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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#fb3_img_img_a42d1be3-f5f4-5afd-af37-579efe4fe726.png" alt="Technical stuff"/> If the word trap is conjuring up some ghastly leg-hold bit of cruelty, please stop worrying. The traps used to capture cats (shown in Figure 4-1) are designed to catch and hold them safely. Made of sturdy wire, these boxlike cages have a door that snaps shut when a cat enters — holding the animal until help can arrive.

      Perhaps the most convenient source of traps and advice on how to use them is your local animal-control department. Many lend out traps for free to citizens who put down a deposit to ensure the equipment will be returned.

Photo depicts a cat in the box traps, which is designed to catch the cats inside and then hold them safely.

      © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      FIGURE 4-1: Box traps are designed to lure cats inside and then hold them safely until help arrives.

      If you’re trying to work with cats on a university campus, hospital, or military base, check with the maintenance department to see whether they have traps — most do, although you may need to go through some paperwork to use them.

      

Although borrowing traps is probably the best way to get started, you can also buy them directly from the same companies that sell to animal-control departments. One such source is Tomahawk Live Trap, P.O. Box 323, Tomahawk, WI 54487; www.livetrap.com.

      Setting up veterinary care

      After you trap a cat, leave the animal in the cage and cover with towels so the cat feels protected. Next stop: A veterinarian.

      Talk to your own veterinarian first. She may well be interested in your project and willing to help, and even if she’s not, she’s likely a good source of referral to other veterinarians who are more actively involved in the care of community cats. Your local animal control agency may have programs in place for community cats already, and if so, these programs can really help you!

      

What you’re asking your veterinarian to do is make a charitable contribution, of her time and her staff’s time, and of her equipment and supplies. Spaying, in particular, is major surgery, and veterinarians routinely do it at a loss, as their contribution to helping combat animal overpopulation.

      

Be sure that the veterinarian is aware that you’ll be bringing in untamed cats. These animals are more difficult to handle, and the staff needs a heads-up before you bring any trapped cat in. Good communication is the key to working with your veterinarian under any circumstances, and that’s doubly true when you’re dealing with these special needs cats.

      

Veterinarians clip the tip off the left ear of a community cat after neutering. That way, if the cat is ever trapped again, cat caretakers and veterinarians will know that the surgery has already been performed. The cut is in a straight line so as not to be confused with damage from fighting or other injury-causing events.

      Trapping cats

      After you have your trap and your veterinarian is on standby, you’re ready to get down to the business of catching cats. Make sure that the trap is clean to start with. Scrub with hot, soapy water and follow with a spray of diluted bleach (a half cup of bleach to a gallon of water will do). If you can manage it, prepare several traps at once. Cats quickly become wary of the traps after seeing others caught, and your best chance may well be a mass trapping.

      

Stop feeding your cat colony for a couple days before you put traps out. You want them hungry!

      Set the trap in a protected area, such as under a bush, or in the shade of a fence or building. Cover the trap with an old towel or blanket to make the cat feel more secure after he has been captured.

      

Check your traps at least a couple times per day and ideally every three-four hours — and even more frequently in cold or hot weather. Traps offer no protection against the elements. A trapped cat is also vulnerable to attack by dogs or by people intent on mayhem.

      

After you have a cat trapped, don’t attempt to remove him from the cage — you’ll be bitten. Keep the cage covered and use the handle to transport the cat, cage and all. Your veterinarian and her staff are trained and experienced at handling less-than-cooperative cats. Don’t risk a bite!

      Spaying and neutering cats

      Once you’ve turned a neutered community cat loose again, you won’t be able to catch the animal again to have stitches removed, which is why it’s essential that the veterinarian use a technique that doesn’t require the animal to be returned to have the stitches removed.

      

If the cat or kitten you’ve brought in is destined to be tamed for a future as a pet, ask the veterinarian to trim the animal’s claws. Taking the sharp tips off the claws will make the cat much easier for you to handle.

      Releasing cats

      Bring a carrier to the veterinarian so the animal doesn’t have to be returned to the trap — you’ll need that for more trapping after all. Your veterinarian will put the cat in your carrier while he’s still unconscious. Take him home and leave him in the carrier, in a quiet place. Have food and water available, but leave him alone otherwise. When the cat is fully conscious, he can be released to his old stomping grounds.

Schematic illustration of carrier for cats, in which food and water should be available

      Miss Parker/Photo by Susan R. Scheide

      FIGURE 4-2: Cats should be spayed or neutered as soon as kittens are weaned.

Line the carrier with newspapers, and with an old towel. The cat will likely relieve himself when he wakes up, so you want something absorbent in the carrier to keep him as comfortable as possible.

      Housing considerations

      While many caretakers don’t worry about shelter for their community cats, especially in warmer

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