Meet our Adoptables & Alumni
Meet our Adoptables
Click on the pictures below to find full biographies on our currently available adoptables.
As a general rule, we recommend that young kittens only go in pairs or to households that already have another pet.
Young kittens on their own, no matter how much attention they get from humans, usually get bored and tend to be more destructive. They need another animal to help socialize them (to learn about appropriate wrestling, hunting behaviors like leaping out at things, boundaries, etc). Most times we recommend if not adopting two that you have another young cat, though some may do well with a friendly, easy-going dog. Note too, often elderly animals tend to get annoyed with the neediness of kittens. Some are still young at heart and don’t mind the constant neediness from a kitten (kittens will need their attention, need to learn how to appropriately wrestle). With older cats in a household we sometimes recommend two kittens so they can keep each other company and it takes the pressure off of the older cat or a more laid back, gentler teen or adult.
If you are not in the position to adopt two at this time, and don’t have another animal at home, don’t despair. There are so many teens and adult cats, who would be fine as a single animal, just looking for the purrfect forever homes too and their personalities will already be mostly set so in a loving environment you don’t have to worry about how they would be.
Meet our Alumni
THIS IS WHY WE FOSTER.
Since we joke our kittens are “broken” from the many cute twisted ways they’ve presented themselves; we started a instagram page of updates from our adopters to prove our case.
See updates of former fosters.