Baltimore Sun

Wintertime habit can save animals’ lives

- By Cathy M. Rosenthal — Ron Stromstad, via email Cathy M. Rosenthal is an animal advocate, author, columnist and pet expert. Send your questions, stories and tips to cathy@ petpundit.com. Please include your name, city and state. You can follow her @cathy

Dear Cathy: I have a sad story to share. I feed two feral cats in my neighborho­od. I have gotten them fixed and look out for them every day. When we got the big freeze a month ago, the temperatur­es dropped to single digits.

I was worried sick about where they would sleep those nights. I even put a chicken coop heater on the patio to offer them and any other animal warmth. The good news is, they survived the big freeze and continued to show up at our door each night for food. It was such a relief.

But then the unthinkabl­e happened. On Christmas Day, we left the house to visit some friends. On the way, we heard a thump and thought we had hit an animal. So, we turned the car around and discovered the animal lying in the middle of the road was one of our feral cats. Apparently, he had gotten into the wheel well for warmth, and we didn’t know this when we drove off. He fell out of the wheel well, and, we hope beyond hope, he was killed instantly. We were devastated to lose one of these feral felines in such a traumatic way.

Someone told me a few days later that when it’s cold outside, you should hit the hood of your car to scare out any animals that may have crawled into your car engine for warmth. I didn’t know to do this and assume others don’t either. Can you share this story? Maybe it will prevent this from happening to other animals. It’s just devastatin­g to have something like this happen. — Patricia, Nashville, Tennessee

Dear Patty: I am so sorry to hear about your loss, and on Christmas Day, no less. I shared your story with several family members and friends and was surprised to learn they didn’t know either that they should hit the hood of their car to scare an animal out of the engine.

Apparently, this is not common knowledge as I hoped. As you point out, an animal also can crawl into a wheel well, so all parts of the car should be knocked on before starting the engine. So, yes, I am sharing your story in the hopes that people living in cold weather will begin implementi­ng this lifesaving habit before starting their car.

People with a remote starter for their car also need to think about this, since turning on a car engine from a distance prevents one from banging on the vehicle. If there is a remote horn or alarm, one should activate that to scare an animal out from under the vehicle.

I was dismayed by your reply to the lady about building a community “home” for “outside” cats. Outside cats, or feral cats, destroy millions of harmless songbirds worldwide each year. Many bird species are already in peril due to habitat loss. The only reason to feed feral cats is to create a bait station so they can be captured, euthanized and removed from the landscape. Please reconsider your response.

Dear Cathy:

Dear Ron: Thank you for your letter, though I respectful­ly couldn’t disagree with you more. Feral cats deserve our compassion and empathy. These felines have either been dumped by their owners or are the offspring of abandoned cats.

In other words, this is a man-made problem, and the solution is not to kill cats but to find humane ways to care for them, prevent them from breeding and provide for their needs for the duration of their short lives. When their needs are met, they are less likely to go after birds.

We also must educate people to not dump their cats. When cats are fed, fixed and cared for, they don’t display annoying mating behaviors and aren’t fighting with other cats to mate.

I was always taken aback by a young man in his 20s who helped his grandma’s neighborho­od fix about 80 feral cats. “All we can do is let them stay,” he said. “It’s just as much their neighborho­od as it is ours.”

I can’t change your mind any more than you can change mine. But I can use this as an opportunit­y to educate people about how TNR — trap, neuter, return — is the most viable solution to addressing the plight of feral cats.

If you want to make a difference, ask your neighbors not to dump their cats. Thanks for writing.

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