Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Cat almost blinded after being shot in the head

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A WARNING has gone out to cat owners after a stray was shot in the head with an airgun.

Catherine Buckley, of voluntary group Huddersfie­ld Feral and Strays, issued the warning to cat owners living in the HD3 area of Huddersfie­ld – particular­ly in Reinwood – after the stray she had been feeding turned up with a swollen face and unable to see.

She said it turned out the animal, which lives in the garden shed at Catherine’s home, had a pellet lodged just in front of his ear.

She said: “Two centimetre­s lower and he could have been blinded or killed.”

Catherine took the animal to Vets 4 Pets at New Hey Road, Oakes, to have the wound cleaned and the cat treated with antibiotic­s.

Rebecca Gowler, the practice manager at Vets 4 Pets, said: “We had to clean the infected wound.

“The member of the public had already squeezed the pellet and pus out. The wound was quite infected. We gave pain relief and antibiotic­s.

“For it to be that infected like that, it must have happened a few days before.”

She said: “Unfortunat­ely, this is not the first time we have seen this happen in the area.”

Posting on Facebook, Catherine said: “Makes me so angry that someone has done this and I wanted to warn others in the area to keep an eye on their cats, be it pet or stray as it can be detrimenta­l so quickly if the pellet and treat(ment) aren’t sorted.”

Members of Huddersfie­ld Feral and Strays have rescued hundreds of cats since being formed last December – when they met after responding to an appeal to help trap a colony of about 70 feral felines in Springwood.

After rescuing a cat, one of the volunteers brings the animal to the vet for treatment including vaccinatio­n, microchipp­ing and neutering.

The animal is then re-homed via a Facebook page called Homes for Kitties Huddersfie­ld.

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