kittens out

and adopted through vetted partners.

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And that's the big goal.

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But people get mad when they

find out their cat had kittens.

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That continues to surprise me.

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And they take the kittens away 'cause I

don't know what they think that's gonna

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do other than put the kittens at risk.

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But they are like, "Oh, my cat

shouldn't have gotten pregnant.

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Take these kittens from me."

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And it's "Oh gosh,

that's not how it works."

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But and then those poor mama cats, what

they go through, I can't even imagine.

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But there's also sometimes good stories.

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:

So I have been contacted

before had a mama cat…

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a woman had a mama cat whose kittens

didn't make it, and she was fully

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:

lactating, and I had bottle babies

that we put with her, and they

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:

took to each other right away.

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:

And so that mama cat automatically

had two babies, and those two babies

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:

didn't have to be bottle babies.

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:

So those are fun stories to have too.

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:

Dixie: Yeah, and that always

makes it so much easier too.

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:

Rebecca: Oh my gosh, yeah.

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:

Dixie: Do you have an incubator

for them or do you just do like the

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:

heating pad or the heating disc?

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:

Rebecca: I do a heating

pad in a baby playpen.

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:

Trying to think of the name of it.

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:

So they have their heating

section and non-heating section.

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:

When they're little, eyes

closed, still little, they're

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:

obviously just on the heating pad.

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:

They don't move much, but plenty

of space in case they need to.

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:

Dixie: Yeah, I just got some incubators

from a grant that we received.

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:

Oh.

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:

And I will say the incubators I

got They were RCOM Brooder B90Ns

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:

I think.

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:

But absolute game changer, 'cause for

years I did either the heating disc or

365

:

the heating pad And you know how sometimes

the kittens will get fussy, and it just

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:

seems you- can't do anything to get

them to be quiet, and they'll just, you

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:

could feed them, you can make sure that

they have their heat, but they just, for

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:

some reason - Yeah … get very fussy.

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:

I found with the incubator, you

feed them, you make them go to the

370

:

bathroom, you put them in there, and

they're quiet until the next feeding.

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:

Rebecca: Really?

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:

Dixie: Yeah it is like

a total game changer.

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:

I never expected that aspect of it.

374

:

I expected it more to be for the

consistent heat, and then if- … I needed

375

:

to hook up like a nebulizer or something

like that to it, then it's contained.

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:

Which you could use for the kittens with

a respiratory or something like that.

377

:

But- Yeah … I got it more for

the constant heat so that I didn't

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:

have to worry about getting up and

checking the heating pad or, heating

379

:

up the heating disk or, worrying

about it being too hot for them.

380

:

And- Yeah … I never

expected that aspect of it.

381

:

So I think I'm on my third litter that

has been in the incubator and, like I

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:

said total game changer because they

get in there and even when they start

383

:

getting old enough, on that like kind

of two-week stage where they start

384

:

playing with each other a little

bit, you'll just watch them- Yeah

385

:

and they rolling around in there,

and they're entertaining themselves.

386

:

They go to sleep, and- Aw … they're

just so comfortable in it.

387

:

Absolute game changer

388

:

Rebecca: I will have to look into

that because I would do anything to

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:

make it more comfortable for them.

390

:

I thought we'd hit the jackpot with

this setup now with the the playpen,

391

:

'cause it just gives them so much space

and is a little bit off the floor,

392

:

so I'm not like getting into a pet

pen that's all the way on the floor.

393

:

And I was like, "Oh, I'm winning now."

394

:

But if there's something even better,

then we definitely would wanna get it.

395

:

Although, one of the things that we're

finding is even to get fosters for the

396

:

bottle babies, having to get the whole kit

of items that they need is so expensive.

397

:

And so that's a whole nother area of,

that we're noting of at what age do we do

398

:

fosters later in the bottle feeding era.

399

:

Maybe at four weeks we put them with

fosters and stick with my friend

400

:

and I are the ones that just take

the itty bitty ones so that we don't

401

:

have to have all of the special

equipment at all foster locations.

402

:

What's your solution for that?

403

:

Dixie: We have a very difficult

- time finding bottle feeders here.

404

:

Rebecca: Okay.

405

:

Dixie: We have the people that

either don't have time, with

406

:

their jobs, and I understand that.

407

:

But then you also have the people that

are just, very scared of bottle feeding.

408

:

I have tried to do bottle feeding classes.

409

:

… And so we have had several of those to

kinda get people on board and at least

410

:

introduce people to bottle feeding.

411

:

Even if they don't do it,

at least they know about it.

412

:

Rebecca: Yeah.

413

:

Dixie: And, we've had quite a

few people sign up for those,

414

:

so , that's a good thing.

415

:

I was thinking of putting together

some kinda kit for the people who

416

:

did wanna bottle feed, but as far as

fosters, I'll kinda leave it up to them.

417

:

I will do it to where if they're

comfortable taking the litter,

418

:

from bottle feeding to up ready for

adoption, then they'll do it that way.

419

:

There are some people that

prefer to just do bottle babies.

420

:

So for those people, once the

kittens are weaned, then what we'll

421

:

do is put them with another foster.

422

:

Rebecca: Okay.

423

:

Dixie: So it really kinda just depends

on the foster that you're dealing with.

424

:

Rebecca: Yeah.

425

:

Dixie: But I find fosters are in short

supply, period, and then when you're

426

:

talking about trying to find a bottle

foster, that's even harder to find.

427

:

Rebecca: Yeah.

428

:

I agree with you that there definitely

aren't as many fosters as we would like.

429

:

Yeah, it's everything.

430

:

Looking for donations and the people

whose eyes glaze over when I say it's

431

:

for cats versus, what about all the

children that need something or the

432

:

dogs or the everything that people put

in front, put ahead of cats in creating

433

:

that compelling story to get people

to, to put money in place where, you

434

:

know, for the benefit of cats has been a

struggle as well as the foster situation.

435

:

But the people who love cats really

love cats, and those are the people that

436

:

we're finding for fostering, which is,

always amazing because then you know

437

:

that somebody's heart is really in it.

438

:

Dixie: Yeah, absolutely.

439

:

Thank you- … so much for taking the

time to speak with me about your endeavor,

440

:

and I wish you much success on it too.

441

:

Yeah.

442

:

Rebecca: Thank you.

443

:

It's been great talking with you

and hearing about what you've got

444

:

going on in Louisiana as well.

445

:

And I've been listening to some of

the podcasts that you've already

446

:

had, have posted and it's been super

informative too 'cause, still being

447

:

very new to this every story helps.

448

:

So I appreciate you being out

there and sharing all these great

449

:

stories from around the country.

450

:

Dixie: Yeah, absolutely.

451

:

And when you listen to the episodes,

there's a lot of people too that are

452

:

willing to help if you have any questions.

453

:

Oh, good.

454

:

If you come across any of them,

if you have any kind of questions,

455

:

you can always reach out to me

and I can hook you up with them.

456

:

But usually we'll put the information

in the show notes as well.

457

:

But- Okay … i'm so happy that everybody

is so into sharing the information

458

:

Thanks for listening.

459

:

And I'm glad to hear that the- Yeah

460

:

episodes are helping you out,

'cause that's what it's all about.

461

:

Yeah.

462

:

And that's what my goal was.

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About the Podcast

Animal Posse
A look inside the world of animal rescue
Dive deep into the world of animal rescue with heartwarming stories, expert interviews, and behind-the-scenes insights. From heartwarming adoptions to daring rescues, we'll explore the incredible bond between humans and animals.
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About your host

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DIXIE LOUVIERE

My love for animals has driven me to dedicate the last 20 years to rescue. In 2024, we established a 501c3 nonprofit Unwanted Feline Organization Inc. and are thrilled to be building a cat sanctuary in Washington Parish, Louisiana, where we can offer a haven for cats in need. I thought it would be great for the rescue to have a podcast so Animal Posse was started with the hope of bringing rescues together, getting them more exposure, and finding more animals
homes.